Who made the music for Jet Set Radio?

Who made the music for Jet Set Radio?

Hideki Naganuma
Richard Jacques
Jet Set Radio/Composers
Hideki Naganuma (born May 16, 1972) is a Japanese composer and DJ who primarily does work for video games. Naganuma is best known for his score for the game Jet Set Radio and its sequel Jet Set Radio Future.

How many levels are in Jet Set Radio?

The game’s three chapters will take in five areas of both Tokyo and the fictitious Grind City, all visually overhauled, but still recognisable to fans. Key selectable characters Gum, Tab and Beat are also back, displaying their aggressive rude kid attitudes as though it were still 2000.

How much does Jet Set Radio Cost?

Original story: Graffiti-centric skate-’em-up Jet Set Radio now has firm release dates over its various platforms, publisher Sega has announced. The XBLA and Steam versions are set for 19th September for $9.99 or 800 Microsoft Points.

Who made the Sonic Rush Ost?

Sonic Rush Original Groove Rush is the official soundtrack album of Sonic Rush for the Nintendo DS. It was released on 23 November 2005 and published by Wave Master. All tracks on the album are composed and arranged by Hideki Naganuma with the exception of tracks 15, 23 and 24.

Who composed the sonic rush music?

Teruhiko Nakagawa
Sonic Rush/Composers

What is G stamina?

G-Stamina – How much spray damage the character can take in Tagger’s Tag battles. Graffiti – How fast the character can spray each graffiti point on a medium, large, and extra large tag.

Why was Jet Set Radio renamed?

Jet Set Radio was released in Japan on June 29, 2000. In North America, it was released on October 31 as Jet Grind Radio due to trademark problems for “Jet Set” in the United States at the time. The PAL version was released later on November 24 under the original name.

What games has Hideki Naganuma made music for?

History. Naganuma joined Sega in 1998. Examples of games he composed music for include Jet Set Radio Future, Ollie King, and Super Monkey Ball: Banana Blitz. In 2008 he left Sega, but has since contributed some music to a few more Sega games, such as Super Monkey Ball 3D.