SOUNDTRACK: BORIS-Noise (2013).
You really never know what you’re going to get with Boris. Most of the time, there are multiple editions of releases with different covers and different mixes.
In this case, despite the different covers of this record (see below), the track listing is exactly the same (except that the Japanese version came with a bonus disc). Total length: 57:52
I like that this album cover parodies (sort of) Nirvana’s Bleach album cover.
“Melody” (黒猫メロディ) 6:40 The disc opens with some ringing alt-rock wit a distorted rocking chorus. Despite the cover, it’s not like Nirvana, it’s more soaring there’s catchy backing oohs and a cool hi-hat flourish.
“Vanilla” 4:15 is heavy in the same vein as “Melody” and “Ghost of Romance” (あの人たち) 5:49 has slow guitars and soaring leads with a heavy solo. “Heavy Rain” (雨) 6:12 starts quite slowly with vocals by Wata and then there’s a big crash and the heavy section follows. It alternates between quiet and loud at intervals.
“Taiyo no Baka” (太陽のバカ) 3:36 is almost a pop metal sound with dancey vocals and woah hos. There’s even a simple guitar riff that follows along. At three and a half minutes it’s a pure pop gem.
“Angel” 18:42 Angel, on the other hand pushes 19 minutes and it’s an epic workout. It begins with a pretty, quiet guitar riff interlaced with a second guitar and interesting percussion. There’s slow vocals as well. But after 6 minutes, a loud distorted guitar interrupts the pretty melody, but it’s only playing an intermittent chord. Even the powerful drums blasts don’t change the overall tempo of the song until a minute later when it takes on a loud droning quality with harmony vocals and a distorted bass moments. There’s a soaring guitar solo as well. By around 10 minutes the song turns into an uptempo rocker with falsetto vocals! The song seems to climax at 13 minutes with a big gong. But there’s more. The song turns into a kind of soaring instrumental with echoing guitars and thumping drums. With two minutes left the song returns to that opening guitar riff with a tidy solo over the top. It’s like the song is nicely bookended with itself. It’s quite the centerpiece.
“Quicksilver” 9:51 Who know what another band might follow a 20 minute song with, but Boris chose a nearly 10 minute song. It seems at first that “Quicksilver” is going to be a short blast with the super fast pummeling hardcore sound. There’s screamed vocals and wild drumming but it’snot that simple. At 3 and a half minutes, the song slows down some although it stays heavy. By around the 5th minute there;s lou dbacking voclals to accompant the lead vocal. Once again, a false climax comes at 7 minutes but there’s more feedback to come along with a quiet, pretty guitar outro. Until the final two minutes when there are loud droning chords that play through to the end.

“Siesta” (シエスタ) 2:50 Siesta is the shortest song on the disc, an instrumental that is kind of pretty and kind of woozy at the same time. It’s definitely a slow down from the erst of the album and a nice conclusion.
This was the first Boris album I bought and it’s still a favorite.
The Japanese edition (cover to the right) came with this bonus disc, which I’ve not heard.
CD 2 (Another Noise) Total length: 23:26
1. “Bit” 9:35
2. “Kimi no Yukue” (君の行方) 4:51
3. “Yuushikai Revue” (有視界 Revue) 3:32
4. “Discharge” (ディスチャージ) 5:32
[READ: July 23, 2015] “Love is Blind and Deaf”
This was the 2015 New Yorker fiction issue. It featured several stories and several one-page essays from writers I like.
In addition to those essays on Time-Travel it also included this short piece from Safran Foer. I hadn’t seen much from Safran Foer recently, so I was interested to read this (very) short story. It’s all of one page.
Much as Zadie Smith’s story about celebrities was unexpected, so was this one (on the following page in the magazine no less) about Adam & Eve.
We learn that Adam was blind and so never had to see Eve’s hideous birthmark. And that Eve was deaf and never had to listen to Adam’s whiny narcissism. And then they ate the apples and knew everything.
They learned about plants and breezes and free will and then even learned about marital fidelity and that’s when it went to hell.
Once their eyes and ears were opened they started bickering with each other.
So they tried covering up their eyes and ears with fig leaves. That worked for a little while.
And then there’s a moral from God at the end. God says that they are always so close–they never see the space between them, so they always see the little things that upset them so much.
A modern fable, perhaps?


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