Gensho (album)

Gensho
Cover art
Studio album by Boris with Merzbow
Released March 16, 2016 (2016-03-16) (Japan), March 18, 2016 (2016-03-18) (worldwide)
Studio Sound Square (Boris), Munemihouse (Merzbow)
Genre Drone metal, shoegaze, noise
Length 148:51
Label Relapse
Boris with Merzbow chronology
Klatter
(2011)
Gensho
(2016)
Boris chronology
Asia
(2015)
Gensho
(2016)
Merzbow chronology
Music for Urbanism
(2015)
Gensho
(2016)

Gensho (現象, "phenomenon") is the fourth collaborative studio album and seventh release by the Japanese rock band Boris and noise musician Merzbow. It is presented in two parts; the first disc features re-recordings of several Boris songs and a cover of the My Bloody Valentine song "Sometimes" in drone-based, drumless style, while the second disc consists of new compositions by Merzbow. They are intended to be played at the same time, much like the previous Boris double album Dronevil, or as separate works.[1][2]

The album was inspired by their June 2014 Boiler Room set, during which Boris played a drumless set, followed by Merzbow, and then a joint set by Boris with Merzbow.[3][4] In support of Gensho, they played a one-off show at Fever in Tokyo on November 27, 2015;[3] a recording of the concert called Gensho at Fever 11272015 is included as a bonus with the Japanese release of Gensho by Daymare Recordings.[5] It includes the recorded debut of a new Boris song "More", as well as a performance of rare song "Kilmister," created for the web anime series Ninja Slayer, and a cover the Man song "Many Are Called, but Few Get Up". Because the Boris tracks are primarily drone-based, both presented versions of the song "Akuma no Uta" are actually more similar to "Introduction" from the same album; regardless, the song is credited as "Akuma no Uta" on all versions.

The vinyl version of the album is released as two separate double LPs; one LP with half of the Boris material and one LP with half of the Merzbow material. Thus, no matter which form is purchased, it is possible to play both contributors simultaneously. These are also available bundled together as a single deluxe edition.[1] The deluxe LP was featured as Record of the Week by Pirates Press.[6]

Initial teasers were posted at the start of the year, most prominently a live clip of "Huge" from the Fever performance on January 21.[7] Rolling Stone announced YouTube streams of "Heavy Rain" and its accompanying section of "Goloka pt. 1" on February 5, 2016.[8] Later in February, The Wire debuted a live video of Boris alone playing the song "More" from Leave Them All Behind 2015.[9]

Critical reception

Antihero Magazine's Jake Kussmaul states that "Gensho is an unpredictable ride through comfortable nostalgia and hard-to-swallow invention...But where the tracks exhibit difficulty individually, their efforts are greater felt when both discs are played in combination."[10]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AntiHero Magazine[11]

Track listing

Gensho

Disc one – Boris
No. Title Length
1. "Farewell" (originally from Pink) 7:53
2. "Huge" (originally from Amplifier Worship) 10:50
3. "Resonance"   4:03
4. "Rainbow" (originally from Rainbow) 6:20
5. "Sometimes" (My Bloody Valentine cover) 9:45
6. "Heavy Rain" (originally from Noise) 7:50
7. "Akuma no Uta" (originally from Akuma no Uta) 11:43
8. "Akirame Flower" (originally from Golden Dance Classics split) 6:14
9. "Vomitself" (originally from Amplifier Worship) 9:47
Total length:
74:25
Disc two – Merzbow
No. Title Length
1. "Planet of the Cows"   18:43
2. "Goloka Pt. 1"   20:09
3. "Goloka Pt. 2"   19:33
4. "Prelude to a Broken Arm"   16:01
Total length:
74:26

Gensho at Fever 11272015

Disc three
No. Title Length
1. "Overture"   2:46
2. "決別" (Farewell) 8:10
3. "Huge"   10:23
4. "虹がはじまるとき" (Rainbow) 6:01
5. "Resonance"   1:02
6. "More" (unreleased Boris track) 6:46
7. "キルミスター incl. "Many Are Called, but Few Get Up"" ("Kilmister") 12:10
8. "黒猫メロディ" ("Melody") 7:23
Total length:
54:41
Disc four
No. Title Length
1. "Angel" (originally from Noise) 18:17
2. "あくまのうた" ("Akuma no Uta") 14:57
3. "" ("Heavy Rain") 7:09
4. "Vomitself"   14:05
Total length:
54:28

Personnel

All personnel credits adapted from the album notes.[12]

Boris

Merzbow

Technical personnel

Release history

Region Date Label Format Catalog Quantity Notes
Japan March 16, 2016 Daymare CD DYMC-260 expanded edition
United States March 18, 2016 Relapse 2×CD RR7321
LP RR7321 / RR7326 500 Parts 1 & 2
2×LP RR7321 1000 Part 1
RR7326 1000 Part 2

References

  1. 1 2 "BORIS WITH MERZBOW Announce Details of New Collaborative Album 'Gensho', Premiere Live Video + Trailer". Relapse Records. January 21, 2016. Retrieved January 28, 2016.
  2. Aoki, Ryotaro. "Rock act Boris and noise musician Merzbow attempt an interactive experiment on 'Gensho'". The Japan Times. Retrieved March 13, 2016.
  3. 1 2 "Boris with Merzbow: Complete New Collaborative Full-Length Gensho; Announce Exclusive One-Off Show in Japan". Relapse Records. September 22, 2015. Retrieved January 28, 2016.
  4. Nagurney, E. (September 23, 2015). "Boris and Merzbow collaborate on new full-length for Relapse". Tiny Mix Tapes. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
  5. "Boris with Merzbow : 現象 -Gensho- Expanded Edition". DIW Products Group. January 2016. Retrieved January 27, 2016.
  6. "Gensho as Pirates Press Record of the Week". Pirates Press. February 12, 2016. Retrieved February 16, 2016.
  7. "Boris with Merzbow - "Huge" (live)". January 21, 2016. Retrieved April 25, 2016.
  8. "Boris With Merzbow: Tinker With a Track From Their Interactive Album". Rolling Stone. February 5, 2016. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
  9. "The Wire - Watch Boris perform "More"". The Wire. February 17, 2016. Retrieved February 17, 2016.
  10. Kussmaul, Jake (29 April 2016). "Album Review: BORIS with MERZBOW - Gensho". antiheromagazine.com. AntiHero Magazine. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  11. Kussmaul, Jake (29 April 2016). "Album Review: BORIS with MERZBOW - Gensho". antiheromagazine.com. AntiHero Magazine. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  12. Gensho (album notes). Boris with Merzbow. Relapse. 2016.

External links

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