Difference between revisions of "Sega Music Group"

From Sega Retro

m (Text replacement - "| tseries= |" to "|")
 
(7 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{CompanyBob
 
{{CompanyBob
| logo=
+
| logo=SegaMusicGroup logo.png
| width=
+
| founded=1994{{intref|Interview: David Javelosa (2008-07-02) by Sega-16}}{{intref|Interview: David Javelosa (2023-12-09) by Alexander Rojas}}
| founded=199x
 
 
| defunct=1997
 
| defunct=1997
 
| mergedwith=
 
| mergedwith=
 
| mergedinto=
 
| mergedinto=
 
| headquarters=San Francisco, California, United States
 
| headquarters=San Francisco, California, United States
 +
| prevdate=1994
 +
| prev=[[Sega Multimedia Studio]]
 
}}
 
}}
 
 
{{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was a short-lived publishing label set up by [[Sega of America]] as a department of [[SegaSoft]]{{intref|Press release: 1996-05-13: Sega Music Group Enters Into Distribution Deal With PolyGram}}, using video games as a means of exposure to music artists, as opposed to radio or television{{intref|Interview: Spencer Nilsen (2008-12-09) by Sega-16}}. Its "resident composer" was [[Spencer Nilsen]], and the group covered a handful of [[Sega Mega-CD]] and [[Sega Saturn]] games in the mid-1990s.
 
{{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was a short-lived publishing label set up by [[Sega of America]] as a department of [[SegaSoft]]{{intref|Press release: 1996-05-13: Sega Music Group Enters Into Distribution Deal With PolyGram}}, using video games as a means of exposure to music artists, as opposed to radio or television{{intref|Interview: Spencer Nilsen (2008-12-09) by Sega-16}}. Its "resident composer" was [[Spencer Nilsen]], and the group covered a handful of [[Sega Mega-CD]] and [[Sega Saturn]] games in the mid-1990s.
  
Sega Music Group was formed after management split the audio department of [[Sega Multimedia Studio]] into its own studio. It was housed in a two-storey 11,000-square-foot building in San Francisco, and had an Euphonix CS2000 mixing desk.
+
==History==
 +
Sega Music Group was formed after management split the audio department of [[Sega Multimedia Studio]] off in 1994{{intref|Interview: David Javelosa (2023-12-09) by Alexander Rojas}}, granting the new division a separate audio studio in the process. It was housed in a two-story 11,000-square-foot building in San Francisco, and had an Euphonix CS2000 mixing desk.
  
 
Sega Music Group is known to have signed one band; a rock group known as Bygone Dogs, who in turn wrote and performed several tracks in Sega video games. It is unknown exactly what happened to the label, though after Sega struck a deal with [[PolyGram]], the studio had little reason to exist{{intref|Interview: Spencer Nilsen (2008-12-09) by Sega-16}}. The studio was subsequently purchased by Nilsen and other ex-Sega members in 1997, becoming an asset of Nilsen's company, OffPlanet Entertainment{{magref|gamepro|111|34}}.
 
Sega Music Group is known to have signed one band; a rock group known as Bygone Dogs, who in turn wrote and performed several tracks in Sega video games. It is unknown exactly what happened to the label, though after Sega struck a deal with [[PolyGram]], the studio had little reason to exist{{intref|Interview: Spencer Nilsen (2008-12-09) by Sega-16}}. The studio was subsequently purchased by Nilsen and other ex-Sega members in 1997, becoming an asset of Nilsen's company, OffPlanet Entertainment{{magref|gamepro|111|34}}.
 +
 +
{{quote|Many felt that composition should have all been freelance. [[Spencer Nilsen|Spencer]] ended up getting corporate to support his idea of Sega Music, a record label for the game soundtracks. It never found a US market.|''[[David Javelosa]]''|ref={{intref|Interview: David Javelosa (2023-11-12) by Alexander Rojas}}}}
  
 
==Softography==
 
==Softography==
 +
{{CompanyHistoryAll|Sega Music Group}}
 +
[[Category:Use CompanyHistoryAll template]]
 +
 
===[[Mega-CD]]===
 
===[[Mega-CD]]===
 
*''[[Wild Woody]]'' (1995)
 
*''[[Wild Woody]]'' (1995)
Line 27: Line 33:
  
 
==Discography==
 
==Discography==
{{CompanyHistory|Sega Music Group|role=RecordLabel}}
+
{{Discography|Sega Music Group}}
 +
 
 +
==List of staff==
 +
{{StaffList|{{PAGENAME}}}}
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 12:43, 20 November 2024

https://segaretro.org/images/9/97/SegaMusicGroup_logo.png

SegaMusicGroup logo.png
Sega Music Group
Founded: 1994[1][2]
Defunct: 1997
Headquarters:
San Francisco, California, United States
1994

This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.


Sega Music Group was a short-lived publishing label set up by Sega of America as a department of SegaSoft[3], using video games as a means of exposure to music artists, as opposed to radio or television[4]. Its "resident composer" was Spencer Nilsen, and the group covered a handful of Sega Mega-CD and Sega Saturn games in the mid-1990s.

History

Sega Music Group was formed after management split the audio department of Sega Multimedia Studio off in 1994[2], granting the new division a separate audio studio in the process. It was housed in a two-story 11,000-square-foot building in San Francisco, and had an Euphonix CS2000 mixing desk.

Sega Music Group is known to have signed one band; a rock group known as Bygone Dogs, who in turn wrote and performed several tracks in Sega video games. It is unknown exactly what happened to the label, though after Sega struck a deal with PolyGram, the studio had little reason to exist[4]. The studio was subsequently purchased by Nilsen and other ex-Sega members in 1997, becoming an asset of Nilsen's company, OffPlanet Entertainment[5].


Many felt that composition should have all been freelance. Spencer ended up getting corporate to support his idea of Sega Music, a record label for the game soundtracks. It never found a US market.

David Javelosa[6]


Softography

Mega-CD

Saturn

Discography

List of staff

References

Overseas Sega companies, studios and subsidiaries
84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
CSK Sega Sammy Holdings
Sega of America
Sega Technical Institute
Sega Away Team
Sega Europe
Sega France Sega France
Sega Consumer Products S.A Sega Spain
Sega Vertriebsgesellschaft Sega Austria
Sega Interactive
Sega Deutschland Sega Germany
Sega Amusements Taiwan Sega Taiwan
Sega Denmark
Sega Belgium
Sega Netherlands
Sega Multimedia Studio
Sega Midwest Studio
Sega Amusements USA
Deith Leisure Sega Amusements Europe Sega Amusements International
Sega Total Solutions
Sega Prize Europe
Sega Music Group
SegaSoft
Sega Entertainment
Hyundai-Sega Entertainment
Sega Enterprises Israel
No Cliche
Sega of America Dreamcast
Sonic Team USA Sega Studios USA
Visual Concepts
Sega.com
Sega.com Asia
Sega of China
Sega Mobile Sega Networks Inc.
Sega Publishing Korea
The Creative Assembly
Sega (China) Network Technology Co., Ltd
Sega Benelux
Sega Studios San Francisco
Sports Interactive
Sega Studios Australia
Three Rings Design
Relic Entertainment
Atlus USA
Demiurge Studios
Go Game
Sonic Studio
Amplitude Studios
Sonic Team USA