stayc main image

Hitmakers on Netflix: The Songwriting Show Everyone’s Talking About

July 27, 2025

There's a new voice in music reality, and it's about creating rather than competing. Hitmakers, a six-episode documentary series that follows 12 elite composers and producers as they work together...

Read more
stayc main image

JUST DROPPED! Miley Cyrus & Spotify Team Up for Exclusive Release ‘Billions Club Live With Miley Cyrus: A Concert Film’

July 27, 2025

Miley Cyrus performs an acoustic rendition of "Flowers" in her new EP.‍Spotify just gave Miley Cyrus fans the ultimate gift. The streaming platform has released...

Read more
stayc main image

Musicians Push Back on Dwindling Payments from Streaming Services

July 27, 2025

The rise of streaming platforms has fundamentally reshaped the music industry, offering convenience and accessibility to millions of listeners. However, for many musicians, the rapid growth of...

Read more
stayc main image

Olivia Rodrigo & Gracie Abrams Speak Out Against Starvation Crisis in Gaza: "We Can’t Stay Silent"

July 27, 2025

Olivia Rodrigo and Gracie Abrams are using their massive platforms to amplify the voices of those suffering in Gaza, where children are facing severe malnutrition due to the prolonged Israel-Hamas...

Read more
stayc main image

Canadian musicians remember Ozzy Osbourne

July 23, 2025

Following the news of Ozzy Osbourne’s passing, Canadian musicians have come forward with emotional tributes to the legendary "Prince of Darkness." Known for his pioneering work with Black Sabbath...

Read more
stayc main image

Demi's Long-Awaited Comeback with New Album Giving 'Main Character High-Energy Dance’

July 23, 2025

After famously holding a "funeral" for her pop sound in 2022, Demi Lovato is officially resurrecting her mainstream roots—with a pulsating dance-pop album that promises to be her "most celebratory"...

Read more
stayc main image

(New Update) Tragedy at Tomorrowland 2025: Woman Dies After Falling!

July 23, 2025

A 35-year-old Canadian woman has died after falling ill during the opening day of Tomorrowland 2025 in Boom, Belgium. The festival, already reeling from a massive main stage fire just days before...

Read more
stayc main image

When a Band That Never Existed Hits 1 Million Spotify Streams — Is Anyone Listening?

July 23, 2025

Consider Billie Eilish as a synthetic voice rather than the genuine one. Spotify recently entered the world of Velvet Sundown, a full AI project including music, graphics, and an algorithmically...

Read more
stayc main image

Resident blocks Beatles fans from Harrison's home

July 23, 2025

In a move to regain some peace and privacy, residents of Arnold Grove in Liverpool have put up a chain across their street, blocking access to the birthplace of Beatles legend George Harrison...

Read more
stayc main image

Pink Floyd Sells Their Rights to Sony and It’s the End of an Era

July 23, 2025

The legendary band that soundtracked a generation has officially handed over the keysThere are bands that make hits, and then there are bands that change the fabric of music forever. Pink Floyd has...

Read more
stayc main image

Red Velvet in North Korea: The K-pop Performance That Crossed the Border

July 23, 2025

When five women did what decades of politics couldn’t, bring two Koreas a little closerThere’s performing for fans, then there’s performing for history.In 2018, Red Velvet, one of K-pop’s most...

Read more
stayc main image

BLACKPINK at Coachella: The Moment That Made America Blink

July 23, 2025

When four girls from South Korea turned the California desert into a global stageThere are music moments… and then there are cultural reset moments. BLACKPINK performing at Coachella? Yeah. That...

Read more

Koji Kondo: Nintendo’s Melody Maestro

stayc main image

Photo Source: https://equipboard.com/pros/koji-kondo

What do popular video games franchises Super Mario, Legend of Zelda, and Star Fox all have in common? They were all produced and published by Nintendo, and the iconic music themes that you hear in the background were all created by one man, Koji Kondo. 

The game Super Mario Bros was released in 1985, and while it is considered one of Nintendo’s classics, its theme song has also carried over many years to today, as a beloved masterpiece.  How did it become what it is today? And what makes the music so memorable? 

Today, we will take a look at Koji Kondo’s music and why his music can last through time.

— 

Koji Kondo found a job at Nintendo through his school job placement board, and quickly signed up due to his love of making synthesizers and games. 

 

Before his legendary Super Mario theme, he worked on an arcade version of Punch-Out and Famicom BASIC, a keyboard that is attachable to a Famicom (the Japanese equivalent to the Nintendo Entertainment System). He created instructions to program popular Japanese music into the Famicom for a few games, before moving on to work on music for the Super Mario Bros video game. 

Super Mario Bros was his largest soundtrack, consisting of six tracks in total. His mission? To create music that didn’t sound like game music and something people had never heard before.

His first piece was an underwater music theme as he found it easier to imagine compared to land music. Kondo had to rewrite music for the land levels multiple times in order to find the perfect fit, to not only enhance gameplay but to also make the game more enjoyable as if it was all part of the experience. 

 

When one of the six tracks did not fit with the game dynamic or with the other pieces in the soundtrack, Kondo would go back to fix and rearrange, to ensure they complemented one another. He would then play the game himself to test out his own soundtracks and readjust based on the feedback he obtained from his own observations. 

His rewriting and rearranging was self-driven and part of his own ambition to make the music more memorable. In fact, the original main Super Mario Bros Overworld theme that we all came to love was edited and reformed the most out of all the soundtracks. 

Aside from his own creativity, he believed the company Nintendo played a part in the process too. Nintendo gave Kondo a lot of artistic freedom which enabled him to brainstorm many ideas, experiment with different sounds, and create new mixes each time. 

Kondo also noted how Nintendo’s process of producing and incorporating game music was different from some other companies at the time. 

“At Nintendo, we were able to start working on the sound of the game as soon as the rest of development was ramping up, so we'd be working in parallel to them.” - Koji Kondo on the difference between Nintendo’s game music process. 

Instead of working after the game was pretty much done, he and the team worked alongside the development team, which he believed contributed to musical success. This was both a benefit and an opportunity, as this allowed him to receive feedback from others and vice versa - being truly involved in the game’s production.

This extensive process wasn’t exclusive to just the Super Mario Bros series, but it was also transferred over for other games that he worked on. Starting with brainstorming ideas, to producing music, testing it out during gameplay, then going back to either edit or pass it to the development theme for implementation. 

Aside from the music production and implementation process, another fact that makes his video game music so memorable is partially due to the game’s popularity. However, the catchy, upbeat, and laidback theme is something that when one hears it from far away, would instantly recognize the Super Mario brand. 

This meant that the music and the game are inseparable. One couldn’t have gone without the other. With Nintendo expanding the Super Mario franchise every year, the music also follows. 

Despite the original music published in 1985, this theme is recognized by large audiences around the world thanks to Nintendo, and its fans’ who keep its legacy going. 

As Koji Kondo continues to work at Nintendo and oversee many of the newer games’ music, he is still very involved in music production, hoping to produce more outstanding and memorable tracks for future generations to hear.

Super mario theme:

Reference List 

https://www.wired.com/2007/03/vgl-koji-kondo-/

https://composercode.com/video-game-composers/#1_Koji_Kondo