m |
m |
||
Line 61: | Line 61: | ||
[[Category: Interviews]] | [[Category: Interviews]] | ||
− | [[Category: The Campfire Headphase]] | + | [[Category: The Campfire Headphase era]] |
title | Search For Seclusion |
---|---|
author | Dan Rule |
publication | The Age (Melbourne, Australia) |
date | 2005/11/11 |
issue | |
pages |
This is an original text copied verbatim from the original source. Do not edit this text to correct errors or misspellings. Aside from added wikilinks, this text is exactly as it originally appeared.
Scottish electronic duo Boards of Canada have done their best to remain a mystery. Dan Rule investigates.
FOR a pair of artists who never release singles or music videos and rarely play live or speak to the press, it is all the more fascinating that Mike Sandison and Marcus Eoin (aka Boards of Canada) have remained two of the most quietly revered, referenced and imitated contemporary musicians around.
Since the wondrously sprawling, downbeat electro-psych of their 1998 debut Music Has the Right to Children and its dark and abrasive 2002 follow-up Geogaddi, the Scottish pair have assumed mysterious, almost ethereal guises.
But, in a rare interview, arranged to discuss their long-awaited third album The Campfire Headphase, both Sandison, 34, and Eoin, 32, are willing to shed some light on their work.
This sense of escapism has strong roots in their childhood. Following a two-year stay in Canada between 1979 and 1980, Sandison and Eoin - who, almost secretly, are brothers (Eoin has always used his middle name to avoid comparisons to electronic duo Orbital, also brothers) - began making their first crude recordings while still in primary school, using a dictation machine and a radio-cassette deck to multi-track instruments with snippets of TV and radio.
Of particular interest to the young brothers were the educational films produced by National Film Board of Canada.
This imprint is present in The Campfire Headphase, which, replete with warbling, detuned guitars and sweeping, sun-faded melodics, evokes clouded, distant reminiscence; a sound far removed from the brooding complexity of Geogaddi.
After working together for so long, the brothers have an intuitive, almost telepathic creative relationship.
The Campfire Headphase is out now through Warp/Inertia.
Scanned images of this newspaper or magazine article are missing. Please upload them to improve this page. |