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Akira Yamaoka (山岡 晃, Yamaoka Akira, born February 6, 1968) is a Japanese composer and music producer. He is best known for composing music for several video games in the Silent Hill series by Konami, among other games. Yamaoka also worked as a producer on the series, as well as composing for the Silent Hill film and its sequel.
IFuturelist (stylized as iFUTURELIST and pronounced "I, futurist") is the first original album by Japanese game designer Akira Yamaoka, well known for his work on the Silent Hill and Bemani series. The tone of the album is decidedly electronic , tending more towards his work in the Bemani series, although there are a few songs similar to those ...
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Akira Yamaoka: [laughs] I'm actually really busy with having interviews and I did a session, so I was busy with preparation for that. So, I didn't have much chance to look at a lot of sessions yet ...
Kuso depicts a series of four surreal vignettes about the mutated survivors of an earthquake that has destroyed Los Angeles. The vignettes are broken up throughout the film by animations, television static, and news reporters reporting on the earthquake; the news report is initially interrupted by Busdriver, who performs a jazz-spoken word number describing the earthquake.
Akira Yamaoka played a major role in the Silent Hill film adaptation by overseeing and approving specific aspects of the movie throughout its production. Some of the original members (as led by Toyama, director of the first Silent Hill game) went on to create the Siren series, which has a similar atmosphere to the Silent Hill franchise.
Tea cakes have a tender, cake-like texture and are somewhere between a sugar cookie and a vanilla cake. The texture of tea cakes varies by the recipe, though the majority of them lean more in the ...
In the Bemani series of rhythm video games by Konami, it appears that seemingly hundreds of different musicians and groups perform the songs.However, in reality there exists only a core group of a few dozen Konami artists, performing under pseudonyms and forming new groups.