title
|
The Ottawan Empire: Introducing...Boards of Canada
|
author
|
Toby Manning
|
publication
|
NME
|
date
|
1998/04
|
issue
|
Apr. 18th, 1998
|
pages
|
p.33
|
Original Text
"The Ottawan Empire: Introducing...Boards of Canada" is an interview by Toby Manning originally published Apr 1998 in NME magazine April 18th, 1998.
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.
The Ottawan Empire: Introducing...Boards of Canada
Who are?
An enigmatic duo holed up in a rural bunker somewhere near Edinburgh, from where they emit languorous, airy electronica with the charm and simplicity of cartoon theme tunes.
Whatâs the name about?
Like their music, it comes from a shared past in front of the TV.
When we were kids a lot of our favourite TV programmes, particularly wildlife documentaries, were made by the Film Board Of Canada,
says
Mike Sandison, the elder and more vocal of these two bearded urchins whose woolly hats seem to be surgically attached to their heads. He and Marcus Eoin have been friends since they were toddlers, growing up in Scotland before sharing a brief sojourn in the Canada when their parents moved there for work.
Documentaries? Yawn...
We just loved the soundtracks,
counters
Mike.
It's something people donât
normally pay much attention to. Like the strings at the end of programmes, the corporate logos with a little flourish and a little happy melody. Theyâre ultimate in psychedelia, but no-one ever notices them or talks about them. Whereas a pop song disappears after a few weeks, a jingle will be repeated for ten years and end up subliminally lodged in peopleâs brains.
Boards Of Canada attempt to create their own versions of these tunes -soundtracks for imaginary wildlife documentaries, jingles for invented corporations. Or, as
Marcus puts it:
An image of something you canât quite remember, but that sounds like it should be familiar.
Not exactly banging club tracks, then?
Hardly. Their debut album for Warp, âMusic Has The Right To Childrenâ, is equally reminiscent of forgotten TV themes, all powered by rhythms distantly related to hiphop. Itâs a strangely rural sound, infinitely less mechanised than the average Warp record.
We kind of see what we do as folk music - just made electronically,
says
Mike.
That said, thereâs also a distinctly sinister undercurrent inherent in their stuttering, cut-up vocals.
Subliminal messages at play, perhaps?
Youâll probably find all these Ozzy Osbourne fans committing suicide after listening too deeply to our music,
chuckles
Mike. Then thereâs that malicious psychedelic edge, too, hardly all hippy vibes and sunshine.
Psychedelic experiences are more attractive to us if theyâre creepy,
says
Mike, adding that such chemical shenanigans have already lost the band one member to date.
Letâs just say it got to the point where it wasnât recreational any more,
explains
Mike, grimly.
And whatâs the kiddy connection?
Weâre totally nostalgic about childhood,
admits
Mike, before
Marcus chips in,
Not that weâre that far removed from childhood. Sometimes you look at people and it seems like growing up is just the process of giving up everything you enjoy. The source of all our music is that weâve refused to accept adulthood.
The nappy hardcore revival starts here!
Toby Manning
BOARDS OF CANADAâS âMUSIC HAS THE RIGHT TO CHILDRENâ ALBUM IS OUT ON WARP ON MONDAY.
Highlights and Notes
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References