Boredoms

  • Osaka-shi, Japan
    hometown
  • Alternative
    genre
  • 1986
    started
  • Bio
    full story
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About Boredoms


Of all the artists in Japan's thriving noise-music community, the Boredoms undoubtedly had the most fun. Although their maniacally extreme cacophony was by no means accessible listening, it was underpinned by a gleeful sense of humor that helped them find a limited (but still surprisingly wide) audience among alternative rockers. A typical Boredoms track might feature massively distorted guitars, squealing synths, any number of odd found-object noisemakers, or studio-manipulation effects; conventional song structures are thrown out the window in favor of abrupt, whiplash-inducing changes of direction. With Sonic Youth and Nirvana counting themselves among the Boredoms' fans, the group actually signed major-label deals during the early '90s, both in Japan and the U.S., and played the Lollapalooza main stage. Although the Boredoms' American deal eventually fell through, they continued to record steadily in Japan, progressing into a sort of trance-inducing, psychedelia-tinged experimental rock indebted to the '70s Krautrock movement.

The Boredoms were formed in early 1986 in Osaka, Japan, by vocalist Yamatsuka Eye (who later went by Yamantaka Eye, then Yamataka Eye, and sometimes just eYe). Eye had been a member of the noise-rock band the Hanatarash, as had drummer Taketani; the rest of the original lineup featured guitarist Tabata Mara and bassist Hosoi. It quickly disintegrated; first, Taketani was let go in favor of Yoshikawa Toyohito, then Hosoi was replaced by Hira (sometimes Hilah), and finally Mara -- who quit to join Zeni Geva -- was replaced by Yamamoto Seiichi (aka Yama-Motor). Thus constituted, the Boredoms recorded their debut three-song EP, Anal by Anal, in 1986; their first full-length, Osozeran No Stooges Kyo ("The Stooges Craze in Osozeran"), followed in 1988, with both records later collected on Onanie Bomb Meets the Sex Pistols. Yoshimi Yokota (aka Yoshimi P-WE) became the band's new drummer and first female member in 1988; Yoshikawa switched to percussion and quit the following year, replaced first by Hasegawa Chu and then by ATR. Following Eye's work with John Zorn's avant-garde Naked City ensemble, the Boredoms' second album, Soul Discharge, was issued in the U.S. by Shimmy Disc in 1990; though some found them pointlessly abrasive, overall the record's crazed attack made them a hip name to drop in underground circles. The buzz surrounding the Boredoms culminated in major-label deals with Warner Japan and Reprise in the U.S., the first fruits of which were 1993's Pop Tatari, for which Yoshikawa returned as co-lead vocalist and synthesizer player. The follow-up Chocolate Synthesizer was released in the U.S. in 1995 (a year later than Japan), and the band supported it by playing a string of main stage dates on that year's Lollapalooza tour.

Lollapalooza marked the peak of the Boredoms' visibility in America, which began to cool down afterwards. Yoshikawa left again, and the band took some time to release a new LP, instead busying themselves with numerous side projects and issuing a series of EPs, dubbed Super Roots, that often appeared only in Japan. Reprise wound up dropping them, at which point the small Birdman label began to pick up some of their releases for domestic distribution. Fortified with a third drummer/percussionist in EDA, 1998 brought the EP Super Go!!!!! and the full-length Super Ae, which heralded the group's increasing psychedelic/Krautrock influence. The same year, the band recorded a split single with 77 -- the "performing" alias of their manager's infant son. 2000 saw the beginning of a series of remix albums titled Rebore; individual volumes featured U.N.K.L.E., Ken Ishii, DJ Krush, and Eye himself. Eye's increasing interest in electronica was reflected on the band's next official full-length album, the trippy Vision Creation Newsun, released in the U.S. on Birdman in 2001. Things were quiet for some time after the release of Vision Creation Newsun and rumors began circulating that the Boredoms had broken up. A smaller version of the group reconvened and played some shows as the Voordoms in 2003, giving further fire to the break up hearsay. In 2005, however, the Boredoms returned with the U.S. release of Seadrum/House of Sun. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi

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  • Reprise
    Boredoms
    Reprise

News

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  • Boredoms
    The Boredoms Revel in Rhythm, Numerology for 88 BoaDrums
    www.rollingstone.com
    On Friday (8/8/08), 88 drummers played for 88 minutes at the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles and in Brooklyn on the Williamsburg waterfront in an annu...
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  • Boredoms
    Boredoms Playing Boadrum 9 Show, Soundtracking Solar Eclipse
    prefixmag.com
    Never let it be said that experimental noise rockers Boredoms lack ambition. Their 77Boadrum show in Brooklyn in 2007 brought together 77 drummers for...
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  • Boredoms
    Boredoms' Super Roots 10 released, already impossible to find
    prefixmag.com
    goes by the moniker "DJ Finger Hat." Track list: 1. Super Rooy 2. Ant 10 3. Ant 10 / Estereo 10 (Remix by Altz) 4. Ant 10 (Remix by DJ Finger Hat) 5. ...
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  • Boredoms
    Boredoms to Play on Boat During Eclipse
    www.pitchfork.com
    On July 7, 2007 (07/07/07), tranced-out Japanese freaks the Boredoms played a show in Brooklyn with 77 drummers. On August 8 of last year (08/08/08), ...
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  • Boredoms
    Boredoms, Deerhoof, No Age, Caribou Plan Special ATP NY Performances
    www.pitchfork.com
    horn section, a choir, and four drummers, and starring, in addition to Dan Snaith himself, Kieran Hebden (aka Four Tet), John Schmersal of Enon/Braini...
    Read More
  • Boredoms
    Boredoms to Play on Boat During Eclipse
    www.pitchfork.com
    On July 7, 2007 (07/07/07), tranced-out Japanese freaks the Boredoms played a show in Brooklyn with 77 drummers. On August 8 of last year (08/08/08), ...
    Read More
  • Boredoms
    Watch: Boredoms 77 Boadrum trailer
    www.drownedinsound.com
    Way back over three years ago the fantastic Japanese group Boredoms did something quite spectacular. They played with a whole 77 drummers as part of t...
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  • Boredoms
    Low, Boredoms, The Fall announced for Jeff Mangum ATP
    drownedinsound.com
    , The Apples In Stereo, Colin Stetson, Micachu And The Shapes and Lost In The Trees. Personally my heart skips a beat every time I read Scratch Acid. ...
    Read More
  • Boredoms
    Shabazz Palaces, the Field, Boredoms, Gang Gang Dance, Kode9 on Battles Remix Collection | News | Pitchfork
    www.pitchfork.com
    remix): Battles will collect remixes of every track from the 2011 LP Gloss Drop on a compilation appropriately titled Dross Glop, out April 17 via War...
    Read More
  • Boredoms
    Watch Joanna Newsom, The Fall, Low, Boredoms Play ATP Minehead
    Paste
    Neutral Milk Hotel's Jeff Mangum spent the weekend in southwest England curating All Tomorrow's Parties Minehead and festival footage of Joanna Newsom...
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Tour Dates

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  • Jun 1 Saturday
    Nagano, Japan Kodama No Mori
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Discography

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  • Super Roots, Vol. 10 (2009)
    Boredoms
    Super Roots, Vol. 10 (2009)
    Thrill Jockey
  • 77 Boadrum (2008)
    Boredoms
    77 Boadrum (2008)
    Avex Trax
  • Seadrum/House of Sun (2005)
    Boredoms
    Seadrum/House of Sun (2005)
    Warner Music
  • Rebore, Vol. 0 (2001)
    Boredoms
    Rebore, Vol. 0 (2001)
    WEA International
  • Rebore, Vol. 3 (2001)
    Boredoms
    Rebore, Vol. 3 (2001)
    WEA International
  • Vision Creation Newsun (2001)
    Boredoms
    Vision Creation Newsun (2001)
    WP
  • Rebore, Vol. 2 (2001)
    Boredoms
    Rebore, Vol. 2 (2001)
    WEA International
  • Rebore, Vol. 1 (2000)
    Boredoms
    Rebore, Vol. 1 (2000)
    WEA International
  • Super Ae (1998)
    Boredoms
    Super Ae (1998)
    Birdman Records
  • Super Roots, Vol. 7 (1997)
    Boredoms
    Super Roots, Vol. 7 (1997)
    Vice/Warner
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