For HANABIE., the last two years have been transformational. The Japanese “Harajuku-core” band has broken through internationally, touring Europe and America, and hitting the festival scene in the proce⭕ss.

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With suꦚmmer festival season in full swing, HANABIE. is once again about to depart Japan for stops in Spain, Germany, and Poland, before embarking on a headline UK and Europe tour later this year. Ahead of that, though, we got to sit down with the band to discuss their music, anime, games, and what it’s like being one of the most unusual bands in the world.

So, Who Exactly Is HANABIE.?

(Left to right): Bassist Hettsu, Guitarist/Singer Matsuri, Lead Singer Yukina, and Drummer Chika from the band Hanabie.
Photo by Mei Okabe

If you were to Google search HANABIE., you’d very quickly༺ stumble across the phrase “Harajuku-core”. It’s a self-styled label created by the band to describe the members’ unique, colourful Harajuku-inspired fashion, combined with its metal/metalcore sounds.

“We’re heavy-driven, but we combine different fun, 𝕴intereꩵsting, and joyful elements into our music”, lead singer Yukina tells me. “Each song has a different flavour, we’re very chaotic.”

Guitarist and singer Matsuri was the first to embrace heavy music, with her father introducing her to bands like Maximum the Hormone and Green Day early on. Bassist Hettsu also found a love for metal at a young age, telling me she “often listened to music from anime, and heavy music from those was inspiring.” Drummer Chika found her love for metal when performing with a previous band. Although that band didn’t play particularly heavy music, they shared a bill with a band that did, and her fondness for th💟e genre was formed.

Yukina, who attended an all-girl school, found her love for metal when she heard a girl in a higher grade “copying Maximum the Hormone, singing in a brutal way.” From here, she began to explore heavier music herself, specifically Maximum the Hormone, and she cites the band’s song F as the reason for her🐟 talent for screaming.

“I listened toꩲ it all night long,” she says. “I was trying to mimic their singing and found out when I rolled my voice and then shot🌱 it out, I could scream.”

I’ve always been particular about my💛 music. I don’t want t༺o copy other people’s style.

Matsuri tells me that, although the band is inspirꦿed by Maximum the Hormone, it’s vital that their sound is their own.

“We haven’t changed in the last ten years. I’ve always been particular about my music. I don’t want to copy other people’s style,” she tells me. “We hope our style encourages more bands to do what we do - make the type of musi🌊c they feel good about and don’t worry about fitting a genre or a label.”

There’s An Otaku In All Of Us

Guitarist Matsuri performing for Hanabie.
Photo by Mei Okabe

An 🅺𓆏otaku is a Japanese term used to describe “a young person who is obsessed with computers or particular aspects of popular culture,” so naturally, being somebody obsessed with games, I had to ask the band about its song ‘’, which translates to “The Lovely Legend of the Nerd”.

“Everybody has a꧟n otaku in them,” Matsuri tells me. “You don’t have to love anime or games to be an otaku; we’re all otaku for different things.

“The song itself is to cheer on the otaku spirit in people,” Yukina adds. “We’re inspired by otaku. It’s a common language that we discovered as we traveled around Europe and the US for the first time. We could form connections with people, speaking about anime and games, and they were all happy, friendly,💦 and peaceful.”

I always look for song ideas wh🦩en I’m play🦋ing games.

Althou🐈gh Matsuri told me you don’t have to love g🔯ames or anime to be an otaku, the band admits they are fond of both media.

“I loved 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Sailor Moon, Oja Majo Doremi,🐬 and Pichi Pichi Pichi growing up,” Yukina tells me. “I’m an otaku for anime with strong girls who h🙈ave magical powers.”

While Yukina leans into anime, Matsuri, who writes the band’s music, is more into gaming. “I make music and I get a lot of inspiration from games, anime, movies, dramas,” she says. “But because gaming is my hobby, I always look for song ideas when I’m playing games.” She cites the 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Dragon Quest series as one of her all-time favourites, while 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Overwatch 2 is her most recent obsession.

Lead Singer Yukina from Hanabie performing to the crowd.
Photo by Mei Okabe

One of the band’s more recent singles, , ticked an item off HANABIE.'s bucket list, soundtracking an anime called Momentary Lily. The anime, which follows t🦄he story of a girl with magic🏅al powers in a post-apocalyptic world, was the perfect first soundtrack for Yukina.

“It was really an accomplishment t🐟o do this,” she recalls. “I got to watch the anime before writing the song, and I got into the mindset of anime lovers, reflecting the worldview of the anime. It was a really precious 🎉thing for us.”

Their ambitions don’t stop there, though, with the band expressing a desire to soundtrack more. “I often write songs for f꧋un,” Yukina says. “I like to write songs about villains, so one day, maybe we can do a soundtrack for one of those.”

When I mention how iconic many villains’ songs are in video games, particularly Se𒐪phiroth from Final Fantasy 7, Matsuri lets off a wry smile, saying, “I’d like to do that.”

Entering The Spicy Queen Era

Drummer Chika performing for Hanabie.
Photo by Mei Okabe

HANABIE.’s laꦜtest song, , comes ten years after the band entered its first mౠusic festival, and Yukina shared an insight as to how it came about.

“We went back to the original production process of the early days,” she says. “It was written and arranged just by the band members, nobody from the outside. It was very DIY but a💮lso very meaningful for our tenth anniver🌜sary.

“I’d say our first song that broke through♛ was We Love Sweets, so we wa𓆏nted a spicy counterpart to this that shows we have grown up and have different taste buds. It really matched the feeling of what we wanted to write.”

We want to be stars who can fill arenas.

With the band turning ten, Yukina reflects on the most significant moment of her career so far, and what it means going forward. “The first year we went on tour,🧸 we were one of Limp Bizkit’s opening acts,” she recalls. “I went on stage and did a song with them. It was completely different from what we had done before, but they made it so much fun.

“Someday, we want to be like this. We want to be stars who can get that sort of reaction and fill arenas. But really, we just want to make people happy with our mಞusic.”

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