Onmyo-za - 2018 - - Hadou Myouou
Released in 2018, Hadou Myouou (The Supreme King of the Surging Wave) stands as the fourteenth studio album by the Japanese heavy metal veterans Onmyo-Za. Arriving during the band’s 20th-anniversary celebrations, the record serves as a definitive statement of their "Yokai Heavy Metal" identity. While their previous double-album release, Karyo Binga , leaned heavily into melodic grandeur, Hadou Myouou represents a deliberate return to the visceral, aggressive roots of the genre, blending traditional Japanese folklore with the technical precision of modern power metal. Thematic and Musical Structure
An Analysis of Hadou Myouou : Onmyo-Za’s Pinnacle of Heaviness and Tradition Introduction ONMYO-ZA - 2018 - Hadou Myouou
The title itself evokes a sense of unstoppable force, and the music follows suit. Onmyo-Za has long been defined by the dual vocal interplay between Kuroneko’s ethereal, operatic range and Matatabi’s gritty, rhythmic delivery. In Hadou Myouou , this dynamic is utilized to narrate tales of Shinto deities, Buddhist imagery, and the supernatural. Released in 2018, Hadou Myouou (The Supreme King
The lead single, "Sakura-no-Riwa," serves as a quintessential example of the album’s philosophy. It balances a high-speed tempo with a hauntingly beautiful melody, reflecting the fleeting nature of the cherry blossom—a common Japanese aesthetic trope. Conversely, "Gegege no Kitaro," a cover of the iconic anime theme, demonstrates the band's ability to transform playful cultural artifacts into brooding, mid-tempo metal anthems without losing the source material's charm. Thematic and Musical Structure An Analysis of Hadou
Beyond the music, Hadou Myouou reinforces Onmyo-Za's role as cultural ambassadors. By utilizing archaic Japanese vocabulary and classical poetic structures ( Waka ), the band preserves linguistic traditions that are often lost in modern J-Pop and J-Rock. The album is not merely a collection of songs but a curated experience of Japanese mythology, presented through the lens of a subculture that prizes virtuosity and storytelling. Conclusion
Hadou Myouou is a masterclass in stylistic consistency. It does not seek to reinvent Onmyo-Za’s established sound; instead, it polishes their "Soul of the Demon" aesthetic to a mirror sheen. By favoring aggression and speed while maintaining their signature melodic sensibility, the band proved in 2018 that they remain the undisputed masters of Japanese folk-metal. It is an album of conviction, showing that two decades into their career, Onmyo-Za’s creative fire—much like the mythical kings they sing of—remains unquenchable.