Review: Boris – New Album


I really ought to have reviewed this album back in March when it was released, because a few things about it have changed. For one thing, the band has since released two additional full lengths, bringing their total discography up to 28 studio albums since 1996 and enough singles and ep releases to make your head spin. More importantly, six of its ten tracks have since been rerecorded. With a seventh song having appeared in a rather different form on an ep in 2009, it is now difficult to regard New Album as its own unique work and not a sort of compilation.

But Boris have never made the reviewer’s life easy, what with changing their style nearly every year and constantly reworking older recordings. This is a band that just refuses to conform to any norm of musical creation. They’ve been doom metal, they’ve been stoner rock, they’ve been drone, they’ve been heavy metal, they’ve been psychedelic rock, they’ve been post-rock, they’ve been shoegaze… It was in 2009 that they really started to go crazy though. They didn’t release much in the way of studio albums that year, at least by Boris standards. Most of what they had to offer came in the form of short one to four track recordings. But there wasn’t a style of the year this time, no one flavor they opted to focus on for a set period of time. No, they’d release a straight up pop single one month and a black metal song the next, with every style previously mentioned somehow incorporated in between.

フレア (Flare)

So what is New Album, and how is it distinguished from their other two releases, which share a number of the same tracks? Well, first of all New Album is j-rock. It was only released in Japan, and all of the songs that were to later appear as hard rock or dream pop here, without losing those characteristics, take on a much more happy, upbeat, decidedly Japanese flavor. The opening song, Flare, is the most telling, both because it is the most characteristically j-rock song of the lot and because it does not appear on any other releases.

Pardon?

But this brief summary doesn’t quiet explain New Album. I mean, the three songs that are exclusive to it–Flare, Pardon?, and Looprider–share very little in common. It’s the album’s take on tracks that reappear later that make it j-rock, far more so than the other two new additions. Wata’s chilled out psychedelic guitar solo on Pardon? is if anything the most thematically out of place portion of the whole album.

Where Heavy Rocks 2011 really stands apart, the distinction between New Album and Attention Please isn’t all that strong. The latter is better, the former is a bit more Japanese. Since I intend to cover their other two albums later this week, I don’t want to reveal too much. Let’s just say this is the happiest, poppiest of the three, and if that appeals to you then it’s definitely worth picking up. Or downloading, I guess, since it won’t be released in North America.

I’ll leave you with by far the most stand-out song on the album (and one that is again a bit out of place, if the album can be said to have an overall stylistic theme at all.) In 2009 Boris released Black Original as the second of two tracks on Japanese Heavy Rock Hits Volume 2. It was a pretty simple, subdued work, featuring a single synthy drum beat, Wata playing a continuous solo that never incorporated more than one note at a time, and Atsuo singing in airy vocals with an occasional small accompaniment. The new Black Original, in contrast, is anything but minimalistic.

Black Original