artists mentioned by Boards of Canada in their interviews
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
This page supports semantic in-text annotations (e.g. "[[Is specified as::World Heritage Site]]") to build structured and queryable content provided by Semantic MediaWiki. For a comprehensive description on how to use annotations or the #ask parser function, please have a look at the getting started, in-text annotation, or inline queries help pages.
Latest revision | Your text | ||
Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
''[[Music Has the Right to Children]]'' returned to the UK Independent Chart Top 20 in February 1999, and after staying around for three weeks it peaked at number 7. Simultaneously the Peel Session single hung around the Top 10 of the Independent Singles Chart for several weeks. [[Boards of Canada]] soon found themselves in demand for remix work and obliged with a handful of mixes for various artists, including the hugely influential Meat Beat Manifesto. | ''[[Music Has the Right to Children]]'' returned to the UK Independent Chart Top 20 in February 1999, and after staying around for three weeks it peaked at number 7. Simultaneously the Peel Session single hung around the Top 10 of the Independent Singles Chart for several weeks. [[Boards of Canada]] soon found themselves in demand for remix work and obliged with a handful of mixes for various artists, including the hugely influential Meat Beat Manifesto. | ||
â | In May 1999 NME included [[Boards of Canada]] in its âTop Ten Nu-Psychedelic Bands,â alongside Mercury Rev & The Beta Band. In the same issue, NME ranked [[Boards of Canada]]âs debut album ''[[Music Has the Right to Children]]'' in its âTop 25 Psychedelic Records of All Timeâ. ''[[Music Has the Right to Children]]'' sat alongside other luminaries such as âTomorrow Never Knowsâ by the Beatles, âInterstellar Overdriveâ by Pink Floyd, âThe Stars That Play With Laughing Samâs | + | In May 1999 NME included [[Boards of Canada]] in its âTop Ten Nu-Psychedelic Bands,â alongside Mercury Rev & The Beta Band. In the same issue, NME ranked [[Boards of Canada]]âs debut album ''[[Music Has the Right to Children]]'' in its âTop 25 Psychedelic Records of All Timeâ. ''[[Music Has the Right to Children]]'' sat alongside other luminaries such as âTomorrow Never Knowsâ by the Beatles, âInterstellar Overdriveâ by Pink Floyd, âThe Stars That Play With Laughing Samâs Dice â by Hendrix and âTo Here Knows Whenâ by My Bloody Valentine to name but a few. |
From 1999 onward various tracks from the BOC back-catalogue were being licensed for compilation albums, TV synchronisation and film soundtracks all over the world. | From 1999 onward various tracks from the BOC back-catalogue were being licensed for compilation albums, TV synchronisation and film soundtracks all over the world. | ||
Line 45: | Line 45: | ||
In the summer of 2004 Mike became a father. His daughter was born during the writing sessions of the bandâs third studio album for Warp. | In the summer of 2004 Mike became a father. His daughter was born during the writing sessions of the bandâs third studio album for Warp. | ||
â | At the end of 2004 US artist Beck asked [[Boards of Canada]] to remix a song for his upcoming album âGueroâ. BOC took the vocal lines of his beautifully wistful track âBroken Drumâ and created a whole new melody around them, with an epic, heavily layered crescendo. In an interview with Clash Magazine in the spring of 2005, Beck described the remix as | + | At the end of 2004 US artist Beck asked [[Boards of Canada]] to remix a song for his upcoming album âGueroâ. BOC took the vocal lines of his beautifully wistful track âBroken Drumâ and created a whole new melody around them, with an epic, heavily layered crescendo. In an interview with Clash Magazine in the spring of 2005, Beck described the remix as â?my favourite remix Iâve ever had done ? they brought out something that was there but then they just added a whole new dimension. I guess itâs quite an emotional song and they brought out something bittersweet in it that was kinda hippyish, but it doesnât maim you with saccharin. It kinda gets you right in the chest.â |
In summer 2005 [[Boards of Canada]] completed work on their third album for [[Warp|Warp Records]]. ''[[The Campfire Headphase]]'' was released in October 2005. Described as an âepic sci-fi westernâ, the album is a surprising deviation into 1970âs guitar licks and graceful, summery lysergic melodies. A video was released for the track âDayvan Cowboyâ, featuring a sky-diver falling from space into the ocean then surfing into the sunset at the songâs euphoric climax. This was the first publicly-available video to be released outside the bandâs live shows. | In summer 2005 [[Boards of Canada]] completed work on their third album for [[Warp|Warp Records]]. ''[[The Campfire Headphase]]'' was released in October 2005. Described as an âepic sci-fi westernâ, the album is a surprising deviation into 1970âs guitar licks and graceful, summery lysergic melodies. A video was released for the track âDayvan Cowboyâ, featuring a sky-diver falling from space into the ocean then surfing into the sunset at the songâs euphoric climax. This was the first publicly-available video to be released outside the bandâs live shows. |