Blog,bsmasa,jp -
The blog served as a digital museum for the specific jingles that play before a train arrives. For years, the author meticulously cataloged these sounds—from the seaside chimes of Yokosuka-Chuo to the bustling tones of Shinagawa—ensuring that even as stations modernized and melodies changed, the old sounds were never forgotten.
was a Japanese personal blog primarily active in the late 2000s and early 2010s that specialized in detailed documentation of train station melodies and railway operations .
While other commuters were frustrated by delays, they were filming a rare sight: a Keikyu 800 series train acting as an emergency snowplow, carrying a dozen workers to clear the tracks toward Uraga. blog,bsmasa,jp
The site was frequently cited by Japanese railway enthusiasts on platforms like Niconico for its technical accuracy regarding the "train approach melodies" (reisha sekkyo melody) of lines like the Keikyu Main Line .
Like many specialized blogs of that era, the site eventually went quiet, leaving behind a trail of links in the "my lists" of train fans and archival snippets that still help people identify the music of their daily commute. The blog served as a digital museum for
6/14 副都心線(後編)+西武ダイヤ改正 | Railway Land - SKT-Lab
The digital footprint of blog.bsmasa.jp tells a story of a dedicated "Melody Hunter" in the heart of Tokyo's transit web. While other commuters were frustrated by delays, they
On a freezing morning in February 2014, while most of Tokyo hunkered down during a massive snowstorm, the author behind bsmasa stood on the platform at Kanazawa-Bunko Station .
