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artists mentioned by Boards of Canada in their interviews

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== Original Text ==
 
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"[[Boards of Canada, eh?]]" is an interview by Walt Miller originally published 1998 in Faqt magazine Vol. 02 No. 04, pp.32-33.
 
"[[Boards of Canada, eh?]]" is an interview by Walt Miller originally published 1998 in Faqt magazine Vol. 02 No. 04, pp.32-33.
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== Original Text ==
 
 
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=== Boards of Canada, eh? ===
  
 
Marcus Eoin and Mike Sandison are a couple of Scottish lads who grew up in Canada, and were mesmerized as children by the documentary soundtracks produced by the Canadian Film Board, (hence the name). As youths. Marcus and Mike were prolific in their endeavors: early adventures included unusual, visionary film & sound experiments. As musicians, the two went virtually unnoticed until Sean Booth called the band up after receiving a demo tape, which led to the much-heralded release, Hi Scores, on Autechre's Skam label. As the hype slowly mounted on the strength of the record, BOC continued their steady work ethic, contributing tracks to various compilations, doing remixes and releasing two more records for Skam (a 7" and a 10"). In 1998, Music Has A Right To Children was put out by Warp, and subsequently licensed to Matador in America. As their first full length release, the album represents a a culmination in the duo's perfected sound: beautiful melancholic melodies over deliciously crunchy rhythms that give nods to Autechre. The duo plans to follow up Music Has A Right with another album for Warp next year. Meanwhile, their film production collective, Music70, continues to work on a large film project to be completed in 2-3 years time.
 
Marcus Eoin and Mike Sandison are a couple of Scottish lads who grew up in Canada, and were mesmerized as children by the documentary soundtracks produced by the Canadian Film Board, (hence the name). As youths. Marcus and Mike were prolific in their endeavors: early adventures included unusual, visionary film & sound experiments. As musicians, the two went virtually unnoticed until Sean Booth called the band up after receiving a demo tape, which led to the much-heralded release, Hi Scores, on Autechre's Skam label. As the hype slowly mounted on the strength of the record, BOC continued their steady work ethic, contributing tracks to various compilations, doing remixes and releasing two more records for Skam (a 7" and a 10"). In 1998, Music Has A Right To Children was put out by Warp, and subsequently licensed to Matador in America. As their first full length release, the album represents a a culmination in the duo's perfected sound: beautiful melancholic melodies over deliciously crunchy rhythms that give nods to Autechre. The duo plans to follow up Music Has A Right with another album for Warp next year. Meanwhile, their film production collective, Music70, continues to work on a large film project to be completed in 2-3 years time.
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{{question|Is there anything you'd like to say about the "large film project" you are said to be working on?}}
 
{{question|Is there anything you'd like to say about the "large film project" you are said to be working on?}}
 
{{boc|It's something we've wanted to do for a long time. A beautiful feature-length film with no budget.}}
 
{{boc|It's something we've wanted to do for a long time. A beautiful feature-length film with no budget.}}
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== Highlights and Notes ==
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*On page 07 in this issue there is a small section "Artist Survey" where several artists were asked who their pop culture heroes were when they were 12 years old.Marcus: Masaaki Hatsumi. Michael: Ted Neeley
  
 
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Image:1998 10 Faqt Vol02 No04 pg32 pg33.jpg
 
Image:1998 10 Faqt Vol02 No04 pg32 pg33.jpg
 
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== Highlights ==
 
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* On page 07 in this issue there is a small section "Artist Survey" where several artists were asked who their pop culture heroes were when they were 12 years old.Marcus: Masaaki Hatsumi. Michael: Ted Neeley
 
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== External Links ==
 
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== References  ==
 
== References  ==

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