Shinji_Hosoe

Shinji Hosoe

Shinji Hosoe

Musical artist


Shinji Hosoe (細江 慎治, Hosoe Shinji, born February 28, 1967), also known as Megaten and Sampling Masters MEGA,[1] is a Japanese video game composer and musician most famous for scoring Ridge Racer, Street Fighter EX and many Namco arcade games between 1987 and 1996.[2] He also runs the music production and publishing company SuperSweep, alongside long time collaborator Ayako Saso.

Quick Facts 細江 慎治, Also known as ...

Biography

Early life

Hosoe was born on February 28, 1967, in Gero, Gifu Prefecture, Japan. His family moved to Chōfu while he was in first grade of elementary school. At the age of 8, he bought Isao Tomita's album The Planets. He also listened to electronic music by artists such as Jean-Michel Jarre, Kraftwerk and Yellow Magic Orchestra. During his teenage years, he played bass in a Yellow Magic Orchestra tribute band. At the time, he did not have a serious interest in music and received low grades in music classes. After graduating high school, he studied computer graphics at Japan Electronics College.[3]

Namco (1985–1996)

Hosoe joined Namco in 1985 as a part-time game tester and CG artist. During this time, he merely created music as a hobby in his spare time. After showing his music to fellow co-workers, he was reassigned the position of a composer in 1986.[4] This led to him composing for Dragon Spirit, as well as various other arcade games such as Final Lap, Ordyne and Dirt Fox. He started off tracks by programming a rhythm into the sequencer, then playing melodies with a keyboard on-top, and later adding new parts or re-writing existing parts.[5] In 1990, he composed for Galaxian3: Project Dragoon, working with Ayako Saso and Takayuki Aihara for the first time; he found himself busy with lots of other work, hence other tracks were composed by the other two composers.[6]

Using the pseudonym Yuji Yamada, he also composed for games that were not developed or published by Namco. These include the Little Master series; as the series was intended for children, director Tadato Kawano asked Hosoe to compose tracks that are upbeat and happy.[7] He also composed for the PC-98 game Eye of the Beholder along with Yuzo Koshiro, whose style he tried to imitate for his tracks in the game.[8]

In 1992, Hosoe composed for Fighter & Attacker alongside Aihara, which was his first game project to utilize hardcore techno music. Neither Hosoe and Aihara had previously listened to music in this genre; Kawano had given Hosoe two CDs of hardcore techno music, which initially puzzled him but grew on him after repeated listens, so he composed music in this genre to match the game's intensity.[9] The following year, he composed for Ridge Racer. While racing games at this point often featured jazz fusion music, the majority of tracks in the game are dance music,[6] although he initially planned to include a wider variety of genres. Due to time constraints, he asked Saso and Nobuyoshi Sano to contribute one track each.[10] The success of Ridge Racer has since led to him receiving many offers from companies to compose similar music. He also composed for Cyber Sled earlier that year, which he considers to be his greatest work,[2] although it received a mixed reception from critics, who criticized it for being repetitive.[11][12]

Arika and SuperSweep (1996–present)

Hosoe left Namco to join Arika in 1996, feeling that his salary would not increase any further.[13] Saso and Aihara also joined Arika desiring to continue working with him, although Sano remained at Namco. This led to the trio composing for Street Fighter EX along with its sequels. The console versions were their first game projects to feature live instrumentation. Ex-Taito composer Yasuhisa Watanabe later joined the sound team. The trio were also given freedom to work on the music of Square games Bushido Blade and Driving Emotion Type-S. The latter game was poorly received by game critics and fans, although the soundtrack has received praise for its blend of fusion, rock and techno music.[14][15][16] However, the music also received criticism, with one critic describing it as sounding like "a flock of seagulls being maimed and tortured".[17]

Upon joining Arika, he expressed a desire to eventually found his own game music company, which eventually led to him leaving in 2000 and founding SuperSweep alongside Saso and Watanabe.[2][18] Yousuke Yasui, who had already tried to apply to join Arika, also joined the company as a composer. In addition to composing for games, the company also publishes various soundtracks.

One of SuperSweep's first works was the soundtrack of Arika's Technictix in 2001, which Hosoe considers to be one of his most significant contributions to game music.[2] The team also worked on the music of the game's sequel Technic Beat. The game's producer, Ichiro Mihara, decided that the game's soundtrack would include remixes of music from earlier Namco and Arika games. Mihara chose which tracks would be included in the game, while the composers decided on which tracks they wanted to remix, at times fighting with other composers over who would remix a track.[19]

In 2004, Hosoe and Saso[20] worked on the gameplay soundtrack of Xenosaga Episode II: Jenseits von Gut und Böse, with Yuki Kajiura composing the cutscene music. Kajiura worked entirely separate from Hosoe and Saso, and did not collaborate on any tracks nor even meet during the game's production.[21] For the gameplay tracks, Hosoe composed those with the sound hardware of the PlayStation 2, and opted to use an electronic sound over orchestral due to the limited memory available to work with, in an attempt to make the difference in sound quality between the gameplay and cutscene soundtracks smaller.[2] His music for the game was poorly received by critics and fans at the time, and were considered unfitting;[22] as a result, he had no interest in releasing a soundtrack CD at the time and did not return to compose for Xenosaga Episode III: Also Sprach Zarathustra, although his work eventually received a more positive reception from fans.[23]

Along with Saso, Kenji Kawai and other composers, he scored Folklore in 2007. The game features a serious, dark cinematic score; while Hosoe most frequently works on upbeat electronic music, he found the music easy to compose due to not having to focus on sound design. In 2009, he served as the sole composer of Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors, which also features dark, intense music. He found the music straightforward to compose. As he had to compose the music using the Nintendo DS sound hardware, Yasui assisted him in ensuring that the music sounded close to the quality of recorded music. He would go on to compose for later titles in the Zero Escape series, including Zero Escape: Virtue's Last Reward in 2012 and Zero Time Dilemma in 2016.[24]

In 2016, game company Breaking Bytes announced that if its shoot 'em up game Xydonia is successfully funded, then Hosoe and Keishi Yonao will contribute additional tracks to the game. Saso and Yasui are also planned to be additional composers for the game if the stretch goal of €32,000 is reached.[25] However, as of 2024 the game has yet to be released.

Side projects

In addition to his career as a composer for games and other media, Hosoe has also participated in a number of side projects. He founded the record label Troubadour Record in 1991. The label released a number of game soundtrack-inspired concept albums, featuring other prolific video game composers such as Hitoshi Sakimoto and Hayato Matsuo,[13] as well as vocal and cover albums. He was also part of the group Oriental Magnetic Yellow (O.M.Y.), parodying Yellow Magic Orchestra, alongside fellow Namco composers Sano, Aihara, and Hiroto Sasaki.[4] The group released several albums and also performed concerts.[26] He has also released albums under the Sampling Masters name with Saso, including the Over Drive Hell series of albums. He has also participated in the Nanosweep album series, which features original tracks by composers from both SuperSweep and Hiroshi Okubo's circle nanosounds.

Notable works

Video games

As lead composer

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As a contributor

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Anime

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Footnotes

Notes

  1. Yoshie Arakawa, Yoshie Takayanagi, Nobuyoshi Sano, Hiroto Sasaki, and Takayuki Aihara
  2. Nobuyoshi Sano, Hiroto Sasaki, Yuri Misumi, Ayako Saso, Takayuki Aihara
  3. Yoshie Arakawa, Nobuyoshi Sano, Hiroto Sasaki, Ayako Saso, Takayuki Aihara, and Keiichi Okabe
  4. Ayako Saso, Yousuke Yasui, Takayuki Aihara, Norihiro Furukawa, and Hiroto Saitoh
  5. Ayako Saso, Yousuke Yasui, Masashi Yano, Yasuhisa Watanabe, Hiroto Saitoh, Takayuki Aihara, and Wataru Ishibashi
  6. Yasuo Yamate, Takayuki Aihara, Hiroto Saitoh, Ayako Saso, Yasuhisa Watanabe, and Masashi Yano
  7. Hiroshi Okubo, Keiki Kobayashi, Ayako Saso, Yuu Miyake, Nobuyoshi Sano, Kohta Takahashi, Asuka Sakai, Takayuki Aihara, Tetsukazu Nakanishi, Koji Nakagawa, and Junichi Nakatsuru
  8. Ayako Saso, Yousuke Yasui, Masashi Yano, Norihiro Furukawa, and Takayuki Aihara
  9. Hitoshi Sakimoto, Yasunori Mitsuda, Kenji Ito, Yoko Shimomura, Ayako Saso, Yasuyuki Suzuki, Kyouji Iwata, Tsukasa Masuko, and Takahiro Ogata
  10. Kenji Kawai, Ayako Saso, Hiroto Saitoh, and Yuriko Mukoujima
  11. Ayako Saso, Yousuke Yasui, Masashi Yano, and Kazuhiro Kobayashi
  12. Also used in the console version of Tekken 6
  13. Naofumi Hataya, Hiroyuki Yamamoto, Teruyoshi Kutsuna, Ayako Saso, Masaharu Iwata, Mitsuhiro Kaneda, Noriyuki Kamikura, and Azusa Chiba
  14. Ayako Saso, Yousuke Yasui, Shoichiro Sakamoto, Teruo Taniguchi, Takahiro Eguchi, and Norihiro Furukawa
  15. Hiroshi Okubo, Taku Inoue, Rio Hamamoto, Ryo Watanabe, Ayako Saso, Keiichi Okabe, and Akihiko Ishikawa
  16. Akitaka Tohyama, Nobuyoshi Sano, Shinji Hosoe, Ayako Saso, Keiichi Okabe, Keigo Hoashi, Taku Inoue, Yoshihito Yano, Yuu Miyake, Rio Hamamoto, Go Shiina, and Ryo Watanabe
  17. Ayako Saso, Takayuki Aihara, Takahiro Eguchi, Fumihisa Tanaka, and Kazuhiro Kobayashi

References

  1. "Ridge Racer, 15 años a toda velocidad". Meristation. February 5, 2007. Archived from the original on September 29, 2011. Retrieved June 11, 2011.
  2. Greening, Chris (January 2010). "Interview with Shinji Hosoe". Square Enix Music Online. Retrieved June 11, 2011.
  3. "ゲームミュージック&アニメ専門店". ga-core. January 7, 2009. Archived from the original on June 29, 2009.
  4. "RocketBaby's interview with Shinji Hosoe". RocketBaby. 2003. Archived from the original on June 4, 2003.
  5. Namco Game Sound Express VOL.4 Dragon Saber (CD). March 21, 1991.
  6. "ゲームミュージック&アニメ専門店". January 14, 2009. Archived from the original on June 29, 2009.
  7. Kawano, Tadato (December 24, 2015). LITTLE MASTER SOUNDTRACK ZENER WORKS 25th ver (in Japanese).
  8. Hosoe, Shinji (December 5, 2014). Shinji Hosoe Works Vol.4 ~F/A~ (in Japanese).
  9. Hosoe, Shinji (January 21, 1994). Namco Game Sound Express VOL.11 Ridge Racer (in Japanese).
  10. "Cyber Sled - PlayStation". Nerd Bacon Reviews. April 18, 2016.
  11. Kotowski, Don (November 18, 2015). "Cyber Commando -Shinji Hosoe Works Vol. 5-".
  12. "ゲームミュージック&アニメ専門店". ga-core. January 21, 2009. Archived from the original on June 29, 2009.
  13. Hall, Alexandra (November 6, 2020). "Square's Awful PS2 Racer Had Good-Ass Music, At Least". Kotaku.
  14. "Driving Emotion Type-S / Bushido Blade Original Soundtrack". Chudah's Corner. Archived from the original on December 16, 2008.
  15. Liu, Johnny (February 1, 2001). "Driving Emotion Type-S review for the PS2". Game Revolution. Archived from the original on December 2, 2008. Retrieved May 21, 2008.
  16. "ゲームミュージック&アニメ専門店". January 28, 2009. Archived from the original on June 29, 2009.
  17. Kotowski, Don (May 26, 2009). "Anime Boston 2009: Interview with Kalafina and Yuki Kajiura". Original Sound Version. Archived from the original on September 20, 2010. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
  18. Dunham, Jeremy (February 9, 2005). "Xenosaga Episode II: Jenseits von Gut und Bose". IGN. Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved January 29, 2010.
  19. Kotowski, Don (July 30, 2016). "Shinji Hosoe and Kotaro Uchikoshi Interview: Zero Times". Video Game Music Online.
  20. Greening, Chris (June 28, 2016). "Hosoe and Yonao tipped to contribute to new retro shmup soundtrack". Video Game Music Online.
  21. "OMY". Troubadour Record. Archived from the original on December 19, 2000.

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