In a career spanning around 30 years the group has undergone multiple changes in line-up, sound and philosophy. Beginning as a dada ‘no-core’ noise-punk outfit, transmuting into psychedelic krautrockers, their more recent records have been largely based around repetitive minimalism, ambient music, and tribal drumming, most recently appearing in a radically stripped down set-up featuring three drummers with singer Eye making interesting noises over the top.
The band has a vast and sometimes confusing discography. Many band members have rotated through the group over the years, often using a number of various stage names. Singer Yamantaka Eye is the closest the band has to a frontman; his style includes a range of baffling screams, babbling, electronic effects, and very heavy post-production. Drummer/singer/trumpeter Yoshimi P-We has also featured on most Boredoms recordings.
The group’s members have all taken part in myriad side-projects (Seiichi Yamamoto’s Rovo, Eye’s work with John Zorn and Yoshimi P-We’s OOIOO being the most notable) and the group itself divides it’s releases between ‘official’ Boredoms records and an experimental ‘Super Roots’ Series. Group members also soundtracked the notorious Miike film, "Ichi the Killer", using the name "Karera Musication". All of this makes a complete Boredoms discography nigh-on impossible. The one constant throughout is their virtually unclassifiable music and infectious sense of joy.
Boredoms were formed in early 1986 by Yamantaka Eye, who at the time acted as front man for the infamous and highly controversial dada-influenced noise/performance art act Hanatarash, locally notorious for its extremely dangerous live shows consisting entirely of on-stage destruction and complete disregard for the audience's safety (Live shows featured power-tools, industrial diggers, no-holds barred gymnastics and much yelping and screaming). The insane antics of Hanatarash would later be highly influential on the earliest incarnation of Boredoms, which was formed by the remaining members of a band Eye started with Hanatarash drummer Ikuo Taketani, as well as guitarist Tabata Mitsuru (known as Tabata Mara), bassist Hosoi Hisato, and vocalist Makki Sasarato, called Acid Makki & Combi and Zombie. The band's sound was characterized by violent, noisy punk rock/No Wave thrashings. They recorded a single track, "U.S.A.", for a compilation tape. Shortly after the release of their first song, Taketani was replaced on drums by Yoshikawa Toyohito, a friend of Eye's. The band officially changed their name to Boredoms after Hira replaced Hosoi on bass, and Sasarato left the band due to creative differences. The band's name comes from the Buzzcocks song "Boredom".
With the band finally reaching a level of stability, Eye and Tabata recorded their first official EP, Anal by Anal, in mid-1986. In early 1987, Tabata left the group to later join Zeni Geva and was replaced by Seiichi Yamamoto as guitar player. In March of 1988, the band released its first full-length, Osorezan no Stooges Kyo. Due to unhappiness over Yoshikawa's drumming, Yoshimi P-We from Eye's Hanatarash-related project UFO or Die was asked to serve as drummer, becoming the first female member of the band, with Yoshikawa switching to general percussion. Shortly after the change Yoshikawa left the group, to be replaced by Chew Hasegawa (now of Japanese funeral doom band Corrupted) and then by Kazuya Nishimura, known by his stage name Atari. The band's sound from this period was marked by harsh, dissonant punk edited extensively by Eye in the studio, citing Sonic Youth and Funkadelic as influences, among others. This style was seen by some as "pointlessly abrasive" without any underlying motive, making Boredoms nihlistic absolute music, according to some critics; however, the strangeness of the record increased the band's popularity in the musical underground.
Their absurdist, scatalogical obsessions got them lumped together US bands such as The Butthole Surfers (the Surfers’ Mark Kramer released the almighty ‘Soul Discharge’ on his Shimmy Disc Label) but in truth, Boredoms’ sound had as much in common at this stage with free jazz and improvisation as anything coming from the American alternative rock scene. They were aggressive, lo-fi and utterly spontaneous - the group changing pitch, volume, and tempo several times in the space of a minute while Eye burbled like a Tasmanian Devil on diet pills. Live shows were marked by an even freer approach, bizarre costumes and much hurtling about the stage.
With the endorsement of the noise-rock aristocracy (Sonic Youth), Boredoms inexplicably found themselves signed to Warner Bros - releasing two of the most uncompromising (and best!) cds ever put out by a major label. “Chocolate Synthesizer” and “Pop Tatari” blend hip-hop, noise, free jazz, speed-punk, funk, reggae and gagaku into a mind-boggling storm of extreme silliness. We shall never see their like again…....
"Super Roots 5" (1995) is seen by some as the pivotal "new" Boredoms sound cd. On paper, the prospect of an hour-long blast of white noise seems very much in keeping with their roots - but in practice Super Roots 5 is much warmer - a sort of psychedelic womb of sound, throbbing and expanding exponentially. It's still a raw and confrontational record, but it hints at a new space-rock direction.
Their subsequent releases - “Super æ" and “Vision Creation Newsun”, are slightly more approachable - if arguably, a little less inventive. By the time of the release of “Vision”, the group’s dissonant side has almost completely been expunged in favour of a a trance-rock sound that is obviously heavily influenced by 70’s German groups such as Can and Neu!.
Both albums also see the emergence of a new spiritual obsessions - particularly with the Sun and water. These obsessions possibly have their roots in Eye's family's religious affiliation with the Oomoto Shinto sect. Around this time the number '7' crops up again and again, both in song titles and in the music itself - again this can be linked to Eye's own private mythology, something he's described as "DNA".
In recent years their releases have been sporadic, though the group has toured extensively in their ‘V∞redoms’ incarnation. Eye suggests that the V∞redoms concept derives from his DJing experience, the “V” representing a needle dropping into an infinite (“∞”) groove.
The emphasis on rhythm is retained from their late-nineties albums, but the krautrock, motorik pulse has been replaced with an orchestrated, ritualistic, tribal three-way dialogue between drummers. t Super Roots 9 ('Livewe!') features a Christmas concert in which the group was augmented by a choir, chanting fragments from work by minimalist composers, Rhys Chatham and Jon Gibson, over a typical V∞redoms drum riot.
Even though some fans feel the group lost an essential element with the departure of guitarist, Seiichi Yamamoto, they show no signs of abandoning their relentlessly experimental journey. The V∞redoms drum rocket found it’s apogee in a New York live performance in which 77 drummers joined Eye to create “Boadrum 77”.
Eye has also started to perform with a Seven-necked guitar.
Acid Police
Boredoms Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
Police!
Acid!
Police!
The repetitive and aggressive chanting of "Acid! Police!" in this song by Boredoms can be interpreted in various ways. One of which is the fear and rebellion against authority figures, specifically the police, who may perceive the use of acid or psychedelic substances as a threat to public order. Acid, in this context, can symbolize the subversive urge to break free from the constraints of society.
On the other hand, the song can be seen as a commentary on the drug culture prevalent in the 90s, where acid was a common recreational drug. The usage of the word "acid" is often used in popular culture to refer to LSD or any other hallucinogenic drug. The police, in this case, could be perceived as a metaphor for the resistance faced by an individual in their pursuit of mind expansion through the use of drugs.
Another possible interpretation of the song is that it's a call for the freedom to express oneself creatively. Acid could symbolize the experimental and unconventional methods of artistic expression, which might be met with resistance or censorship by the authorities. The police, therefore, represent those who try to curb this artistic freedom.
Overall, "Acid Police" is a song that highlights the tension between individualistic desires and societal constraints, freedom of expression and censorship, and the power struggle between authority and rebellion.
Line by Line Meaning
Acid!
This is a reference to the drug LSD, also known as acid. It is used as an exclamation to express excitement or enthusiasm.
Police!
This is a reference to law enforcement officers. The tone in which it is said suggests fear, anxiety or a sense of being intimidated.
Acid!
This line repeats the previous exclamation and emphasizes the significance of the drug in the song.
Police!
This line repeats the previous reference to law enforcement and emphasizes the conflict between the artist and the authorities.
Lyrics © O/B/O APRA AMCOS
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
J DoubleYoo
I genuinely feel sorry for anyone who did not get to see them live in the 90's
World Series of Ghosts
Man why you gotta do me like that
zappa
you’re so lucky i’m crazy Jealous. who’d they play with?!!?
Fresh Linen
:(
Saif Mohammed
mang......
DEGNER
@zappa Nirvana
Frank Walley
i was hugely enjoying my first time hearing this song, listening closely in my school library. when the song returns for the final tribal bout i decided to read the comments left here, and with every recitation, i was offered a new interpretation of this underworldly utterance, each making me laugh so much harder than the next and now i'm sweaty and embarrassed in the library. boredoms really really get to you like that
bubblepopshot
Every time I listen to this song it's a spiritual experience
BoingoTarash90s
An amusing yet powerful track. What a classic!
Enthusiastic Guy
4:05 onwards. Brilliant end to the song. Shows a Beatles influence.