Tag: Boris

NEEDLE EXCHANGE 066: An Exclusive Mix By … Cave In

Photo by Aaron Richter

This week’s exclusive mix was compiled by Cave In and originally offered as a digital “cassette” in the enhanced edition of our quarterly magazine. Interested in more exclusive music, starting with our next issue in September? Subscribe to self-titled for the iPad, Android and standard Web browsers here. Otherwise, please enjoy the one-track version of Cave In’s tour-ready tape, which incorporates everything from Brian Eno and Boris to Portishead and Public Enemy…

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LONG PLAYER OF THE DAY: Mammifer/House of Low Culture/Merzbow, ‘Lou Lou…In Tokyo’ Double LP

The Artist/Album: Mammifer/House of Low Culture/Merzbow, Lou Lou…In Tokyo (SIGE, 2011)

The Reason(s) We Can’t Stop Listening: Considering how active Aaron Turner’s been since Isis suddenly disbanded last summer, one thing’s clear: dude’s found quite a muse in Mamiffer frontwoman Faith Coloccia. How else could one explain the Robert Pollard-like procession of releases that have been rolling off the assembly line of the pair’s relatively new SIGE Records imprint, from micro-lot cassettes to this limited, elegantly designed live album? Lou Lou‘s one-night-only set starts off with relatively sedate renditions of Coloccia’s back catalog, then eases into a tense side-long collaboration with Boris drummer Atsuo and the almighty Merzbow—one that’s patient enough to make its climatic blend of ambient noise and monk-like chants truly count.

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Read Our New Issue, F/ John Maus, Zomby, Fucked Up, Memory Tapes and More

Memory Tapes (Photo: Travis Huggett)

Good news for anyone who misses reading actual magazines: our new issue is now available in its standard Web edition here. The iPad pressing is imminent as well, but for now, here’s what you’re getting for free:

  • An afternoon at the Central Park Zoo with John Maus
  • A rare, revealing interview with Zomby
  • A track-by-track breakdown of Ford & Lopatin‘s debut album
  • Jamie Woon on … Louis C.K., George Orwell and more
  • Austra‘s guide to Nine Inch Nails
  • A Lib Service session with Memory Tapes
  • Dirty Beaches discusses the importance of family
  • Damian of Fucked Up shares his favorite records, from 7 Seconds to the Smiths
  • Blondes, Laurel Halo, ARP and more take us behind the scenes their one-night-only performance with Harald Grosskopf
  • Disposable camera shots of SXSW by Black Lips, the Megaphonic Thrift and Toro Y Moi
  • Original art by Boris, as inspired by the Weeknd‘s House of Balloons mixtape

Stay tuned to our Twitter account and Facebook page for more info, including details on how to score a hand-numbered LP and a pair of concert tickets from our cover star!

DOWNLOAD THIS NOW: Two New Boris Songs, “Riot Sugar” & “Hope”

Photo: Andrew Parks

Boris will release two new records—their first releases through Sargent House—on May 24th. We’ll have more details after we’ve given them both a proper listen, but here’s the basic breakdown: Attention Please lets guitarist Wata assume the frontwoman position for 10 tracks, and Heavy Rocks is “beyond heavy…a pillar of innovation and integrity in guitar-based music.” It’s also fleshed out with some close friends, including Michio Kurihara (Ghost), Ian Astbury (The Cult, BXI), Faith Coloccia (Mamiffer), and Aaron Turner (Isis, Mamiffer, et al.).

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TEST PRESSING: Listen To JD Twitch’s Old Mount Florida Project, Alongside a Live Set From San Francisco and Some Remixes

While we’ve been a fan of JD Twitch‘s edits and Optimo-related DJ sets for years, we had no idea he was part of a Matador-endorsed duo called Mount Florida in the late ’90s/early ’00s. Thank the power of Soundcloud, then, for reintroducing us to the duo’s Arthur Russell cover (“A Little Lost”) and a lengthy slice of dub-infused techno called “Riot On Jamaica Street.” You can check out both long-overlooked EP tracks after the jump, along with some remixes and a recent live JD Twitch set from San Francisco’s Honey Soundsystem party…

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Boris Announce Three New LPs, Including ‘Heavy Rocks’ Reissue

After a relatively quiet release schedule last year, Boris appear to be gearing up for a busy 2011 run. According to the trio’s official site, we can expect the following this spring: a new album on Avex/Tearbridge, a Southern Lord reissue of 2002′s Heavy Rocks CD, and a Sargent House LP called Attention Please.

More details as we get them. In the meantime, here’s the official trailer for their recently released Live In Japan DVD…

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2010 IN REVIEW: The Year In Photos, From LCD Soundsystem To PiL

Poland's OFF Festival

For the stories and sets related to any of the following photos, just click on the shots…

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VIDEO: Watch the Trailer For Boris’ ‘Live In Japan’ DVD

Live In Japan was captured at the tail end of Boris Smile tour in 2008. It’s set to hit shops on January 18 through Southern Lord. Check out the cover art and tracklisting after the jump…

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I WAS THERE: Boris and Sunn O))) Prevail Over a Power Outage At Brooklyn’s Masonic Temple

Boris' drummer jumps into the crowd while everyone else struggles to get the power back on

Words and Photos by Andrew Parks

The Artist and Their Latest Release: Sunn O))) & Boris, Altar (Southern Lord, 2006)

The Show: Sunn O))) & Boris present Altar, with Jesse Sykes & the Sweet Hereafter and BXI @ Brooklyn Masonic Temple, 9.7.10

The Set In a Few Sentences: “Sorry, but we blew two-thirds of the power in the building with that last riff,” said Sunn O))) guitarist Stephen O’Malley, “So it’s going to take us a few minutes to figure this shit out. Go get a beer or something.”

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THE SELF-TITLED INTERVIEW: Ian Astbury

Ian Astbury with Boris

[Photo by Miki Matsushima]

Words by Andrew Parks

“People don’t usually drop the Cult as being one of their favorite ‘cool’ bands,” admits the band’s longtime singer, Ian Astbury, “Because a lot of people associate us with late ’80s histrionics. The reality of the situation is that we were indie kids first—working class musicians who were into post-punk and psychedelic rock. Eventually it evolved into drinking beer, listening to AC/DC and selling millions of records, though, and I just went with it.”

Going with it meant switching gears from the proto-goth tunes of the Southern Death Cult to such pyro-ready stadium-rock singles as “She Sells Sanctuary,” “Wild Flower” and “Fire Woman.” Somewhere between then and now, Astbury launched an ill-fated precursor to Lollapalooza (Gathering of the Tribes), slipped into Jim Morrison’s shoes on three of the Doors’ reunion tours, and tracked an EP with his unlikeliest collaborators yet: the art-damaged Japanese band Boris.

On the eve of Boris and Astbury’s premiere BXI performance at Brooklyn’s Masonic Temple tonight, we asked Astbury about the following: Damien Hirst, Vogue fashion spreads, poverty-stricken reservations, 500-year-old monasteries, and his undying hatred for a certain breed of hipsters. (This story was originally supposed to be about Astbury’s non-musical influences—hence the Hirst question up top—but it quickly turned into an hour-long run through of the singer’s entire career.)

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