芸能山城組 (Geinoh Yamashirogumi) is a Japanese musical collective founded on Ja… Read Full Bio ↴芸能山城組 (Geinoh Yamashirogumi) is a Japanese musical collective founded on January 19, 1974 by Shoji Yamashiro, consisting of hundreds of people from all walks of life: journalists, doctors, engineers, students, businessmen, etc. The array of talents and ideas available brings a peerless degree of creativity to their work, which is known for skillful fusion of traditional music with high technology. Their early albums were marked by a distinct world influence, with works such as Chi No Hibiki (Echoes of the Earth Sing East Europe) displaying Bulgarian and other eastern European singing styles and Africa Genjoh (The African Vision Singing) featuring African stylised chanting. Osore-zan - Dounokenbai, furthermore, offered a more psychedelic flavor with Krautrock influences and the introduction of guitar work.
Their breakthrough however came in the 1980s. MIDI digital synthesizers could not handle the tuning systems of traditional gamelan music, so the group had to start from scratch, teaching themselves how to program in order to modify their equipment. The album that followed, Ecophony Rinne (1986) was a new direction for the group, the first time they incorporated computer generated sounds into their work. It also marked the start of what's now known as the "trilogy". The success of this album brought them to the attention of Katsuhiro Otomo, who commissioned them to create what would become their most well-known work, the soundtrack of Akira. Ecophony Gaia, released in 1990, is the third album of the "trilogy" - Ecophony Rinne (1986) and Symphonic Suite AKIRA (1988) make up the respective first and second albums in the trilogy - and like Akira before it revels in experimentation, with traditional musical styles and modern instrumentation and synthesizers being used to create a wonderful fusion of styles that become almost impossible to clearly categorise.
Geinoh Yamashirogumi has faithfully and accurately reproduced over eighty different styles of traditional music and performances from around the world, but despite having performed internationally to a high degree of critical acclaim, they remain relatively unknown.
Their breakthrough however came in the 1980s. MIDI digital synthesizers could not handle the tuning systems of traditional gamelan music, so the group had to start from scratch, teaching themselves how to program in order to modify their equipment. The album that followed, Ecophony Rinne (1986) was a new direction for the group, the first time they incorporated computer generated sounds into their work. It also marked the start of what's now known as the "trilogy". The success of this album brought them to the attention of Katsuhiro Otomo, who commissioned them to create what would become their most well-known work, the soundtrack of Akira. Ecophony Gaia, released in 1990, is the third album of the "trilogy" - Ecophony Rinne (1986) and Symphonic Suite AKIRA (1988) make up the respective first and second albums in the trilogy - and like Akira before it revels in experimentation, with traditional musical styles and modern instrumentation and synthesizers being used to create a wonderful fusion of styles that become almost impossible to clearly categorise.
Geinoh Yamashirogumi has faithfully and accurately reproduced over eighty different styles of traditional music and performances from around the world, but despite having performed internationally to a high degree of critical acclaim, they remain relatively unknown.
Winds Over Neo-Tokyo
芸能山城組 Lyrics
We have lyrics for these tracks by 芸能山城組:
Kaneda 嵐 瓦礫 炎 破片 街 竜巻 力 光 ヤツら 祭り 空…
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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@gonkdroid9325
My personal favorite. The part where it drops is so intense.
@Mannex17
lead synth sound is the factory preset "Living Calliope" from the Roland D-50, which was used on many tracks for the Akira OST
@evilnigga444
I've been looking for the synths used by geinoh yamashirogumi for awhile now, you have no idea how much help this is. thanks!
@SaraKhan-by9jz
Does that include the DUN in 1:51?
@spankmaster
King
@Thonyyyprod34
Magnificiant
@apep.8555
We should go somewhere far away
@odakyuodakyu6650
小田原城?
@DuskLegend
this is fitting for the real world, iykyk
@OrbitalfilmsAU
i know this is a synth bit it sounds like an instrument and it's bugging me. A calliope maybe? i know chances are no one will see this and know what i mean but any help would be appreciated. I love this sound but have no idea what it is or how to recreate it. I have some synths that sound vaguely similar