Jun Ishikawa (composer)

Jun Ishikawa (石川 淳, Ishikawa Jun, born 1964), is a Japanese video game composer who is employed at game company HAL Laboratory. Along with fellow HAL composer Hirokazu Ando, he is best known for composing music for Kirby games, including the first title Kirby's Dream Land. He has also composed for other games developed by the company, such as the BoxBoy! series and Picross 3D.

Jun Ishikawa
石川 淳
Born1964 (age 5859)
Chiba Prefecture, Japan
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Composer
  • musician
Instrument(s)
  • Piano
  • synthesizer
Years active1990–present[2]

Biography

Ishikawa joined HAL Laboratory in 1990, composing one track and sound effects for Uchuu Keibitai SDF, along with senior composer Hideki Kanazashi. His experience with composing for the NES led to him scoring Kirby's Dream Land in 1992, which established the direction the music of later games would take. He intentionally wrote simple melodies and chords, feeling that complex chords did not sound good on the Game Boy's speakers.[3] The previous year, composer Hirokazu Ando also joined HAL after sending a demo track; Ishikawa was impressed and met with him before joining the company. This led to Ando serving as the lead composer of Kirby's Adventure in 1993, who would go on to compose for several future titles in the franchise.

Ishikawa also composed for Kirby Super Star in 1996, feeling that the ideas in the tracks he wrote were what he had always imagined would fit in certain settings. For Kirby's Dream Land 3, Ishikawa decided to incorporate influences from genres such as techno and drum'n'bass, wishing to evolve the franchise's sound further. Seniors at the company did not initially understand the shift, although then-HAL president Satoru Iwata did not object to it. Kirby: Canvas Curse also featured a change in sound direction, with the music incorporating elements of glitch. The final stage music originally had nearly inaudible notes and no melody, although testers criticized it for being noisy, so it was tweaked to sound more audible.[3]

In 2010, he contributed additional tracks to Kirby's Epic Yarn along with Ando and Tadashi Ikegami. HAL were only given a month to compose additional tracks for the game. He tried to make the tracks fit with those of lead composer Tomoya Tomita, which had already been completed at the time.[4]

As well as the Kirby series, Ishikawa and Ando have also composed for the BoxBoy! series, which features chiptune-inspired music.[1] In 2018, he composed for Kirby Star Allies along with Ando and newcomer Yuuta Ogasawara. Creating the sound effects involved trial and error; some of the sound effects he created were also made using nutrition drink bottles and cans.[5]

Ishikawa prefers to keep a low profile and runs for cover when asked in interviews to pose for photos. He has stated that this attitude is a result of his discipline from being at school while studying film music. His first public appearance was in an Iwata Asks interview for Kirby's Epic Yarn in 2010. In 2017 he did a speech at the Kirby 25th Anniversary Orchestra Concert, along with fellow HAL composers.[3] In 2022, arrangements of the team's music were performed at Kirby 30th Anniversary Music Festival, which was streamed on YouTube. The composers also performed a King Dedede medley under the name HAL Laboratory Dream Band, with Ishikawa on keyboards, Ando on bass, Ogasawara on drums, Ikegami on saxophone, Megumi Ohara on keyboards and flute, and Shogo Sakai on guitar. The composers commented their thoughts about the festival on the promotional video posted prior to it, with Ishikawa feeling that his tracks were usually not written with the intention to be performed live.[6]

Musical style

Ishikawa's music often features electronic elements,[7] as well as an emphasis on melodies and fast tempos.[3] His music sometimes incorporates unusual time signatures, although Ishikawa has stated that this may result from experimenting with a sequencer, rather than intending to be eccentric.[2] While he is fond of modular synths, he does not use them in his game music due to regarding them as inconvenient for creating music.[8] As his tracks are written for the purposes of entertaining players, he never thinks about how they would sound performed live, and has also admitted that he would not be able to perform most of his own compositions live.[6]

Legacy

Fellow Kirby composer Hirokazu Ando has named Ishikawa as being a huge influence on his own compositions for the franchise.[9] Max Coburn has also listed both Ishikawa and Ando as being among his favorite video game composers.[10]

In 2022, a cover of Ishikawa's composition, "Meta Knight's Revenge" from Kirby Super Star, performed by The 8-Bit Big Band featuring Button Masher, won a Grammy Award for Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella. The arrangers, Charlie Rosen and Jake Silverman thanked Ishikawa for his music during the acceptance speech.[11][12] Kirby creator Masahiro Sakurai reacted to the Grammy with surprise.[13]

Works

Video games

Year Title Notes
1990 Uchuu Keibitai SDF one track; sound effects
New Ghostbusters II
1991 HAL's Hole in One Golf
HyperZone
1992 Arcana with Hirokazu Ando
Kirby's Dream Land
1993 Kirby's Adventure with Hirokazu Ando
Alcahest
1996 Kirby Super Star with Dan Miyakawa
1997 Kirby's Dream Land 3
1998 Kirby no Kirakira Kizzu with Hirokazu Ando
2000 Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards
2002 Kirby: Nightmare in Dream Land with Hirokazu Ando, Tadashi Ikegami, and Shogo Sakai
2003 Kirby Air Ride
2005 Kirby: Canvas Curse with Tadashi Ikegami
2006 Otona no Jōshikiryoku Training DS with Hirokazu Ando and Tadashi Ikegami
Kirby: Squeak Squad with Hirokazu Ando, Tadashi Ikegami, and Shogo Sakai
2008 Super Smash Bros. Brawl supervisor
Kirby Super Star Ultra with Hirokazu Ando
2009 Picross 3D with Yasumasa Yamada and Hirokazu Ando
2010 Kirby's Epic Yarn with Tomoya Tomita, Hirokazu Ando, and Tadashi Ikegami
2011 Kirby's Return to Dream Land with Hirokazu Ando
2012 Kirby's Dream Collection with Hirokazu Ando and Shogo Sakai
2014 Kirby: Triple Deluxe with Hirokazu Ando
Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS supervisor
Super Smash Bros. for Wii U
2015 BoyBoy! with Hirokazu Ando
2016 BoxBoxBoy!
Kirby: Planet Robobot
2017 Bye-Bye BoxBoy!
Team Kirby Clash Deluxe
Kirby's Blowout Blast
2018 Kirby Star Allies with Hirokazu Ando and Yuuta Ogasawara
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate supervisor
2019 BoxBoy! + BoxGirl! with Hirokazu Ando and Yuuta Ogasawara
Super Kirby Clash with Kiyoshi Hazemoto, Hirokazu Ando and Tadashi Ikegami
2020 Kirby Fighters 2 with Kiyoshi Hazemoto, Hirokazu Ando and Yuki Shimooka
2022 Kirby and the Forgotten Land with various others[lower-alpha 1]
Kirby's Dream Buffet with various others[lower-alpha 2]
2023 Kirby's Return to Dream Land Deluxe with various others[lower-alpha 3]

Other

Year Title Notes
2002 Kirby: Right Back at Ya! (season 2) with various others[lower-alpha 4]
2016 Kirby Café with Hirokazu Ando, Megumi Ohara, and Shogo Sakai
2019 Kirby Café (chapter 4) with various others[lower-alpha 5]

Footnotes

Notes

  1. Hirokazu Ando, Yuuta Ogasawara, Yuki Shimooka, and Tadashi Ikegami
  2. Shogo Sakai, Hirokazu Ando, Megumi Ohara, and Yuki Shimooka
  3. Hirokazu Ando, Yuki Shimooka, Kiyoshi Hazemoto, and Yuki Kato
  4. Akira Miyagawa, Hayata Akashi, Hirokazu Ando, Shogo Sakai, and Tadashi Ikegami
  5. Hirokazu Ando, Yuuta Ogasawara, Megumi Ohara, Shogo Sakai, and Yuki Shimooka

References

  1. Greening, Chris (February 7, 2017). "BoxBoy album features chiptunes from Kirby composers". Video Game Music Online.
  2. "Keyboard Magazine 2017 SUMMER". Ritto Music. 2017. pp. 55, 56, 59.
  3. Kirby 25th Anniversary Orchestra Concert (in Japanese). Nintendo. 2017.
  4. Iwata, Satoru (2010). "5. Surprising and Humorous Sound". Nintendo.
  5. "『星のカービィ スターアライズ オリジナルサウンドトラック』特設サイト". HAL Laboratory. 2019.
  6. "イベント直前PV『星のカービィ 30周年記念ミュージックフェス / Kirby 30th Anniversary Music Fest.』". YouTube. August 11, 2022.
  7. "カービィ30thフェス レポート後編". Nintendo Dream WEB (in Japanese). December 12, 2022.
  8. "『星のカービィ』シリーズを手がけた石川淳&安藤浩和(HAL研究所)に話を聞く!|キーボード・マガジン 2017年7月号 SUMMERより". Rittor Music (in Japanese).
  9. King, Darryn (June 20, 2018). "The Music Of Kirby: Still Tickling Gamers Pink". Forbes.
  10. "Interview with everyone's favorite: Maxo". Alt Citizen. July 2014.
  11. Robinson, Andy (April 4, 2022). "An orchestra's Kirby cover song just won a Grammy". Video Games Chronicle.
  12. Moyse, Chris (April 5, 2022). "Kirby has become Nintendo's first Grammy Award winner". Destructoid.
  13. Masahiro Sakurai [@Sora_Sakurai] (April 4, 2022). "そんなことありえるの?! びっくりです。" (Tweet) (in Japanese) via Twitter.
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