Boards of Canada
Geogaddi 2002 Warp Records Familiar ghostly slow melodics open the orange fronted album with pleasant but haunting melancholy, a dreamy state of mind is induced by the dropped tempo and deliciously warm reverberation that encapsulates each sound. Amidst claims of Satanism and the dark veined thinking that laces the album, the music is actually surprisingly pleasant and concordant, full of flavour and interesting wandering sections. The decision to format the music in nuggets and nibbles which sandwich slightly meatier renditions in neatly spaced interludes was carried through from the previous work, Music Has The Right To Children. The tone change and progression from the earlier light and sometimes heavenly composition has been into darker and more shady parts. Minor keys and mystery play a forerunning role in the atmosphere and direction of Geogaddi. Sound bytes and vintage sounds mix nicely in electronic fuzz and synthesised visionary scoring to meld into a cocktail of luminous darkness and magical motions that glisten and sway in and out of phase with our listening reality. We're tempted to fall into comfortable spaces littering the catchy bits, invited to drift off into sea like realms of static and chime, but the nostalgic frills and pulsing rhythms keep us switched on. This isn't a sing-a-long, Boards of Canada utilise the electronic studio environment to create enchanting backdrops and breath-taking atmospheres. Down-tempo sludgy glades of reaching ideals and self-awareness grow into philosophical and psychological arenas that recreate the music from new angles and perspectives many artists simply never see. Despite the lack of commonplace tick box items that usually make a great album, Boards of Canada went and made one in a totally different direction, and in doing so wrote a whole new list of things to include when thinking about making something totally worthwhile.
Boards of Canada
Music Has The Right To Children Warp Records 1998 Armed with an array of tape recorders and influences stretching back to the 1970s, Boards of Canada emerged on the worldwide scene with Music Has The Right To Children after an exclusive run of home grown productions reserved for the few who were in the know. Abstractly formed and choppy Twoism EP was their first major exhibit, after being spotted by Autechre's Sean Booth, record producer in his own right, decided to release High Scores EP which features the Skam label's favourite tracks. This however being branded accessible, didn't make major news. It did, though, open the gates to bigger and better things, a full length release, namely “Music Has The Right To Children”. The crystal shimmering of sound that is reproduced when warming up the frequencies with organic recording methods found in devices such as Grundig tape machines when used to sample dated UHF transmissions is perhaps the magic ingredient. Boards of Canada seem to know exactly which part is the spine tingler, they pin-point that key motif which captivates the multiple senses of nostalgia, producing loving glows and whimsy fantasies of the moment. Wildlife Analysis opens the album with a melody, played to a drone which hides inside the scale beautifully. The piece is only meant to tickle our eardrums as within ninety seconds it is fading and setting the scene for the second movement. Ambient yet somehow poignant synths begin to whirlwind in slow motion around an ever growing rhythm, which after 4 or 8 bars (depending on your mindfulness) begins to play out loud. More layers build, ghostly voices, bells and rhythm fills encapsulate the feeling of being somewhere else, probably a long time ago. It is at this point that we realise this is not a typical music album. The emotive quality of the sounds on offer are rooted deeply in audio experience, the rhythms and scalings only serve as archaic reminders that once upon a time, albums had songs. Crafty electronica grooves surround sandwiches of oddity and savoury fillers which bite after bite, make morsel for the ears. A truly artistic piece of work, the children that are born of music are an odd yet undoubtedly endearing bunch. This one, which is attempting to figurehead the experimental music movement, is actually one of my favourites. Well done, son. |
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