someone must have been under my table during this because there's no way it's just this fucking good
If you go with the intended (and best) method of listening to the Drone disc and the Evil disc simultaneously you'll be hit with 40 minutes of quality, ear-shattering feedback on top of trademark Boris guitar crunch. If you go the alternative route and listen to each side by itself then... I mean it's still good, but something definitely feels missing. The Drone side works as Boris' most ambient work thus far, but the Evil side feels pretty bare-bones and empty without the added layers of ... read more
This is def not the most accesible boris albums as you need to play both disks as the same time to get the full experience but to be honest it's one of their heavier projects....maybe ever? a complete joy although it lacks the structure or the punch of other instrumental albums they've made
Boris' two-disked goliath possesses a heavy and atmospheric sound, with piercing guitar tones and sinister droning ambiance, that evokes desolate apocalyptic imagery, while extended song structures heighten the overall tension and dark mood.
This is my first Boris album, but why this one when there are other albums by the band considered better and more memorable? Well, it all boils down to the idea. This LP is a double album where the two discs are meant to be listened to simultaneously, a concept I had never seen before. That's what attracted me to this album. Though now that I think about it, that basically means that the album is just a normal one, but with two of its defining components separated into two discs.
Enough ... read more
| 1 | Giddiness Throne 20:01 | 92 |
| 2 | Interference Demon 19:57 | 90 |
| 1 | Evil Wave Form 19:51 | 96 |
| 2 | The Evilone Which Sobs 16:09 | 95 |