Boris

Boris may refer to:

Name

  • Boris (given name), a male given name
  • Boris (surname)
  • People

  • Boris (singer) (born 1965), pseudonym of French singer Philippe Dhondt
  • Boris I of Bulgaria (died 907), the first Christian ruler of the First Bulgarian Empire, canonized after his death
  • Boris II of Bulgaria (c. 931–977), ruler of the First Bulgarian Empire
  • Boris III of Bulgaria (1894–1943), ruler of the Kingdom of Bulgaria in the first half of the 20th century
  • Boris and Gleb (died 1015), the first saints canonized in Kievan Rus
  • Boris Becker (born 1967), German tennis player
  • Boris Johnson (born 1964), British politician and the current Mayor of London
  • Entertainment

  • Boris (band), Japanese experimental rock trio
  • "Boris" (song), song from the 1991 album Bullhead by The Melvins
  • Boris (TV series), an Italian TV series (2007–2009)
  • Boris (EP), an EP by Yezda Urfa
  • Other

  • Boris (crater), a lunar crater
  • Hurricane Boris (disambiguation), several cyclones in the Eastern Pacific
  • Boris stones, seven medieval artifacts in Belarus
  • Boris (surname)

    Boris is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Boyko Borisov, former Bulgarian Premier
  • Jean-Pierre Boris, journalist at Radio France Internationale
  • Paul Boris, retired Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Trevor Boris, Canadian comedian and writer
  • Leonard Borisoff, American vocalist, songwriter and record producer
  • Boris (EP)

    Boris is the original EP recorded by Yezda Urfa to gather attention from record companies. Three of the pieces were reworked on Sacred Baboon (To-Ta in the Moya, Boris and his 3 Verses (including "Flow Guides Aren't My Bag"), and 3, Almost 4, 6 Yea). The album is now a rare find in the progressive rock circles

    Track listing

  • Side One
  • Boris and his 3 verses (Including "Flow Guides Aren't My Bag") (11:00)
  • Texas Armadillo (1:48)
  • 3, almost 4, 6 yea (8:46)
  • Side two
  • To-Ta in the Moya (Including Tyreczimmage) (10:50)
  • Three Tons of Fresh Thyroid Glands (10:20)
  • CD Syn-Phonic SYNCD20 Bonus track
  • The Basis of Dubenglazy While Dirk Does the Dance (9:50)
  • Length with bonus track: 52:35

    Personnel

    Brad Christoff :percussion, all sorts
    Phil Kimbrough: keyboards, synthesizers, mandolin, wind instruments
    Mark Tippins: guitars, banjo, vocals
    Marc Miller: bass
    Rick Rodenbaugh: vocals

    Boris (song)

    Boris is a song by The Melvins on their 1991 album, Bullhead. Due to its extremely slow speeds and repetitive guitars it is often regarded as a doom metal song. The song is a fan favorite and appears on the Melvins retrospective album/book Neither Here nor There and the live album Alive at the F*cker Club. The Japanese doom/drone metal band Boris named themselves after this song. The Boris song "Vomitself" from their album Amplifier Worship has a similar but slower riff at the start of the song.

    The song was covered by Isis and Agoraphobic Nosebleed on the 2005 tribute album We Reach: The Music of the Melvins. This song is no relation to the song by Boy of the same title.

    References

    Boris (given name)

    Boris, Borys or Barys (Bulgarian, Russian, Serbian, Ukrainian: Борис; Belarusian: Барыс) is a male name of Bulgarian origin. Nowadays, it is most widely represented in Russia (by the number of the name carriers), almost equally in Belarus, less in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Republic of Macedonia, Poland, Montenegro, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Ukraine. In recent generations it has also been used among speakers of Germanic (continental and Anglo-Frisian) and, to a lesser extent, Romance languages.

    Meaning

    The most common theory is that this name comes from the Bulgar language with meanings according to the different interpretations: "wolf", "short" or "snow leopard". Some authors, who support an Iranian theory about the origin of the Bulgar language derive "Bogoris" from the Iranian word "bog", which could mean "godlike".

    Origin

    Boris is first found in written records in the case of the Bulgarian ruler Prince Boris I (852-889), who adopted Christianity in 864 AD and imposed it on his people. His name came to be known in Europe in relation to this particular act. Moreover, after his death in 907 AD he was proclaimed the first Bulgarian saint, and traces of his cult during this period can be found as far away as Ireland. The Patriarchate of Constantinople recognized the canonization of St. Boris in 923 AD. However, Prince Boris was not a Slav. He descended from the Bulgars. Among the Bulgars the name was known in its two forms: Boris and Bogoris.

    Boris Titulaer

    Boris Titulaer is a contemporary soul singer-songwriter from the Netherlands. Previously known as Boris in his native Netherlands, he adopted the stage name Bo Saris (his mother's maiden name) in 2012.

    Biography

    Titulaer was born in Venlo, Netherlands. He currently resides in London, England. He was the winner of the second edition of the Dutch talent show Idols. Following a series of successful albums in the Netherlands, Titulaer moved to London.

    His first release under the moniker Bo Saris, She's On Fire, peaked at number 5 in the Dutch Alternative Music charts in August 2012. The EP release included remixes by house music producer Maya Jane Coles and drum and bass producer Calibre. Both had a limited vinyl release.

    He is also featured on the Chase & Status song "Breathing" from their 2013 album Brand New Machine.

    As "Bo Saris", Titulaer is signed to DERAM Records, a division of Universal Music Group, and has released two EPs - The Addict and Little Bit More - Remixes. His latest album, GOLD, was released in May 2014.

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