This is a list of songs in Jet Set Radio Future. This page covers the albums that the songs appear on along with trivia relating to the songs as well. Unlike Jet Set Radio, the soundtrack for Jet Set Radio Future did not gain any additional songs, and strictly stuck with the songs included in the game.
Jet Set Radio Future Original Sound Tracks[]
- Songs featured on the soundtrack release for Jet Set Radio Future.
- Hideki Naganuma - "The Concept of Love" (3:42)
- Hideki Naganuma - "Fly Like a Butterfly" (3:21)
- Hideki Naganuma - "Funky Dealer" (3:32)
- Hideki Naganuma - "Shape Da Future" (3:48)
- Hideki Naganuma - "Teknopathetic" (3:45)
- Hideki Naganuma - "Oldies But Happies" (3:10)
- Hideki Naganuma - "Like It Like This Like That" (2:49)
- Guitar Vader - "I Love Love You (JSRF Version)" (4:35)
- Remixed by: Hideki Naganuma
- Guitar Vader - "Baby-T (JSRF Version)" (1:42)
- Hideki Naganuma - "Humming the Bassline (D.S.Remix)" (4:18)
- Remixed by: Deavid Soul
- Hideki Naganuma - "Rock It On (D.S.Remix)" (6:40)
- Remixed by: Deavid Soul
- Hideki Naganuma - "Sneakman (Toronto Mix)" (4:17)
- Remixed by: Toronto
- Richard Jacques - "What About the Future" (4:19)
- Richard Jacques - "Bokfresh" (3:34)
- Hideki Naganuma - "Let Mom Sleep (No Sleep Remix)" (3:35)
- Remixed by: Richard Jacques
- Hideki Naganuma - "That's Enough (B.B.Rights Mix)" (3:33)
- Remixed by: B.B. Rights
- Hideki Naganuma - "Sweet Soul Brother (B.B.Rights Mix)" (3:20)
- Remixed by: B.B. Rights
- Hideki Naganuma - "Grace & Glory (B.B.M.H.Mix)" (3:49)
- Remixed by: B.B. Rights & Mic Harrison
- Hideki Naganuma - "Jet Set Medley Future" (3:55)
- Hideki Naganuma - "Jet Set Station #2" (0:13)
- Featuring: Billy Brown
- Hideki Naganuma - "Jet Set Groove #3" (0:11)
- Hideki Naganuma - "Jet Set Groove #4" (0:11)
Licensed songs[]
- Songs that were licensed for the game.
- Bis - "Statement of Intent (Remix)"* (2:45)
- Remixed by: Jason Famous (Uncredited)
- The Latch Brothers - "Ill Victory Beat" (3:35)
- Russell Simins - "I'm Not a Model" (4:43)
- The Latch Brothers - "Me Likey the Poom Poom" (3:32)
- Cibo Matto - "Birthday Cake" (3:16)
- Bran Van 3000 - "The Answer (The Latch Brothers Remix)" (4:25)
- Additional: Summer Rose and Dizzy D (Vocals; Uncredited)
- Remixed by: The Latch Brothers
- The Latch Brothers - "Latch Brother Bounce" (4:34)
- The Latch Brothers - "Count Latchula" (3:59)
- Scapegoat Wax - "Aisle 10 (Hello Allison)"* (3:43)
- The Latch Brothers - "Koto Stomp" (3:23)
- The Prunes - "Rockin' the Mic (The Latch Brothers Remix)" (3:48)
- Additional: Freestyle (Vocals; Uncredited)
- Remixed by: The Latch Brothers
- BS 2000 - "The Scrappy (The Latch Brothers Remix)" (2:47)
- Remixed by: The Latch Brothers
Albums[]
Jet Set Radio Future Original Sound Tracks, the first soundtrack release for Jet Set Radio Future.
The Jet Set Radio Future Music Sampler, a pre-order bonus given to customers in the United States.
Jet Set Radio: Original Soundtrack with Bonus Tracks from JSRF, Jet Set Radio's second soundtrack release, containing seven songs from JSRF.
Jet Set Radio Future SEGA Original Tracks, the second and so far, final release of the game's soundtrack. Contains music only made in-house with the exception of four songs.
Trivia[]
Naming differences[]
- Songs with * are noted by being titled differently in the game or on official releases.
- "I Love Love You (Love Love Super Dimension Mix)" is referred to as "I Love Love You (JSRF Version)" on Jet Set Radio Future Original Sound Tracks.
- Despite it being referred to as the "(JSRF Version)" on the soundtrack release, the song is referred by its original name in the game.
- "Baby-T" is also titled as "Baby-T (JSRF Version)", but it is the same song from Guitar Vader's second studio album From Dusk.
- "Statement of Intent (Remix)" is titled as "Statement of Intent" in game.
- "Aisle 10 (Hello Allison)" is titled as "Aisle 10" in game and on the Jet Set Radio Future Music Sampler.
- "I Love Love You (Love Love Super Dimension Mix)" is referred to as "I Love Love You (JSRF Version)" on Jet Set Radio Future Original Sound Tracks.
Censorship[]
- "Birthday Cake" by Cibo Matto was censored in the game due to some of the lyrics having explicit language, drug references, and war references. Lines that were cut:
- "I don't give a flying fuck though".
- "We made a war with the Vietnamese".
- "We loved LSD, we died easily".
- "Birthday Cake" appeared uncensored in the prototype in Jet Set Radio Future.[1]
- "I'm Not a Model" by Russell Simins is also heavily edited in the game to the point where the song ends much earlier than intended.
- The intro to the song is cut and instead begins with the first drums.
- An entire verse about oral sex is also removed. However, said verse can be heard in the Jet Set Radio Future Music Sampler release of the song. The song also appears uncensored in the prototype of Jet Set Radio Future.[2]
Uncredited artists[]
- Jason Famous is the remixer of "Statement of Intent", his name is nowhere to be found in game.
- The MC on "Rockin' the Mic" from the Prunes, is Freestyle. He is not credited anywhere in the game nor is he mentioned on the Jet Set Radio Future Music Sampler.
- The vocalists that appear in the remix of "The Answer" by Bran Van 3000 are Summer Rose and Dizzy D. Just like the two aforementioned artists, they were also not credited in the game.
Soundtrack release differences[]
- "Jet Set Medley Future" and "Jet Set Station #2" were not included in the 2012 digital album Jet Set Radio Future SEGA Original Tracks album for unknown reasons.[3]
- Despite Richard Jacques' songs being made in-house for SEGA, the songs did not get released digitally for the Jet Set Radio Future SEGA Original Tracks album.
- Richard himself isn't sure why they were not included either.[4]
- Although the first soundtrack release for Jet Set Radio Future includes both Guitar Vader songs that appear in the game, SEGA has no ownership of them. All rights go to Berry Records and Sony Music Entertainment Japan (SMEJ).
Song reusage[]
- "The Concept of Love" would be included in the soundtrack to ESPN NFL Football, alongside the original versions of "Let Mom Sleep" and "Humming the Bassline". "Everybody Jump Around" was also featured in the game as well.
- Hideki Naganuma would go on to remix "The Concept of Love" and "Teknopathetic" in 2004 for SEGA's arcade-only game, Ollie King.
- He also composed the entire game's soundtrack as well.
- "Fly Like a Butterfly", "Jet Set Station #2", and "Jet Set Groove #3" would all appear in Sega Superstars Tennis.
- "Fly Like a Butterfly", "Jet Set Groove #3", "The Concept of Love", and "Funky Dealer" would also appear Sonic & Sega All-Stars Racing for most versions of the game.
- For the DS version of the game, "The Concept of Love", "Funky Dealer", and "Fly Like a Butterfly" were rearranged by Allister Brimble and Anthony Putson. The two would also rearrange both "Jet Set Groove #3" and "Jet Set Groove #4" for the DS version of the game, but would go unused as both songs are jingles and full-fledged sampled-based songs like Naganuma's other work from JSRF.
- The remixes of "Let Mom Sleep" and "Sneakman" would only appear in the console/PC versions of the game.
- "Let Mom Sleep (No Sleep Remix)" would also be reused in Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed under the name of "Course: Shibuya Downtown".
- "The Concept of Love", "Fly Like a Butterfly", and "Funky Dealer" would appear in the mobile game, Go Dance, along with the original version of "Let Mom Sleep".
General[]
- The version of "Statement of Intent" that appears in the game is the remixed version from Bis' compilation album, Intendo, which was released under Grand Royal back in 1998.
- The Latch Brothers remixes of "The Scrappy" and "The Answer" were never officially released.
- The Latch Brothers remix of "The Answer" only plays in the Tokyo Underground Sewage Facility and the Bottom Point of the Sewage Facility.
- Similar to "Moody's Shuffle" and the instrumental for "Improvise" in Jet Set Radio, "Ill Victory Beat" only plays in the cutscenes throughout Jet Set Radio Future's story mode.
- "Aisle 10" by Scapegoat Wax was featured in another game that was also an Xbox exclusive, titled Project Gotham Racing, which was released on November 15, 2001, 3 months before the release of JSRF.
- The game also featured "Set It Off" from Shuvel.
- The beta version of the game included the Madlib remix of "Aisle 10" and "Hit List" from Shuvel as well.
- On June 14, 2025, Richard Jacques would post his JSR collection, which included a disc of his works for JSRF. On that disc, an extended version of "What About the Future" was confirmed to exist.[5][6]
See also[]
References[]
- ↑ ガム (September 23, 2021). "JSRF Prototype - s_set_03a". YouTube. Retrieved on November 30, 2023.
- ↑ ガム (September 23, 2021). "JSRF Prototype - s_set_02a". YouTube. Retrieved on November 30, 2023.
- ↑ Hideki Naganuma (@Hideki_Naganuma) on Twitter (October 3, 2012). "@24wave はい。効果音追加はいいのですが、セガ著作権であると思われる、ラジオジングルのJet Set Station#1#2、Jet Set Medley及びJet Set Medley Futureが入っていないのが、少し謎ではあります。。。". Twitter. Retrieved on November 12, 2024.
- ↑ Richard Jacques (@Richard_Jacques) on Twitter (August 28, 2020). "I didn't know that and no not sure why. I have the Japanese CD release and they are on there, but they are quite hard to find now.". Twitter. Retrieved on April 11, 2023.
- ↑ Image of Richard Jacques' JSRF songs, which confirms the extended version of "What About the Future".
- ↑ Richard Jacques (@richardjacquescomposer) on Threads (June 14, 2025). "This weekend celebrates the 25th Anniversary of Jet Set Radio. It was an honour to be featured as a guest artist on the soundtrack to this truly iconic game. #JetSetRadio #EverybodyJumpAround". Threads. Retrieved on June 14, 2025.



