76 comments

  • liampulles 4 minutes ago ago

    This led me down a rabbit hole, and I found a Japanese youtube channel with various departure music compilations: https://www.youtube.com/@Musashino-Rapid

  • kelnos 5 hours ago ago

    I was just in Japan a few months ago. It was my fourth visit, but the first for my partner, who found the different departure melodies notable and a really nice, cute, joyful thing. We made a point to listen to them whenever we were taking a train somewhere (which was of course very often, multiple times per day). In a way it feels like a funny thing to have near top-of-mind when it comes to memories of a trip that was packed with so many fun activities.

    Noticed the Okachimachi and Uguisudani (and several other) melodies are the same... is that correct, or is that a mistake on the site? I imagine it's hard to have a unique melody for every single station, so I expect there are some repeats throughout the transit system, but those two stations are so close together, it's a surprise that they'd be the same.

  • tkgally 7 hours ago ago

    A couple of months ago, riding the subway through Ginza Station for the first time in a while, I noticed that the door-closing melody was from the 1949 song Ginza Kankan Musume [1, 2]. I’m normally not very familiar with Japanese pop music, but I happen to have the song on a playlist I listen to together with my five-year-old grandson. It brought a smile to my face, as it’s a cheerful, very slightly risqué song from the early postwar period, when Japanese popular culture was enjoying renewed freedom. It was fun to hear it in a subway station in 2025.

    [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVYpdBcso3A

    [2] https://g.co/gemini/share/d584c36b99ab

    • ipnon 7 hours ago ago

      I don't know how to describe this, but Japanese enjoy putting a little bit of joy into every thing, like Ronald McDonald, but real.

      • reedf1 2 hours ago ago

        This probably has a philosophical underpinning in Animism, almost everything is anthropomorphized and given a "soul", personality. This has the affect of humanizing the most utilitarian parts of day-to-day life, commuting, a tax office, etc.

  • Philip-J-Fry an hour ago ago

    Why can't train operators in other countries take inspiration from things like this?

    It takes very little effort to implement. You could hold melody competitions for local communities. It is a nice thing which sparks joy and it's also something that people would want to travel and experience. You could hold a competition with local schools every year to develop a little 5 second melody.

    I just think of this from a UK point-of-view. It's like we completely forget what makes life interesting and everything has to be boring and mundane.

  • thomashop 9 hours ago ago

    I'm also a fan of the Yamanote Line.

    I made a psychedelic AI audio-visual collage inspired by it.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwUSzUvShqcaa

    I made field recordings during my last stay in Tokyo. From those, I made a song for each station of the Yamanote line, using the Jingle in the prompt. The visuals were made similarly.

    Used mainly Suno, Udio, Runway and Ableton Live.

    • hn111 2 hours ago ago

      Love it! Thanks for sharing

  • ekusiadadus 10 hours ago ago

    I listen to them every day.

    By the way, Ikebukuro’s melody isn’t this one anymore. Bic Camera, an electronics retailer, acquired Seibu, and now their song is played instead. https://youtu.be/9Emi-ZAnnlc?si=G8iazo945capvT5T&t=221

    It’s fun, isn’t it?

    • NalNezumi 4 hours ago ago

      Thia give me PTSD flashback. My first job out of high school was bic camera. Those melodies are fun at station because they only play it when train is coming, but full blasting it 24/7 (including rest room) makes your brain go numb.

      I go in to a trance state of corporate drone mode with a 営業スマイル(sales smile) and bendy-hip when I hear that tune

      • ehnto 3 hours ago ago

        I can imagine. I have the Yodobashi Camera jingle permenantly seared into my brain, and I am only a customer!

        When I worked at a gym, they played the same 10 or so songs all day every day. My heartrate rises when I hear them.

        • cbracken 44 minutes ago ago

          In my mind, Yamada Denki is the absolute worst. I bought a washing machine there in 2004 and, almost entirely due to the song, have been back maybe once since then. I remember at the time telling my wife I couldn't imagine what working there would do to a person.

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3aR-DnEcM8

    • rootnod3 9 hours ago ago

      Seibu had nothing to do with it. BicCamera started in Ikebukuro and was influential in building up the area. The jingle change is a campaign as BicCamera is doing a cooperation with the ward to build it out more. See [1]

      [1] https://dc.watch.impress.co.jp/docs/news/1573062.html

      • ekusiadadus 9 hours ago ago

        Ah, my mistake — Bic Camera didn’t acquire Seibu’s site. Seibu Ikebukuro was actually sold to Fortress, and then the property was transferred to Yodobashi Holdings, which is now planning the redevelopment. Bic Camera started in Ikebukuro, so it’s influential locally, but it wasn’t part of the acquisition.

        Sources:

        Wikipedia – Sogo & Seibu: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sogo_%26_Seibu SBbit – Seibu Ikebukuro redevelopment: https://www.sbbit.jp/article/cont1/144891

  • marsavar 10 hours ago ago

    My favourite, when I lived in Japan many years ago, was the Musashi-Koganei melody in Tokyo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cT2xTUPveCw

    It stood very much in contrast with all the other jingles, and I simply loved it.

    • ronyeh 8 hours ago ago

      Is that a fancy dancy version of Sakura Sakura (probably the most famous Japanese folk song)?

      https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=jqpFjsMtCb0

      • jrockway 5 hours ago ago

        It is.

        There are possibly-recognizable tunes throughout the system. Vivaldi's Spring comes to mind. I think at Ooimachi.

  • phantomathkg 8 hours ago ago

    What interesting is, the implementation is completely simple multi pages HTML5/CSS/Vanilla JavaScript. No framework. And it just, works.

    • 0_____0 5 hours ago ago

      Why...would this ever need a framework?

      I haven't done any website design since the early 2010s, what would a webdev even pull from the modern frameworks to achieve what this site is doing?

    • searls 8 hours ago ago

      Does it? On iPadOS 26 and even with Silent Mode disabled I still can't hear anything.

      • Shadowmist 7 hours ago ago

        Works fine for me on iPadOS 26. Click on the station names?

    • agos 2 hours ago ago

      it's really really buggy at least on Safari - text overlapping, spaces changing, etc. not exactly a poster child!

    • krenerd 8 hours ago ago

      good old days

  • kitallis 3 hours ago ago

    I made a similar flutter app (to test our main product) that plays the in-train announcement instead of the station melody.

    https://github.com/tramlinehq/ueno – it's downloadable from both app stores.

  • notpushkin 7 hours ago ago

    Nit: if you scroll down a lot, the stations at the top disappear (and get appended at the bottom, which makes sense – it’s a circular line after all!), but the space remains, so when you scroll back there’s a ton of empty space. Maybe remove that empty space after the scrolling has stopped? (Would be nice if you could scroll backwards, too!)

    And just to throw in a wild idea, it might be nice if the UI was a variation of the in-train display interface: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Series-E131-500_Insi...

    Naturally, it’s not as clean and sleek, but incorporating some elements of it might make this site look more authentic. Maybe something like this? https://files.catbox.moe/8cpp76.png

  • cedws 4 hours ago ago

    Leaving Japan next week after living in Tokyo for 6 months. This website is going to hit different very soon.

    ドアに注意下さい

    • fransje26 2 hours ago ago

      The best of luck with this next upcoming chapter of your life!

  • presentation 9 hours ago ago

    Other lines have some bangers too - used to live in Koenji and Asagaya, love those.

    https://youtu.be/wpw1MWH0AZI?si=ELfOL6QdgYCxHRyU

    https://youtu.be/4qFHVCMUrto?si=daYuWZWK_aQizbha

    • aa-jv 2 hours ago ago

      Lived in Asagaya for a year .. this sure brought back memories. I'd often walk to Koenji for the nightlife .. what a wonderful neighborhood. I remember the beautiful moments in summer when the school jingle played out over the region - that was another example of Japanese appreciation for aesthetics that I've carried with me all my life.

      Sad to see the recent development of Asagaya, though. Some classic old Japanese dwellings, now gone ..

  • djtango 5 hours ago ago

    I'll plug a youtuber who has played them live for fun:

    https://youtu.be/4V6Q5l2S7Co?si=k1M5F6WD3y05wIN2

    He also has done live reproductions of SNES music which are well worth a view

  • maybe_pablo 6 hours ago ago

    Very interesting! I made just yesterday a track with Yamanote's Shinagawa melody https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=haV1O8hqaaE (using Suno)

  • Zee2 12 hours ago ago

    Why don't I remember the Ueno station being an electronic office telephone ringtone...

    • modeless 11 hours ago ago

      Yeah I'm not sure about some of these. Some are duplicates too, is that accurate?

    • zelliot 9 hours ago ago

      Here is the correct Ueno melody: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IGaCcvBcDQc

      • kelnos 4 hours ago ago

        According to someone in the comments, the ringing thing did actually exist, but was replaced by this new tune in 2021.

    • ekianjo 10 hours ago ago

      When you get this, I believe the actual song is missing

  • bluecoconut 12 hours ago ago

    The first time I got off at and heard Komagome's tune I mistakenly thought it was some halloween special because it was late October at the time, and the song felt so distinct and unique.

  • austinallegro 12 hours ago ago

    This is up there with the Hard Off in store music. Magnificent!

    https://youtu.be/yFLYuKUKXoY

  • ajb 12 hours ago ago

    Ebisu has the "Harry Lime" theme from "The Third Man"? Wasn't expecting to recognise any... I wonder who was a fan of that film.

    • makeitdouble 12 hours ago ago

      Yes, it's that song.

      The station is named after a beer company that operates there, and they used their beer CM song for the station chime as well.

      • greydius 11 hours ago ago

        And the brewery got the name from Ebisu, a god who is believed to protect fishermen.

        • ekianjo 10 hours ago ago

          Yeah that's him you see on the Ebisu beer cans

  • kmorg 10 hours ago ago

    Unfortunately JR East has phasing out the custom melodies and have been standardizing the Yamanote line to always play the same tune. They are saying labor shortages are the reason since they need to press a physical button in the station in order to play the melody.

    • numpad0 3 hours ago ago

      These songs were composed by whoever available at equipment manufacturers, and copyright statuses were a bit of a mess. Now that the songs had become no small part of their branding and JRE would want to use them as they please, they're vertically integrating the process.

    • cbhl 9 hours ago ago

      Huh.

      https://kaisercougarconnection.com/2784/news/musical-trains-...

      My impression is that all of the Yamanote line stations are above ground -- I'd have expected it to be possible to have "one button plays the right sound at each station" if you used a standard phone's GPS to figure out which station you were at.

      • numpad0 3 hours ago ago

        Commuter trains always knows where they are by various means. Braking distances for trains is airplane scaled, and so knowing where they are programmatically with accuracy on both trains and at central control stations is important for safety.

      • kmorg 8 hours ago ago

        Its most likely not worth it to JR East to support it anymore since they have had a labor shortage recently.

      • justsomehnguy 5 hours ago ago

        > GPS

        Kids these days...

        Not only you don't need a GNSS to determine a fixed in place railroad station but actually you don't want to use a GNSS to do that.

        A simple radio beacon working on ~400MHz is more than enough to solve this difficult technical obstacle.

        Of course, this is totally ignoring what the trains do already know where they are because they need to display the current/next stations on the passenger information displays.

    • jrockway 5 hours ago ago

      I think it's pretty obvious that the goal is to get rid of the conductor position entirely. 50% less employees per train. Someone who sits at a desk all day definitely gets promoted for that one.

    • bapak 8 hours ago ago

      Huh? What does that even mean? The train already announces the train station name, so why does it need a specific button for the specific jingle? Does not sound right.

      • kmorg 6 hours ago ago

        Its not an automated operation, the train jingles play a few seconds before the conductor closes the door. Its played at different times depending on congestion on the train platform.

  • presentation 9 hours ago ago

    They changed the melodies for a lot of the stations recently, I’ve noticed.

  • haunter 11 hours ago ago

    I'm playing JR EAST Train Simulator with the Yamanote Line DLC and I need these station melodies asap as a mod somehow! So good

  • okonomiyaki3000 10 hours ago ago

    Takadanobaba has always been my favorite. The Tetsuwan Atom theme song.

  • 0xWTF 10 hours ago ago

    How do I get them as ringtones?

  • osu_Vanilla 7 hours ago ago
  • positron26 9 hours ago ago

    Awww. I hadn't been to Tokyo since Covid and the tunes I remember have all changed. Used to like the Shibuya one.

    I honestly need to pop up there to some Rust meetups. I always wind up discounting Tokyo, but I've met some smart people at the wrong times.

  • mc32 11 hours ago ago

    There used to be an OS X widget that had all the station melodies… It’s been a while.

  • ranger_danger 13 hours ago ago
    • bluecoconut 12 hours ago ago

      Interestingly this one seems it is from before 高輪ゲートウェイ (Takanawa Gateway) station which opened in 2020, but the numbering shows the gap (JY 25 -> JY 27). That led me to looking it up, and turns out that they introduced the numbering in 2016, and that already came pre-planned with the gap ready [1].

      [1] https://www.jreast.co.jp/press/2016/20160402.pdf

      • QuantumNomad_ 11 hours ago ago

        In the street where I grew up they had to renumber most of the houses one year because a row of new buildings were built, so everyone that was further down the street than the new houses had to have their numbers increased so that the new houses could be given numbers that were in order with where along the street they were built.

        I wonder if that sort of renumbering is common or not, and if Japan is better at planning that sort of thing also.

        I was too young at the time to know if this lead to any mail delivery issues, and I imagine the postal delivery service was made aware of the change. But I would think that even if they were notified it would sometimes be the case that if your house used to be say number 53 and now it’s 73 that mail that was intended for you ends up in the mail box of the house that used to be 33 and is now 53.

        Even if not at first then at least like 3 years later when some random company still has your old address on file and most other mail for everyone in the street is usually addressed to updated numbers.

        • makeitdouble 11 hours ago ago

          I'd assume most countries don't bother remapping when it comes to Street numbers ?

          France has a suffix system, so you if a buildings are added between 24 and 25 you'll get 24 bis, 24 ter etc.

          Japan doesn't care about the ordering in the first place, so a block added between 24 and 25 and 26 will be 32 without any issue.

        • modeless 11 hours ago ago

          In Japan house numbers are based on construction date rather than position along the street.

  • ranger_danger 13 hours ago ago

    How are these audio tracks not copyright violations?

    • Animats 12 hours ago ago

      Good question. The composer and artist of most of them in Japan is Minoru Mukaiya.[1] He's also the CEO of Ongakukan, which builds train simulators for both games and training.

      He's done over a hundred original station jingles.[2] Many of the Yamanote Line jingles are classics, though.

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minoru_Mukaiya

      [2] https://www.ongakukan.co.jp/en/business/music/#melody

      • ekianjo 10 hours ago ago

        Seems like he has nothing to do with the Yamanote line melodies though.

    • unleaded 11 hours ago ago

      You Wouldn't Download a Train Station

      • layer8 10 hours ago ago

        There is some joke involving audio tracks in here.

    • cammikebrown 12 hours ago ago

      Pffft, this is fair use

      • gruez 8 hours ago ago

        I know "fair use" gets bandied about quite frequently on youtube uploads, but offering full verbatim downloads of any work is highly unlikely to be considered fair use if a court were to rule on it. The only reason such sites are still up is that the rights holders don't care enough to sue.

        • kmeisthax 5 hours ago ago

          Yes, and this is also the real tragedy of automated copyright enforcement. All the funny grey area uses get marginalized.

      • hnthroay22312 4 hours ago ago

        not the same under Japanese's copyright law.