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Boris Concert Tickets

Originating from Tokyo, Boris is a popular touring act playing concerts in many locations since 1992. Boris has a distinct alternative sound and a unique show that captivates audiences. Boris is not currently on tour but may be adding shows soon. Get concert tickets for Boris and see when the next Boris tour dates are scheduled at ConcertBank.com. Check our available Boris concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Bands like Japan's Boris pose a huge dilemma to record store owners that have to organize their albums by section. How exactly does the drone classic Amplifier Worship fit in the same aisle as the dream-pop of New Album? The easy solution is, of course, to make tags like "experimental" or "avant-garde," a convenient way to gloss over the differences in artists who refuse to commit themselves to your "rock" and "pop" sections...
- www.popmatters.com
Sound: Those not so familiar with Japanese experimental metal titans Boris might be forgiven for thinking that they always seem to have a new album on the horizon. In essence, this isn't so far from the truth; their penchant for releasing music left right and centre has already gifted us four new records in 2011. The J-pop extravaganza "New Album" was preceded by the vinyl only "Klatter" (with Merzbow), and May saw the double release of "Attention Please" and "Heavy Rocks" (2011)...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Boris fans are used to left turns, but New Album opener "Flare," with its hyped-up J-pop plus Mars Volta mall-prog collision, could have them double-checking to make sure this is in fact a Boris album. That is, if they don't know the story: that the group was inspired by Japanese Vocaloid pop, enlisted pop producer Shinobu Narita, and re-worked several tunes from this year's previous pair of albums, Attention Please and Heavy Rocks--along with a few new tunes--to achieve "extreme pop...
- www.undertheradarmag.com
It's been a very strange year for Boris, and that's seriously saying something. 2011 saw the long-running Japanese experimental rock trio put out a total of three full-length albums this year (four, if you count Klatter, their sixth co-release with Merzbow)...
- www.prefixmag.com
In a move that's as scrambled and paradoxical as its music, Boris is unleashing New Album--which came out in the group's native Japan early this year--after the U.S. release of Heavy Rocks and Attention Please, the pair of albums that originally followed it. The convoluted chronology makes a weird sort of sense...
- www.avclub.com
In a move that's as scrambled and paradoxical as its music, Boris is unleashing New Album--which came out in the group's native Japan early this year--after the U.S. release of Heavy Rocks and Attention Please, the pair of albums that originally followed it. The convoluted chronology makes a weird sort of sense...
- www.avclub.com
In recent years, Boris' self-mythologizing has been the most interesting part of their project. They've thrown plenty of curve balls since forming in 1992, but after 2005's Pink, they sped up the shifts and got weirder. The trio is also more willing to revisit its past and recontextualize its output with new styles and approaches. (It can often feel like an archival project, or like you're spying on someone else's déjà vu...
- pitchfork.com
Attention Please (Sargent House) New Album (Inoxia) As if forging an alternate history, Boris' Heavy Rocks shares a title and comparable artwork with the Japanese outfit's 2002 LP, a classic power trio rendering of modern doom metal. That's where similarities end...
- www.austinchronicle.com
Summary: The Year of Boris: Great start, excellent execution, but a little shaky on the landing. 3 of 3 thought this review was well written It's been a hell of a year for Japanese metal outfit, Boris. Starting things off with a bang, the band released a split with noise artist Merzbow, entitled Klatter. The band then revealed a surprising move to release not one, but three separate and distinct albums, all within the calendar year...
- www.sputnikmusic.com
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