

If you love good music or want to see an emotional story that will tug at your heartstrings, then this is one I highly recommend you watch.

It has quite possibly my favourite final episode to any Anime I’ve seen so far. Overall, Your Lie in April is an excellent Anime that I absolutely adore. Once you start watching your going to stuck with it. An amazing musical adventure to go on with great characters and storyline.

Your Lie in April (Shigatsu wa Kimi no Uso) does really well in most of these of course people would have loved for kaori to have survived her ordeal and continued to be with kousei.

What makes it great is due to the fact that it has what people love. Your Lie in April is one of the most popular anime in romance-music category and It is realistic in a way that it teaches you to follow your passion no matter how messed up your past was, you should forget the grudges and all the lingering emotions from the past and move on because LIFE GOES ON! Why is your lie in April so good? « Shigatsu », or « April », comes from the phrase Kousei uses to describe Kaori (« She exists inside spring »), spring being used to describe and symbolize Kaori throughout the show the « lie » can be deduced from two things: Kaori claiming at the beginning to like Watari, when in fact she was in love with Kousei, and her. What is the meaning of your lie in April? The show didn’t grab me and hold me as I suspected it might, but it is pleasant, all the same.I just finished watching Your Lie In April and this has been by far the most depressing anime i’ve ever seen. I think, though, that this is part of the show’s inherent musicality, how it can stir a range of emotions and navigate different territories with subtle shifts and deft instrumentation. This isn’t such a bad thing, but it is an intermittently noticeable one, and it might be annoying for someone who likes a more focused narrative and tone. Often we lament a show pandering too explicitly to a particular demographic, so that’s a point in the favour of Your Lie in April, but it can also make the show feel as though it doesn’t quite know what it wants to be. The protagonist is male but nonviolent and un-superpowered the narrative is lightly romantic and often funny, but explicitly concerned with a deep-rooted sense of trauma and psychological turmoil its aesthetic is pretty and painterly but belies a darker interior. Because the show operates in this way, it’s difficult to pin down, both in terms of its genre and who might get the most from it. This idea is reflected everywhere in how the show embraces the extremes of emotion and tone that is typical of one’s teenage years and emblematic of how music can stir up sentimentality, melancholy, or optimism. Between him and Kaori, another classical musician, Your Lie in April has a relationship bonded and in some sense defined by the transporting beauty and power of music. The spectre of both loss and trauma loom over Kosei, a piano prodigy who hasn’t played since the death of his abusive mother two years prior. The themes being unpacked here are of the high-school variety, but Kosei, Tsubaki, and Watari, some of the first characters we meet, have bigger fish to fry that the usual school-age matters of crushes and studying for tests and suchlike.
