Akira Yamaoka

Japanese composer and sound designer (born 1968) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Akira Yamaoka (山岡 晃, Yamaoka Akira; born February 6, 1968) is a Japanese composer and sound designer. He has scored almost every installment of Konami's horror video game series Silent Hill since 1999, also producing some of the entries and composing for three film adaptations. He has been the sound director at Grasshopper Manufacture since 2010 and has served as director and sound designer at Supertrick Games since 2018.

Born (1968-02-06) February 6, 1968 (age 58)
Niigata, Japan
Occupations
  • Composer
  • sound designer
  • producer
  • guitarist
Yearsactive1991–present
SpouseTamu Murata
Quick facts Born, Occupations ...
Akira Yamaoka
山岡 晃
Yamaoka in March 2010
Born (1968-02-06) February 6, 1968 (age 58)
Niigata, Japan
Occupations
  • Composer
  • sound designer
  • producer
  • guitarist
Years active1991–present
SpouseTamu Murata
Musical career
Genres
InstrumentGuitar
Websiteakirayamaoka.jp
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Early life

Akira Yamaoka was born in Niigata on February 6, 1968. He sought to become a designer, but instead became a musician whilst studying product design and interior design at Tokyo Art College.[1][2]

Career

Yamaoka joined Konami on September 21, 1993.[3][better source needed] He immediately began to work on the games Contra: Hard Corps, Sparkster, and Sparkster: Rocket Knight Adventures 2. Shortly thereafter, he worked on the music for the PC Engine and Sega CD versions of Snatcher.

When Konami began searching for a musician to compose the score for Silent Hill, Yamaoka volunteered because he thought he was the only one capable of making the soundtrack.[1] Although initially hired as a composer, he soon became involved in the game's overall sound design.[4] He later named Silent Hill 2 as his favorite of his own soundtracks.[5]

On December 2, 2009, it was announced that Yamaoka was leaving Konami.[6][7] On February 3, 2010, he joined Grasshopper Manufacture and began working with Goichi Suda and Shinji Mikami on their action game Shadows of the Damned.[8] He was first appointed to the role of chief sound officer at Grasshopper, but became involved in aspects of game production as well.[9]

On August 10, 2012, Yamaoka announced he would be releasing a second solo album in late 2012 that would be "different from the usual Silent Hill music".[10] On October 31, he announced that the new three-track Spanish-language EP Revolución would premiere at V-CON during a live performance.[11] In 2014, he expressed interest in returning as a composer for Silent Hills, although the project was later cancelled.[4]

From late October to early November 2015, Yamaoka and his band travelled to the United Kingdom for their Silent Hill Live tour, during which they performed songs from the Silent Hill series at venues in Brighton, Bristol, Cardiff, Glasgow, London, Manchester, and Southampton.[12][13] In July 2016, he performed live at the BitSummit 4th indie game festival in Kyoto.[14]

Style and influences

Yamaoka has named Suda51 as his favorite game creator and No More Heroes (2007) as his favorite video game.[15] He has also named Dario Argento's Suspiria (1977) as his favorite film.[16]

In July 2010, Yamaoka was invited by the website Nintendo Life to curate a short playlist for a new series exploring "the musical tastes of notable video game creators and figures".[17] His playlist consisted of "Moon Over Moscow" by Visage, "Der Mussolini" by Deutsch Amerikanische Freundschaft, "Amber" by Craig Armstrong, "Moments in Love" by Art of Noise, and "The Ecstasy of Gold" by Ennio Morricone.[17] He further cited "Moon Over Moscow" as the earliest song that made him want to pursue music,[1] and revealed that he wanted "The Ecstasy of Gold" to be played at his funeral.[17]

When asked in February 2014 which other artists influenced him, Yamaoka cited Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails as his "main inspiration, both performing and in music style".[10] He later said that his work on Silent Hill was directly influenced by Reznor, composer Angelo Badalamenti's work with filmmaker David Lynch (especially Twin Peaks), and the more atmospheric songs by Depeche Mode and Metallica.[1]

On the topic of whether his studies at Tokyo Art College helped him in his musical career, Yamaoka explained, "At that time, Mick Karn of Japan, Steve Strange of Visage, and a lot of other musicians combined the notions of art and music with their own new style. I got really influenced by that. Therefore, every time I write songs, I try to combine art and music."[1] He has also stated that he derives much of his influence from baroque styles common throughout the 18th century.[1]

Personal life

Yamaoka is married to fellow musician Ai "Tamu" Murata, best known as the drummer of the heavy metal band Nemophila. They have two daughters together.[18]

In March 2011, Yamaoka auctioned off some of his musical instruments to raise funds for charity after the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.[5]

Works

Video games

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Notes
1991 Smart Ball with Yasuhiko Fukuda and Manabu Saito
1994 Contra: Hard Corps with several others
Sparkster with several others
Sparkster: Rocket Knight Adventures 2 with Michiru Yamane
Snatcher PC Engine version, Sega CD version, PlayStation version, Sega Saturn version
1996 Gradius Deluxe Pack with Miki Higashino, Kiyohiko Yamane, and Motoaki Furukawa
Ganbare Goemon: Uchū Kaizoku Akogingu with several others
Road Rage/Speed King PlayStation version
Lightning Legend: Daigo no Daibouken "Spring's Undersea Walking Hurricane (Rankerk Hatred)"
1997 Moon: Remix RPG Adventure "Tears of Machine" and "TILT"
International Superstar Soccer Pro 98 with several others
Nagano Winter Olympics '98 with Soshiro Hokkai and Keiko Fukami
1998 Poy Poy 2
NBA In The Zone '98 with Yuichi Asami, Ryuichi Inoue, and Nobuhiko Matsufuji
Kensei: Sacred Fist with Kyoran Suzuki and Norikazu Miura
1999 Silent Hill
ISS Pro Evolution with Shinji Enomoto, Kosuke Soeda, and Hideki Kasai
1999–2012 Bemani series
2000 Gradius III and IV
ESPN MLS GameNight with Shinji Enomoto, Kosuke Soeda, and Hideki Kasai
2001 Silent Hill 2[19]
2002 Contra: Shattered Soldier with Sota Fujimori
2003 Silent Hill 3[19]
2004 Rumble Roses with several others
Silent Hill 4: The Room[19]
2006 Rumble Roses XX with several others
2007 Silent Hill: The Arcade with Masayuki Maruyama and Jun Ito
Silent Hill: Origins[20]
Silent Hill: The Escape
2008 Silent Hill: Homecoming
Otomedius Gorgeous! arrangements
2009 Silent Hill: Shattered Memories[21]
2010 No More Heroes 2: Desperate Struggle with several others
2011 Shadows of the Damned
Rebuild of Evangelion: Sound Impact arrangements
2012 Sine Mora
Liberation Maiden
Lollipop Chainsaw music director
Silent Hill: Book of Memories guitarist on "Love Psalm (Book of Memories)"
Black Knight Sword
2013 Rotolla
Killer Is Dead music director
2014 Ranko Tsukigime's Longest Day
Murasaki Baby "Neeko"
2015 Persona 4: Dancing All Night "Time To Make History" remix
2016 Puzzle & Dragons X[22] with Kenji Ito, Yuzo Koshiro, and Keigo Ozaki
The Silver Case[23] arrangements, "WHITEOUT"
Let It Die music director
2017 Astro Boy: Edge of Time[24]
World of Tanks "Battle in Japan" with Andrius Klimka[25]
2018 The 25th Ward: The Silver Case[26] with Baiyon, Erika Ito, and Masafumi Takada
2020 Dead by Daylight Chapter XVI: Silent Hill[27]
Ninjala with several others
World of Tanks "Mirny-13 – Hangar Theme" with Aleksandr Khilko and Aleksey Vanchuk[28]
2021 The Medium with Arkadiusz Reikowski[29]
2022 Deathverse: Let It Die[30]
2023 Decarnation[31]
Stray Souls[32]
2024 Silent Hill: The Short Message
Silent Hill 2 Remake
Slitterhead[33]
2025 Silent Hill f with Kensuke Inage, Dai, and Koichi "Xaki" Sakita
Let It Die: Inferno[34] Sound Director
Total Chaos[35] with several others; theme and end credits
2026 Pathologic 3 composer of an original track[36]
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Films

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Notes
2006 Silent Hill with Jeff Danna, also executive producer
2011 Julia X "Julia's Wish"
2012 Silent Hill: Revelation with Jeff Danna
2014 Patema Inverted sound director
2017 Kuso[37] with Flying Lotus, Aphex Twin, Thundercat, and various others
2026 Return to Silent Hill[38] also executive producer
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Anime/television

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Notes
2022 Cyberpunk: Edgerunners Anime series based on Cyberpunk 2077[39]
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Other

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Notes
2006 iFuturelist
2011 "Ex Animo" by Play for Japan: The Album with various others
Sdatcher An episodic radio drama prequel of Sdatcher
2012 Revolución[citation needed]
"Rinkaku (Eternal Slumber Mix)" by Dir En Grey[citation needed]
2013 "Rose Cat" by World 1-2 with various others
2014 "Sustain the Untruth (Remix)" by Dir En Grey[citation needed]
2016 Enn Mo Takenawa "Yuigon Zakura"
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Notes

References

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