©2026 Project MiucS / 「ゴーストコンサート : missing Songs」製作委員会
The spring 2026 anime series Ghost Concert: missing Songs is moving right along with its production. The series is directed by Masato Jinbo, who also handled the series composition. Masayuki Uikawa is handling the character designs with ENGI on the animation production. The series was scheduled for an April 5th, 2026, debut, and Crunchyroll previously made its pickup of it, where it’ll be available to subscribers in North America, Central America, South America, Europe, Africa, Oceania, the Middle East, CIS, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam.
The latest update has the production rolling out another song to check out. This one comes from the fifth episode with “Nursing Angel as performed by Seria Aiba (CV: Yoshinori Fujidera) & Nightingale (CV: Ami Koshimizu).
The series features the opening song “Goukon REQUIEMER” by Seria Aiba, while the ending theme is “Ibara no Michi” by Odysseus.
The Japanese cast includes:
- Minori Fujidera as Seria Aiba
- Rina Hidaka as Cleopatra
- Emiri Suyama as MiucS
- Minako Kotobuki as Odysseus
- Miyu Irino as Yōtetsu
- Miyuki Sakurai as Syuri Murayama
- Nao Ojika as Kaede Saionji
- Satomi Satō as Riku Aoki
- Satoshi Hino as Setsutei
- Yuri An as Rui Ichikawa
- Miyuki Sakurai as Akari Murayama
Check out the official site and Twitter.
Plot Concept: The anime takes place in 2045, in a world where songs have been banned. Instead of humans playing instruments and creating music, a music app titled “MiucS” is in charge of these things. High school student Seria goes out with her friends one day, but she happens to hear someone singing, which is supposed to be prohibited. What she finds is a lone ghost, a “Great Ghost” who has appeared from outside this world.
Previous promos and visuals:
©2026 Project MiucS / 「ゴーストコンサート : missing Songs」製作委員会
Chris Beveridge
http://www.fandompost.com
Chris has been writing about anime, manga, movies and comics for well on twenty years now. He began AnimeOnDVD.com back in 1998 and has covered nearly every anime release that’s come out in the US ever since.
He likes to write a lot, as you can see.


