Super Mario Bros.: Mario Syndrome: Difference between revisions

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
mNo edit summary
Line 74: Line 74:
==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*The arrangement of the Ground Theme heard on "Mario Syndrome" is similar to "Super Mario 2007," the arrangement used for [[Toy Time Galaxy]] in ''[[Super Mario Galaxy]]'' and [[Supermassive Galaxy]] in ''[[Super Mario Galaxy 2]]''.
*The arrangement of the Ground Theme heard on "Mario Syndrome" is similar to "Super Mario 2007," the arrangement used for [[Toy Time Galaxy]] in ''[[Super Mario Galaxy]]'' and [[Supermassive Galaxy]] in ''[[Super Mario Galaxy 2]]''.
*Although the sprite of [[Mario]] depicted on the front cover is similar to [[Super Mario (form)|Super Mario]], it actually recreates a transitional sprite seen for a single frame when [[Small Mario]] picks up a [[Super Mushroom]].<ref>Supper Mario Broth (December 13, 2017). [https://twitter.com/MarioBrothBlog/status/940978534822174725 The cover for Mario Syndrome, a 1986 official Super Mario Bros. remix album, depicts what appears to be a recolored and slightly edited version of the transitional sprite between Small Mario and Super Mario that can be seen for a single frame in Super Mario Bros.] ''Twitter''. Retrieved October 25, 2023.</ref>
*Although the sprite of [[Mario]] depicted on the front cover is similar to [[Super Mario (form)|Super Mario]], it actually recreates a transitional sprite seen for a single frame when [[Small Mario]] picks up a [[Super Mushroom]] or when powering down to Small Mario.<ref>Supper Mario Broth (December 13, 2017). [https://twitter.com/MarioBrothBlog/status/940978534822174725 The cover for Mario Syndrome, a 1986 official Super Mario Bros. remix album, depicts what appears to be a recolored and slightly edited version of the transitional sprite between Small Mario and Super Mario that can be seen for a single frame in Super Mario Bros.] ''Twitter''. Retrieved October 25, 2023.</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 18:15, November 12, 2023

Super Mario Bros.: Mario Syndrome
Front cover for Super Mario Bros.: Mario Syndrome
Composed by:
Koji Kondo
Original arrangements by Shunji Inoue and performed by Bonus21
Publisher(s) King Records
Release date Japan May 21, 1986
Media 12" single, cassette single
Track(s) 3
Length 15:11
Catalog number(s) K13A-748

Super Mario Bros.: Mario Syndrome is a novelty maxi-single by Bonus21, a group consisting of Takaki Funabashi, Hiroki Harada, Shunji Inoue, Yoshichika Kuriyama, Hiroyuki Tanaka, and Chikako Watabe. Released through King Records on May 21, 1986, the single is the band's only release.

Super Mario Bros.: Mario Syndrome features three tracks based on songs from Super Mario Bros.: "Mario Syndrome," a dance remix of the Ground Theme that interpolates "Super Star" during the chorus; "Mario Syndrome Re-Mix," a remixed version of the previous song; and "Princess Peach," a vocal rendition of "Ending." The pseudonymous Super Bubble Club is credited with producing the single and writing lyrics for all three songs.

Tracklist

Side One

# Japanese title Translated English title Source Length Audio sample Credits
1. マリオ・シンドローム Mario Syndrome Ground Theme (Super Mario Bros.) 6:04 File:Mariosyndrome1.wav Shunji Inoue (Arrangement)
Super Bubble Group (Lyrics)
Bonus21 (Performance)
Koji Kondo (Original Composition)

Side Two

# Japanese title Translated English title Source Length Audio sample Credits
1. マリオ・シンドローム(リミックス・バージョン) Mario Syndrome (Re-Mix Version) Ground Theme (Super Mario Bros.) 3:23 File:Mariosyndrome3.wav Shunji Inoue (Arrangement)
Super Bubble Group (Lyrics)
Bonus21 (Performance)
Koji Kondo (Original Composition)
2. 私はピーチ姫 Princess Peach Ending (Super Mario Bros.) 5:44

Personnel

Bonus21

  • Takaki Funabashi – Chorus
  • Hiroki Harada – Chorus
  • Shunji Inoue – Keyboards
  • Yoshichika Kuriyama – Synthesizer
  • Hiroyuki Tanaka – Bass
  • Chikako Watabe – Vocals

Production

  • Masaaki Saito – engineer
  • Fujo Sakai – director
  • Super Bubble Club – sound production
  • Hiroyuki Tsuji – assistant engineer
  • Yoshinobu Yamaguchi – sound advisor

Music credits

  • Koji Kondo – composition
  • Shunji Inoue – arrangement
  • Super Bubble Club – lyrics

Trivia

References

External links