American composer who worked as music producer for Dragon Ball Z's Funimation/Saban dub in the 1990s. His career expanded to include Naruto localization and extensive stock music composition for hundreds of productions.
Sweet worked as a music producer on Dragon Ball Z during its original Saban/Funimation English adaptation, credited alongside Ron Wasserman and Jeremy Sweet for contractual reasons that limited individual songwriting recognition. His work contributed to the sound of the dub that reached millions of Western viewers.
In the 1990s and early 2000s, Sweet sang and composed themes for various Saban-related properties before transitioning to freelance composition. He became composer for the English dub of Naruto and has since become a prolific contributor to Smashtrax stock music, providing background scores for hundreds of television shows, films, and productions since the early 2000s. His shift from anime localization to stock music reflects the changing landscape of animation scoring.
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