Yuzo Koshiro - A Life in Music
1984 Falcom debut → Ys → Sega → Ancient Corp → Streets of Rage trilogy → Etrian Odyssey → SoR4
Born
Yuzo Koshiro is born on 12 December 1967 in Japan. He shows an early aptitude for music and begins playing piano as a child, developing the formal grounding that would later inform his compositional discipline.
Nihon Falcom - Professional Debut
Aged 16–17, Koshiro begins composing professionally for Nihon Falcom, one of Japan's leading RPG developers. His sister Ayano Koshiro joins Falcom during the same period as a graphic artist. Koshiro's early Falcom work includes contributions to Dragon Slayer II: Xanadu (1985), demonstrating early mastery of the PC-88's FM synthesis capabilities.
Ys I: Ancient Ys Vanished
Ys I: Ancient Ys Vanished (PC-88) establishes Koshiro as a major voice in Japanese game music. The score is celebrated for its melodic sophistication and its extraordinary exploitation of the OPN FM synthesis chip. The Falcom Sound Team JDK collaboration demonstrates that game music can have genuine compositional ambition - not merely functional background texture.
Ys II: The Final Chapter
The companion score to Ys I expands the musical world of the series. The Ys I & II CD-ROM² release for the TurboGrafx-16 in 1989 brings both scores to international audiences through PCM audio - widely considered the definitive version and one of the first great game soundtracks to achieve recognition beyond Japan.
Sega and the Mega Drive - Revenge of Shinobi
Koshiro composes the soundtrack for Revenge of Shinobi (The Super Shinobi) for the Sega Mega Drive. The score is a landmark for the YM2612 FM chip - demonstrating its expressive range through dense layering and rhythmic sophistication. Some tracks incorporated samples that were later revised in re-releases, but the original score remains highly regarded.
Ancient Corp Founded & ActRaiser
Yuzo and Ayano Koshiro co-found Ancient Corp (株式会社エインシャント) as their primary development vehicle. In the same year, Koshiro composes the score for ActRaiser (SNES, Quintet/Enix) - a sweeping orchestral work for the SPC700 chip that stands in dramatic contrast to his electronic Mega Drive work, demonstrating extraordinary compositional range.
Streets of Rage
The first Streets of Rage (Bare Knuckle) soundtrack establishes the sonic identity of the series: techno-influenced, club-ready, and technically impressive on the YM2612. Ayano Koshiro provides art direction and pixel art for the game, beginning the full-family Ancient Corp collaboration with Sega.
Streets of Rage 2 - The Masterpiece
Streets of Rage 2 (Bare Knuckle II) for the Mega Drive. Widely regarded as Koshiro's masterpiece and one of the greatest game soundtracks ever produced. The score blends techno, house, and jungle in a way unprecedented on the platform. Koshiro composed it using a custom sequencer he built himself and was listening to contemporary European club music while writing it. The result is a soundtrack that sounds as if it belongs in a 1992 rave, yet was somehow coaxed from a 16-bit FM chip.
Streets of Rage 3 & Beyond Oasis
Streets of Rage 3 (Bare Knuckle III) is co-composed by Koshiro and Motohiro Kawashima, pushing the SoR sound in more experimental directions. In the same year, Koshiro composes Beyond Oasis (The Story of Thor) for the Mega Drive, published by Sega - directed by Ayano Koshiro, making it a fully family-produced title.
Mid-Career and Continuing Work
Koshiro continues composing for Ancient Corp projects and licensing work through the late 1990s and early 2000s, contributing to various titles across platforms while maintaining the studio's output.
Etrian Odyssey - Return to the Spotlight
Etrian Odyssey (Atlus, Nintendo DS) marks Koshiro's return to high-profile prominence. The score draws on progressive rock and orchestral elements while retaining his distinctive melodic voice. The series produces numerous sequels with Koshiro as lead or contributing composer through to the present day.
Streets of Rage 4
Streets of Rage 4 (Dotemu, Lizardcube, Guard Crush Games) features Koshiro as a contributing composer alongside Olivier Deriviere and others. He contributes original tracks using modern production tools while incorporating Mega Drive-era aesthetic sensibilities - a self-conscious return to the neon-lit streets he defined thirty years earlier. The release is accompanied by extensive interviews discussing both his modern workflow and retrospective views on the original trilogy.
Ancient Corp - Active
Ancient Corp remains active as of 2024, with Yuzo Koshiro continuing to compose for modern titles. The company's website (ancient.co.jp) documents ongoing work. Koshiro's influence on game music composition - particularly FM synthesis technique and the intersection of club music and game scoring - remains a reference point for contemporary composers.