Every Omoinotake Anime Song

Omoinotake skyrocketed to fame with their 2024 hit track “Ikuokukonen.” Overseas, the trio’s anime contributions have helped grow their fanbase internationally.

This article introduces every Omoinotake anime song featured in a TV series or movie.

RELATED: Discover Omoinotake

Hitorigoto – From The Apothecary Diaries

“Hitorigoto” (ひとりごと) is the second ending theme for season 2 of The Apothecary Diaries. This Omoinotake anime song was digitally released on April 5, 2025.

In their official comment, Omoinotake shared how they wondered what kind of song would suit the “tip of the arrow of emotions,” which shifts with every episode. As the story unfolds, the band created a “monologue” that can be heard in many different ways.

The band writes,Though the modern world and the world of The Apothecary Diaries have different values and views on life and death, I feel like I have created a song with a ‘universality’ that will never change.”

They conclude, “In a world full of sadness, one millimeter of hope, that I wish I could share with you.”

Tsubomi – From My Hero Academia

Digitally released on May 5, 2024, “Tsubomi” (蕾) is the first ending theme for My Hero Academia Season 7

As longtime fans of My Hero Academia, Omoinotake expressed joy in their official comment to contribute to the series.

The band noted how often they were moved by the heroes’ “care about others,” beginning with the protagonist Deku. 

While reflecting on the characters’ enduring empathy, they wrote “Tsubomi” to “never give up on understanding one another.” 

Happiness (Shiawase) – From Horimiya: The Missing Pieces

“Happiness,” also known as “Shiawase” (幸せ), is the opening theme for the anime series Horimiya: The Missing Pieces. This Omoinotake anime song was digitally released on July 1, 2023. 

Omoinotake crafted this song to capture the bittersweet nostalgia that defines Horimiya‘s world, where the emotions of its lovable characters intersect in heartfelt and often unspoken ways. 

Rather than simply creating a warm, gentle track, they share, in their official comment, that they sought to “depict the scenery and time that led to those feelings, and the inner thoughts that cannot be put into words.” 

Omoinotake hopes that this song will make each person “reflect on their own ‘happiness.’”

EVERBLUE – From Blue Period

“EVERBLUE” serves as the opening theme for the anime series Blue Period. Digitally released on October 1, 2021, this Omoinotake anime song brought more overseas recognition to the band’s name.

Reflecting on their journey in their official comment, the band believed they began as “three people without a single bit of ‘talent,'” navigating “years of trial and error” before finding themselves performing live on the streets of Shibuya—much like Yatora’s artistic awakening. 

Inspired by the protagonist Yatora’s words, “Doing what you love doesn’t mean it’s always fun,” they channeled their “complexes and conflicts, the youthfulness of first impulses and struggle, and surely, the hope that lies ahead.”

After nine years together, Omoinotake shared that, just as Yatora “likes to draw,” they too, simply “like music.” 

Moratorium – From Twittering Birds Never Fly: The Clouds Gather

“Moratorium” (モラトリアム) is the theme song for the animated film adaptation of Twittering Birds Never Fly: The Clouds Gather

Digitally released on January 31, 2020, this song marks the band’s first collaboration with an animated work. Each band member provided their own official comments on the song. 

“An overwhelming number of words overflowed from within me.” 

Tomoaki Fukushima (EMOAKI)

Emoaki spoke about how the story’s damp, melancholy nuance deeply resonated with the band, who came from the rainy Shimane Prefecture. He adds, “The moment I finished reading the original story, an overwhelming number of words overflowed from within me.” 

For Leo Fujii, this collaboration was the first time he had ever channeled his honest feelings of sorrow directly into his music. 

Hiroyuki Tomita reflected on the characters, describing how although they initially appear “cruel and cold-hearted at first glance,” their hidden “weakness, fragility, and humanity” emerge as the story unfolds. 

The band named the song “Moratorium,” as Emoaki explains, to represent the fleeting love “we can’t suppress, even though we know it will not come true.”

Music Playlist: All Omoinotake Anime Songs

Check out this playlist of every released Omoinotake anime song mentioned above.

Follow Omoinotake

Follow Omoinotake through all of the links below. 

Official website:

https://omoinotake.com/ 

Social media links:

Check out other anime song lists and articles on utatune.

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