Yoko Shimomura

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yoko Shimomura (下村 陽子 Shimomura Yōko?, born October 19, 1967) is a Japanese composer and musician best known for her soundtracks for various video games. See video game music.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Yoko Shimomura was born in Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. Her parents enrolled her in piano lessons when she was five years old. She took quickly to the instrument, and she often pretended to be composing her own music by playing the piano randomly.

After high school, she enrolled as a piano major in Osaka Music University. Upon graduation, Shimomura intended to become a piano instructor. She had been a video gamer for many years, though, so on a lark, she sent some samples of her work to various video game companies. Capcom invited her in for an audition and interview, and she was offered a job there. Her family and instructors were dismayed with her change in focus (video-game music was still not mainstream in Japan at the time), but Shimomura accepted the job at Capcom. She was a member of Capcom's in-house jazz band Alph Lyla, and composed the soundtrack of Street Fighter II.

In 1993, Shimomura transferred to another game company, Squaresoft (now Square Enix). Her first project at the company was the score for the role-playing game (RPG) Live A Live in 1994. After this, she was paired with more experienced composers for a time. For example, she teamed with Noriko Matsueda on the strategy/RPG Front Mission in 1995. In 1996, she composed and arranged (from Koji Kondo's Mario series music, as well as three tracks from Final Fantasy IV by Nobuo Uematsu), the music to Super Mario RPG.

In 1998, she went solo once again for the soundtrack to the RPG Parasite Eve (video game). One of her most major works was achieved in 1999 with Legend of Mana, a follow up to the beloved Seiken Densetsu series. The score to Legend of Mana showed a high range of breadth and depth to her music, and though the game met with polarized sentiments, the music can be regarded as classic.

In 2002, Yoko Shimomura left Square to work as a freelancer. One of her first projects as an independent was to compose the soundtrack to Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga (a semi-sequel to Super Mario RPG and Paper Mario) for Game Boy Advance.

Shimomura’s most notable recent score is for Kingdom Hearts II (2005), the sequel to the first joint Square/Disney venture that features Disney characters in an action/RPG environment. She also composed the score to the game's predecessors, Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories and Kingdom Hearts. Shimomura was initially apprehensive about the Kingdom Hearts project, skeptical that she could successfully pull it off. However, her work on the game (which became a best-seller) went on to win critical acclaim and is often cited as her finest accomplishment to date.

In March of 2008, Yoko Shimomura's best works compilation album Drammatica was released containing her compositions from Kingdom Hearts and other games in full orchestrated score. It includes music from Final Fantasy Versus XIII, Live A Live, Kingdom Hearts, Front Mission, Legend of Mana, and Heroes of Mana.[1] In an interview with Music4Games regarding the project, Shimomura commented that with the sheet music generated for the project, she'd be interseted in pursuing a live performance of Drammatica for fans if the opportunity arose.[2]

[edit] Video game soundtracks (incomplete)

[edit] Other works

[edit] References

[edit] External links