


It’s about time for Atlus go back and give Persona 1 and 2 the same treatment. I loved Persona 4: Dancing All Night, so much that I platinumed the game, and will surely do the same with Persona 3 Dancing Moon Light / Persona 5 Dancing Star Night. You can grab a copy here “PSX music patch by Canzah” For anyone else who wants to play the remake on PSP, a fan on Reddit released a patch to bring back the original PlayStation music. The muted instruments are unable to capture the tone and atmosphere created by of the original tracks. Many of the remixes songs sound like they would perfectly hit among his later work with Persona, yet they sound out of place here. As with most Persona songs, compositions tend to use instrumental combinations which shouldn’t work, yet somehow fit perfectly within the context of the Megami Tensei universe, such as the bass and piano in Tsuchiya’s Reiji track. Bass is certainly not the type of leading instrument you generally see video game music, so his work has a unique sound even among all the other tracks. Of the four composers, Kenichi Tsuchiya contributed the most tracks on the soundtrack with his bass heavy compositions. While some might say the game has aged rather poorly, It’s safe to say that the music continues to stand out to this day. The composers behind Persona’s sublime soundtrack were Kenichi Tsuchiya, Hidehito Aoki, Misaki Okibe, and Shoji Meguro. It would be one of the first Megami Tensei games to hit American shores, under the name Revelations: Persona.

It was a spinoff of the Megami Tensei series and the first in the Persona series. Megami Ibunroku Persona was developed by Atlus and released for the PlayStation on September 20, 1996.
