One of electronic music's most fully realized acts, Boards Of Canada quietly created its own aesthetic universe on 1998's Music Has The Right To Children, an unassuming album built around hardwired ...
Few electronic artists capture the duality of nature as effectively as Scottish duo Boards of Canada. With 1998’s “Music Has the Right to Children,” Boards introduced a musical perspective that ...
Record Store Day, 2013. A mysterious vinyl, titled ——/——/——/xxxxxx/——/—— appeared in a New York music store. It contained a brief burst of audio ...
Boards of Canada have a lot to answer for. Four years ago the duo's debut album, 'Music Has the Right to Children', sent 50,000 people scurrying to their rooms, only to emerge months later - and never ...
rumour, and there’s talk of demon faces in the cover art. What the title (or indeed any of it all means) is up for debate. To add to the excitement, no preview copies of the album were distributed.
So here it is, the most eagerly-awaited electronica album of the year - and amazingly enough, it lives up to all expectations. The two reclusive Scots who make up the Boards of Canada made a massive ...