1. OroborO was a noise rock band from Boston, Massachusetts.
Western Massachusetts act OroborO has a habit of being different. Their sound is a mix of progressive rock, art punk and feint funkiness. Frontwoman Emily Carter is a force of nature on the mic with her screams and emphatic way of singing. Nate Kellogg’s abstract skill on guitar makes the band’s weirdness shine. The foundation for the unique rhythms is provided by the stellar syncopation between drummer Jordan Frick and bassist Spencer Gusha.
OroborO initially started with three members, Nate, Jordan, and Spencer. After releasing 2 instrumental demo sessions on their Bandcamp in 2016 (LOST DEMOS and DEMOS), they would add vocalist Emily Carter to the group, which led to their first single "Baked Acid" on January 20, 2017, and their debut record "Laughing Death" on January 12, 2018, which had a physical CD release.
After touring several U.S. states, they would release a music video for "Black Ice" on December 11, 2018, which would be the final track on their EP "D Y A D"; this EP would drop on January 11, 2019; it had a physical release on cassette tape.
Their final single, "Climb / Gutted", released September 13, 2019, was their only release under a label Flesh and Bone Records who gave the single a physical cassette tape release as well.
The band went on indefinite hiatus on March 20, 2020, removing most of their pages online as well as their website. Emily Carter and Spencer Gusha would later form the Boston/NYC band BRICKLAYER which went on its own hiatus after their debut album in 2024. Jordan Frick would participate in the bands Silver Pattern and Bandski in Seattle, Washington. Nate Kellogg started two projects, an ambient and an IDM project, under the monikers Make Tape Music and Person Project respectively.
2. Oroboro is a snake which bites itself at tale by creating a circle, symbolizing sun and natural cyclicity. Oroboro is a community of creative artists. It's main staff consists of Aleksandrs Maijers, Andrejs Grimms and Žaks Bernarts. They all do experimental arts and music without restricting themselves and listeners to a specific genre or music with a strict form of construction. Oroboro in their music use wide range of multinational music instruments, even improvised versions of them and other things which are not music instruments, but from their made noise could easily be. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
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