Omoinotake Releases My Hero Academia Anime Season 7 Ending Theme Music Video
The official YouTube channel for three-piece Japanese rock band Omoinotake began streaming a music video for their third CD single song "Tsubomi" ( Bud ) on May 18. The song is now featured as the ending theme for the latest seventh season of the My Hero Academia TV anime. Omoinotake "TsubomI" music video My Hero Academia TV anime Season 7 creditless ending movie Omoinotake was formed by Leo Fujii (vocal, keyboards), Hironoshin Tomita (drums), and Tomoaki Fukushima (bass) in 2012, and previously provided theme songs for Twittering Birds Never Fly – The Clouds Gather (2020), Blue Period (2021), and Horimiya: The Missing Pieces (2023). "Tsubomi" is their first theme song work for the My Hero Academia series. Takuro Okubo directed the music video for "Tsubomi" was directed by. Okubo also directed the music video for the band's previous 15th digital single song, "Ikuoku-kounen" ( Several hundred million light-years ) released in January 2024. The theme of the music video is "Collaboration of different things" such as "desolation and color," "artificiality and nature," and "salvation and fear." The clip is composed of a combination of scenes of the three members performing strongly in front of vivid and noisy colors in the devastated nature, sometimes ugly, sometimes beautiful, and a drama part in which the boys appear, which conveys a different worldview where hope and anguish coexist, something that has never been seen in Omoinotake's previous music videos. "Tsubomi" released digitally first on May 5, and its CD single will be available in Japan on June 12. Regular edition CD jacket Time-limited production edition CD jacket Omoinotake profile photo RELATED: My Hero Academia Season 7: Where to Watch, Trailers, Cast & More Following the sixth season that aired rom October 2022 to Match 2023, the latest seventh season of the My Hero Academia TV anime premiered in Japan on May 4, 2024, and streams on Crunchyroll for members in North America, Central America, South America, Europe, Africa, Oceania, the Middle East and CIS. Crunchyroll describes the My Hero Academia anime: Izuku has dreamt of being a hero all his life—a lofty goal for anyone, but especially challenging for a kid with no superpowers. That’s right, in a world where eighty percent of the population has some kind of super-powered “quirk,” Izuku was unlucky enough to be born completely normal. But that’s not enough to stop him from enrolling in one of the world’s most prestigious hero academies. Sources: Omoinotake official YouTube channel , Sony Music Labels press release © Omoinotake © Kohei Horikoshi/SHUEISHA, My Hero Academia Production Committee
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