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On 19 March 2020, Marumari [https://www.reddit.com/r/Marumari/comments/erezoa/comment/fkxmh29/ confirmed] that he created "Eno Test" "back in the Napster days". It seems he created it circa 2000, named it "Eno Test", and never gave it an official release. The track wound up on file sharing networks and bootleg audio discs, where it gained a life of its own, spreading and being given different names, including "Stry Craty Bya". | On 19 March 2020, Marumari [https://www.reddit.com/r/Marumari/comments/erezoa/comment/fkxmh29/ confirmed] that he created "Eno Test" "back in the Napster days". It seems he created it circa 2000, named it "Eno Test", and never gave it an official release. The track wound up on file sharing networks and bootleg audio discs, where it gained a life of its own, spreading and being given different names, including "Stry Craty Bya". | ||
| − | The main melody of "Eno Test" is sampled from the song "But If" by Brian Eno on the album | + | The main melody of "Eno Test" is sampled from the song "But If" by Brian Eno on the album ''The Drop'' (1997). |
== "Eno Test" releases == | == "Eno Test" releases == | ||
| Eno Test | |
|---|---|
| Running time | 5:07 or 4:38 |
| Appears on | P2P networks |
| Parson | |
|---|---|
| Running time | 5:12 |
| Appears on | P2P networks |
"Eno Test" and "Parson" are two tracks by Marumari which are often misattributed to either Boards of Canada alone, or to Marumari & Boards of Canada. Both tracks are the work of Marumari alone.
"Eno Test" is sometimes misrepresented as "Stry Craty Bya", which is the name of a track from Acid Memories, a Boards of Canada album that has never been released to the public.
The songs were discovered in the early 2000s on various P2P networks. They are among the earliest mislabeled tracks; "Eno Test" was first mentioned on idm-l on May 14, 2000. "Parson" was first mentioned in another post (in conjunction with "Eno Test") on Jan 12, 2001. They were included on the earliest archived copy of DavidAC's BoC pages, dated August 2002.
On 19 March 2020, Marumari confirmed that he created "Eno Test" "back in the Napster days". It seems he created it circa 2000, named it "Eno Test", and never gave it an official release. The track wound up on file sharing networks and bootleg audio discs, where it gained a life of its own, spreading and being given different names, including "Stry Craty Bya".
The main melody of "Eno Test" is sampled from the song "But If" by Brian Eno on the album The Drop (1997).
After its initial appearance on P2P file-sharing networks, "Eno Test" was officially released on May 1, 2002 as "Submarine Tactics" on the We Bore CD-R compilation by Toast and Jam Recordings.
Over two decades later, on May 23, 2025, it appeared as "Emergency on Bleecker (Enotest)"' on Marumari's self-released compilation album Hidden Tracks and Rarities 2001–2005, available digitally and on cassette via Bandcamp.
Both of these appearances run about 5:07, whereas the old P2P-shared version, misattributed to Boards of Canada, runs 4:37. The two versions diverge near the 3:30 mark. Examples are linked below:
"Eno Test" is also erroneously associated with Stereolab, by virtue of being included on a 3-disc Stereolab bootleg named B-Sides Collected. It is listed as the 15th track on the second disc and credited as "Eno Test (with Marumari)", according to Bradley's Almanac, the personal homepage of a former trader.
"Parson" appeared on Hidden Tracks and Rarities 2001–2005 under the name "Sarson (Parson)". It runs 5:12 and matches the version shared on P2P networks in the early 2000s.