[Machine Translation] Seiichi Yamamoto's "Uta Mono" origin album, Rashinban, is finally available on analog LP for the first time! Seiichi Yamamoto's second album, which has further deepened from its function as a singing band, is now available for the long-awaited analog release. His voice, which is as free of artifice as the spoken word, is assimilated into the songs themselves. If a pop song is a kind of mimicry, this album perfectly fulfills the role. You can't catch the outlines of the songs even if you strain your eyes. But that does not mean it is ambiguous. From "Suka," a song that shows his love for the Beach Boys, to "Acoustic," a folk song that would be rude to call it neo-acoustic, to the new wave "Cool Down," it is as if we are following Seiichi Yamamoto's itinerary as a listener, There is no drama in the nearly 10-minute long "Colors," nor is there a climax. But once you get caught up in the song, it will be stuck in your head forever. With obi.