Product Name
Option 1 / Option 2 / Option 3
Weekly Delivery
Product Discount (-$0)
COUPON1 (-$0)
-
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
+
Remove
$0
$0
Success message won't be visible to user.
Error message won't be visible to user.
Success message won't be visible to user. Coupon title will be listed below if it's valid.
Invalid code
Coupon1
Coupon2
Subtotal
$0
Order Discount
-$0
COUPON2
-$0
Total
$0

Time Capsule's Kay Suzuki tells the story behind the latest VF release.

When Ecophony Rinne was first released in 1986, its ambitions exceeded the limitations of the formats available at the time. This new edition, half-speed mastered at Abbey Road, approaches the material with a different level of precision, focusing on the preservation of its extended high-frequency structure and hypersonic overtones.

To understand why that level of detail matters, you have to begin in the centre of Tokyo’s concrete landscape.

If you wander through the glass and steel canyons of West Shinjuku in midsummer, you may encounter a sound that feels out of place, yet fundamentally right. A rhythmic, multi-layered vocal barrage. A 16-beat interlocking pulse of “cha-cha-cha” vibrating through the pavement itself. This is the Kecak Festival, a five-decade tradition led by Geinoh Yamashirogumi, a group that exists at the improbable intersection of ancient ritual, cutting-edge neuroscience and the outer limits of audiophile fidelity.

For the dedicated crate-digger, Geinoh Yamashirogumi can feel like the final boss of Japanese discographies. Their records orbit the outer edges of ethnomusicology and experimental sound, resisting easy categorisation. Choir, communal experiment, scientific research institute.

At the heart of this sprawl is Shoji Yamashiro, a man who has lived a life without belonging to any single field. In the academic world, he is Dr. Tsutomu Oohashi, a celebrated scientist and professor who has received prestigious international honours across both the life sciences and cultural arts. He is the author of landmark texts, such as Sound and Civilization, which explore the deep links between sound environments and human civilization.

Yet, his musical authority is not merely that of a producer or a theorist. While studying microbiology at university, he was simultaneously a student of a master conductor, learning a precision-based method of Western conducting usually reserved for the elite echelons of the classical world. Using this rigorous training, he began his journey as a conductor for the Hato no Kai student choir in the 1960s, a period where he first began to question the limitations of Western choral traditions.

Yamashiro’s philosophy is built on a radical critique of Western modernism. He argues that our civilization’s obsession with specialisation has atrophied our "living brains," reducing our once-all-encompassing genetic potential to narrow, single-function silos. To combat this, he founded Geinoh Yamashirogumi in 1974 as a "multi-performance community" made up not of trained musicians, but of scientists, engineers, journalists and students. Their only qualification is their status as amateurs, people who "act, play, and enjoy" music as a primal, communal necessity rather than a career.

The group’s scope is staggering, a vast catalogue of over 80 distinct musical systems gathered from across the globe. They treat these traditions not as museum pieces, but as essential human information to be embodied. Their repertoire traces a wide arc along the Silk Road, moving from the vocal layers of Russia to the traditional sounds of Bengal. This deep dive began with their early mastery of Bulgarian polyphony, where they moved beyond the constraints of Western harmony to capture the complex, overtone-rich vocal qualities and dissonant harmonies that define that tradition.

In 1983, Yamashiro trekked 100 kilometres into the Ituri rainforest to live with the Mbuti Pygmies, an encounter he credits with completely reorganising his thinking. He discovered an improvised polyphony of such sophistication that it mirrored the Renaissance structures of Palestrina, yet it was achieved entirely without scores, rehearsals, or conductors.

This "primordial germination" of sound - an extremity of human achievement also explored by the academic / musician Francis Bebey and famously referenced by Herbie Hancock provided the opening movement and the spiritual core of the 1986 masterwork, Ecophony Rinne.

For many Western listeners, the gateway into this world was the 1988 cult anime masterpiece AKIRA. Yamashiro was given total creative freedom and an unlimited budget by director Katsuhiro Otomo to construct a "sonic architecture" for Neo-Tokyo. AKIRA took the "Ecophony" style of its predecessor and added modern electronic elements and Noh theatre vocals to create its iconic sound.

Ecophony Rinne remains the summit of human tradition reimagined. This isn't "world music" in the sense of a tourist’s souvenir. It is a meticulously researched reimagining of human tradition. When you listen to the album, you are hearing a community attempting to re-enact the "essential information" that once defined human life in the tropical rainforest. It is a four-part song cycle based on the eternal loops of birth, death, and reincarnation, featuring over 200 performers using everything from sampled Tibetan horns to thundering Japanese drums and synthesizers.

It was during the original release of Ecophony Rinne that Yamashiro made the discovery that would cement his legacy in audiophile circles: the Hypersonic Effect. While comparing the test pressings for the LP and the then-new CD format, Yamashiro was struck by a profound difference. Though the audible frequencies were identical, the CD felt "lifeless," while the vinyl remained "deeply satisfying". As a scientist, he began to measure the brain activity of listeners using EEGs and PET scans.

He discovered that sounds containing ultra-high frequencies, specifically those above 20kHz, trigger a significant increase in blood flow to the deep brain, including the thalamus and prefrontal cortex. These "inaudible" frequencies, which abound in the natural soundscapes of rainforests and in the overtones of traditional instruments like the Gamelan, actually strengthen alpha brainwaves and improve our physical well-being.

Standard CDs are historically capped at a sampling rate that limits the frequency response to 22.05kHz. Yamashiro argued that this effectively "starves" the brain of essential nutrients of sound, suggesting that our bodies receive sound not just through our ears, but through our entire skin surface, vibrating in sympathy with the environment.

To capture these frequencies, Yamashiro established Studio Terra, a temple of high-fidelity research. The studio features an AMEK 9098i console, which was customized by the founder Rupert Neve himself to achieve a frequency response reaching an astounding 200kHz. To translate these signals into air vibrations, Yamashiro developed original monitor speakers capable of playing back sound at that same 200kHz threshold.

While recreating such a setup in a consumer living room is a monumental task, the group encourages listeners to get as close as possible to this wide-bandwidth experience. Yamashiro’s team has tested the new test pressings and confirmed that the Hypersonic Audio is definitively captured in the grooves of this release.

Now, four decades since its inception, Time Capsule is revisiting Ecophony Rinne with a definitive reissue. This release is half-speed mastered at Abbey Road Studios by Miles Showell. In this process, both the master source and the cutting lathe are run at half their normal speed, giving the cutting stylus twice as much time and precision to carve the intricate high-frequency information into the lacquer. It is the most precise way to ensure the hypersonic overtones are preserved.

Listening to Geinoh Yamashirogumi is an act of unlearning our Western distinctions of genre and instead giving it our undivided attention. It is music built on ecological principles, where the listener is part of the ecosystem rather than a spectator.

In an era increasingly defined by the efficiency of AI and the isolation of digital consumption, the Yamashirogumi project feels more radical than ever. It is a reminder that music was once, and can be again, a primal force of kizuna (bonds), a way to sync our living brains to the pulse of the planet.

Pre-order Geinoh Yamashirogumi’s Ecophony Rinne via Time Capsule Records and The Vinyl Factory now.


More from The Vinyl Factory

Watch: Kay Suzuki on new VF release Geinoh Yamashirogumi’s Ecophony Rinne

OJAS Music label launches with VF vinyl release of Michael A. Muller & Otto A. Totland

VDS London: East London’s paradise for Japanese vinyl collectors

Subscribe to newsletter
By subscribing you agree to with our Privacy Policy.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.