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"[[The Last Unexplored Area of Boards of Canada]]"  is an interview (In Japanese) by Joe Sato, Nakamoto Hiroyuni originally published Mar. 2002 in Buzz magazine Number 31, pp.12-16.
 
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"[[The Last Unexplored Area of Boards of Canada]]"  is a 2002/03 interview by Joe Sato, Nakamoto Hiroyuni. It originally appeared in Japanese Buzz magazine.
  
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'''ใ‚จใ‚ฏใ‚นใƒšใƒชใƒกใƒณใ‚ฟใƒซใƒปใƒŸใƒฅใƒผใ‚ธใƒƒใ‚ฏๆœ€ๅพŒใฎ็ง˜ๅขƒใƒœใƒผใ‚บใƒปใ‚ชใƒ–ใƒปใ‚ซใƒŠใƒ€ '''
 
 
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== Translation  ==
  
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== Translated Text ==
 
 
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'''Note:''' The original magazine was scanned to PDF. That PDF was sent to an online OCR tool to be converted to Japanese character text. The resulting text was translated on a basic level by Google Translate. That translation has been rewritten and interpreted into proper English by Toni L'Avon.
 
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'''The Last Unexplored Area of Boards of Canada'''
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'''Note:''' The original magazine was scanned to PDF. That PDF was sent to an online OCR tool to be converted to Japanese character text. The resulting text was translated on a basic level by Google Translate. That translation has been rewritten and interpreted into proper English by [http://www.twoism.org/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=3440 Valotonin].
  
  
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The only thing that truly exists is the moment. Everything inside of me is entranced and captivated by a very particular sound. This sound reverberated and flowed from [[Boards of Canada]]'s release - ''[[Geogaddi]]''. Once, a band called My Bloody Valentine changed the world with its sweet and layered, sugar coated and heavily sculpted sound. Today we meet two musicians from Scotland, [[Mike Sandison]] and [[Marcus Eoin]] who have once again reshaped our entire perception of music. This will be their sixth public release, but the people behind the music are still very much a mystery. ''[[Music Has the Right to Children]]'', which had been entirely distinct from the Hip-Hop, electronic and experimental music of the time that it was often associated with, created  the backdrop for the long awaited second album, ''[[Geogaddi]]'', the contents of which was far exceeding the boundaries of imagination created by the listener's anticipation and craving for more of the Sandison's sounds. They tend to be illusive and very shy of public exposure and interviews but, to my surprise and seemingly by miracle, this will be their first ever interview in Japan. We conducted the interview by email and I was anxiously awaiting a reply which, in turn, arrived safely. Now we can begin to peer beneath the illusive cloak of secrecy and begin to build a picture of the source of the sonic mastery below. It would all become clear.  
 
The only thing that truly exists is the moment. Everything inside of me is entranced and captivated by a very particular sound. This sound reverberated and flowed from [[Boards of Canada]]'s release - ''[[Geogaddi]]''. Once, a band called My Bloody Valentine changed the world with its sweet and layered, sugar coated and heavily sculpted sound. Today we meet two musicians from Scotland, [[Mike Sandison]] and [[Marcus Eoin]] who have once again reshaped our entire perception of music. This will be their sixth public release, but the people behind the music are still very much a mystery. ''[[Music Has the Right to Children]]'', which had been entirely distinct from the Hip-Hop, electronic and experimental music of the time that it was often associated with, created  the backdrop for the long awaited second album, ''[[Geogaddi]]'', the contents of which was far exceeding the boundaries of imagination created by the listener's anticipation and craving for more of the Sandison's sounds. They tend to be illusive and very shy of public exposure and interviews but, to my surprise and seemingly by miracle, this will be their first ever interview in Japan. We conducted the interview by email and I was anxiously awaiting a reply which, in turn, arrived safely. Now we can begin to peer beneath the illusive cloak of secrecy and begin to build a picture of the source of the sonic mastery below. It would all become clear.  
  
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[[Boards of Canada]] are not ones to involve themselves with the media too readily and their true identities are not known at all in Japan. Through this interview conducted via Email, I found that Mike and Marcus are each different characters with interesting personalities...
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[[Boards of Canada]] are not one's to involve themselves with the media too readily and their true identities are not known at all in Japan. Through this interview conducted via Email, I found that Mike and Marcus are each different characters with interesting personalities...
  
 
{{question| This album, the first full length release in around four years, is often directly compared to your previous work. Is this something you generally anticipate and was it created in the knowledge of it being a followup to ''[[Music Has the Right to Children]]''?}}
 
{{question| This album, the first full length release in around four years, is often directly compared to your previous work. Is this something you generally anticipate and was it created in the knowledge of it being a followup to ''[[Music Has the Right to Children]]''?}}
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{{question| The name '[[Boards of Canada]]' is derived from the Canadian visual production company: ''National Film [[Boards of Canada]]''. I am told that the company is based in Canada and seems to produce nature and cultural films, alongside animated films for children. Is there a relation to this or a reason that you decided to use the name?}}
 
{{question| The name '[[Boards of Canada]]' is derived from the Canadian visual production company: ''National Film [[Boards of Canada]]''. I am told that the company is based in Canada and seems to produce nature and cultural films, alongside animated films for children. Is there a relation to this or a reason that you decided to use the name?}}
  
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{{boc|Mike: The National Film [[Boards of Canada]] is a huge organization. In the 1970's, when we were children, we often watched their productions and were always interested and enchanted by alterations in sound quality made as a result of the tape physically degrading. This later had a huge influence on our musical direction.}}
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{{boc|Mike: The National Film [[Boards of Canada]] is a huge organization. In the 1970's, when we where children, we often watched their productions and were always interested and enchanted by alterations in sound quality made as a result of the tape physically degrading. This later had a huge influence on our musical direction}}
  
 
{{question| Can you tell me more about your history in creating and editing music. Are there any records that had a big impact on your lives?}}
 
{{question| Can you tell me more about your history in creating and editing music. Are there any records that had a big impact on your lives?}}
  
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{{boc| Marcus: When we were younger, we both had access to a piano and guitar and used them to develop ourselves as musicians. There was one record I recall that was mostly created around the sampling of another older record, in fact. When I listened to it, I could instantly envision what I would want to do with it if it were in my hands, expanding upon the beats and mixing it down in a more simplistic way. It wasn't so much particular songs but particular elements and techniques used in music that I was attracted to. One artist we very much look at with respect is Meat Beat Manifesto, they are real innovators in their field. There were other records that I could almost believe were discs sent from the future, really amazing sequenced sections and I believe they were using a sequencer to play a monotonous synth. Other records attracted me due to elements such as bass-lines which immediately get you addicted to the music. In other cases you could feel that the synthesizers were just alive, beautifully so.}}
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{{boc| Marcus: When we where younger, we both had access to a piano and guitar and used them to develop ourselves as musicians. There was one record I recall that was mostly created around the sampling of another older record, in fact. When I listened to it, I could instantly envision what I would want to do with it if it where in my hands, expanding upon the beats and mixing it down in a more simplistic way. It wasn't so much particular songs but particular elements and techniques used in music that I was attracted to. One artist we very much look at with respect is Meat Beat Manifesto, they are real innovators in their field. There where other records that I could almost believe where discs sent from the future, really amazing sequenced sections and I believe they where using a sequencer to play a monotonous synth. Other records attracted me due to elements such as bass-lines which immediately get you addicted to the music. In other cases you could feel that the synthesizers where just alive, beautifully so.}}
  
 
{{boc| Mike: A handful of artists strive to create a beauty beyond the artificial tastelessness that we see in a lot of today's music. This isn't to say that I don't like a few things that people tend to refer to as artificial and tasteless though.  An example of something I find it very difficult to like are computer programmed tracks that appear to have had the melodies completely overlooked, nothing resembling a true melody left. I think people tend to create that kind of music as a way of showing off computing/programming skills rather than a true affection for music. Music should be able to induce a sense of emotion that appeals to human understanding. A melody often creates a meaning within.}}
 
{{boc| Mike: A handful of artists strive to create a beauty beyond the artificial tastelessness that we see in a lot of today's music. This isn't to say that I don't like a few things that people tend to refer to as artificial and tasteless though.  An example of something I find it very difficult to like are computer programmed tracks that appear to have had the melodies completely overlooked, nothing resembling a true melody left. I think people tend to create that kind of music as a way of showing off computing/programming skills rather than a true affection for music. Music should be able to induce a sense of emotion that appeals to human understanding. A melody often creates a meaning within.}}
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{{question| In terms of ''[[Geogaddi]]'', what inspires you to create such fascinating names for the tracks, for example: "[[Music Is Math]]"', "[[A Is To B As B Is To C]]"' and more natural themes such as on "[[Dandelion]]"' and "[[You Could Feel the Sky]]"'? When I hear them, it isn't something that I would associate with electronic music and rhythms. It is more the sound of nature.}}
 
{{question| In terms of ''[[Geogaddi]]'', what inspires you to create such fascinating names for the tracks, for example: "[[Music Is Math]]"', "[[A Is To B As B Is To C]]"' and more natural themes such as on "[[Dandelion]]"' and "[[You Could Feel the Sky]]"'? When I hear them, it isn't something that I would associate with electronic music and rhythms. It is more the sound of nature.}}
  
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{{boc| Mike: I think the humanity of our music is reflected in our lives. Neither of us is particularly a technology lover. I want to move around as I think about working with machines. I think that experimental art does not have a mechanism that makes it possible to change music in such a way as to separate it from its existence in nature. It seems as if it is somehow made in a way in which technology has a large influence on the work, but the listeners are not ever sure of what it is. We believe it is music because it has an element of the abnormal and the unnatural. It is also the ability to create it as if one were experiencing or seeing it in a natural environment. We use authentic organic elements of sound and it is entertaining to create sounds that are beyond the reaches of our imagination.}}
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{{boc| Mike: I think the humanity of our music is reflected in our lives. Neither of us is particularly a technology lover. I want to move around as I think about working with machines. I think that experimental art does not have a mechanism that makes it possible to change music in such a way as to separate it from its existence in nature. It seems as if it is somehow made in a way in which technology has a large influence on the work, but the listeners are not ever sure of what it is. We believe it is music because it has an element of the abnormal and the unnatural. It is also the ability to create it as if one where experiencing or seeing it in a natural environment. We use authentic organic elements of sound and it is entertaining to create sounds that are beyond the reaches of our imagination.}}
  
 
{{question| Can you tell me anything more about the creation of [[Boards of Canada]]?}}
 
{{question| Can you tell me anything more about the creation of [[Boards of Canada]]?}}
  
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{{boc| [Ambiguous as to who responds] We were both the children of musical families, living close to the sea. There really wasn't much entertainment for us as children. I began making strange cassette tapes, creating a tapestry of sound akin to the patterns of sound one hears in nature, perhaps on an island. In reality there are an infinitely large number of instruments one can use, with computer based 'Laptop music', your choices are entirely limited and constrained to the limits of the machine, not to the limits of human reality and beyond as it otherwise would be.}}
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{{boc| [Ambiguous as to who responds] We where both the children of musical families, living close to the sea. There really wasn't much entertainment for us as children. I began making strange cassette tapes, creating a tapestry of sound akin to the patterns of sound one hears in nature, perhaps on an island. In reality there are an infinitely large number of instruments one can use, with computer based 'Laptop music', your choices are entirely limited and constrained to the limits of the machine, not to the limits of human reality and beyond as it otherwise would be.}}
  
 
{{question| Is there also an influence in your music that comes from 'Hip-Hop', 'Break-beats' and heavy sequencing?}}
 
{{question| Is there also an influence in your music that comes from 'Hip-Hop', 'Break-beats' and heavy sequencing?}}
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{{question| Do you think of music as a tool for communication?}}
 
{{question| Do you think of music as a tool for communication?}}
  
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{{boc|Mike: Of course there is music that exists solely for the purpose of communication. Actually ''Let me convey far more emotions than words ever could'' is a good example of how human beings developed intelligence. It started from the point at which an ape struck a stick and started clapping, and finally it became possible to express complex human emotion. There is someone, somewhere listening to the melodies I make and feeling nice if the emotion I am trying to put across is a sentiment like love or adoration. It would be nice if there were someone who would experience the experience of being able to listen to your own music when they hear our creations, as in the end, we create it to our own taste. }}
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{{boc|Mike: Of course there is music that exists solely for the purpose of communication. Actually ''Let me convey far more emotions than words ever could'' is a good example of how human beings developed intelligence. It started from the point at which an ape struck a stick and started clapping, and finally it became possible to express complex human emotion. There is someone, somewhere listening to the melodies I make and feeling nice if the emotion I am trying to put across is a sentiment like love or adoration. It would be nice if there where someone who would experience the experience of being able to listen to your own music when they hear our creations, as in the end, we create it to our own taste. }}
  
 
[Unintelligible section omitted]
 
[Unintelligible section omitted]
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{{question|It does seem that in that time period and with government Public Service announcements that there was a strong shift towards the pessimistic and the negative. I personally picked up on some of this in 'A Beautiful Place Out in the Country'}}
 
{{question|It does seem that in that time period and with government Public Service announcements that there was a strong shift towards the pessimistic and the negative. I personally picked up on some of this in 'A Beautiful Place Out in the Country'}}
  
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{{boc| Mike: The underlying message in both "[[1969]]"' and 'A Beautiful Place Out in the Country' are rather similar. The general lifestyle changed quite dramatically around this point in history and structure and regulation were becoming evermore part of the lives of the general population. We are actually really interested to know of people's states of mind when listening to our music and whether it is felt as somewhat of a psychedelic experience to them. }}
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{{boc| Mike: The underlying message in both "[[1969]]"' and 'A Beautiful Place Out in the Country' are rather similar. The general lifestyle changed quite dramatically around this point in history and structure and regulation where becoming evermore part of the lives of the general population. We are actually really interested to know of people's states of mind when listening to our music and whether it is felt as somewhat of a psychedelic experience to them. }}
  
 
{{boc|Marcus: I think that being aware of one's internal thought processes and being aware of the way the world changes in its entirety and is constantly changing is a positive attribute to have. Good things are sometimes born from this state of mind, but also the negative can be born of these realizations, too. It seems so distant from what is considered to be common sense, such as leaving your body in a distorted form etc.}}
 
{{boc|Marcus: I think that being aware of one's internal thought processes and being aware of the way the world changes in its entirety and is constantly changing is a positive attribute to have. Good things are sometimes born from this state of mind, but also the negative can be born of these realizations, too. It seems so distant from what is considered to be common sense, such as leaving your body in a distorted form etc.}}
  
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{{question|I think that the previous works that you have made, made one feel like something beautiful was being created in front of them, although sharp elements of Hip-Hop were used heavily and anger and aggression were felt more intensely. Regardless, the psychedelic feel in this work seems to be dramatically expanding upon the euphoria and warmth of your previous, What is your take on this?}}
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{{question|I think that the previous works that you have made, made one feel like something beautiful was being created in front of them, although sharp elements of Hip-Hop where used heavily and anger and aggression where felt more intensely. Regardless, the psychedelic feel in this work seems to be dramatically expanding upon the euphoria and warmth of your previous, What is your take on this?}}
  
 
{{boc| Marcus: I think that it is a reasonable interpretation. I wanted to make something which isn't limited to feeling like it is a specific style of music within a particular time period. The psychedelic element is certainly there to a certain extent, but it comes more from the music surrounding psychedelics as opposed to the chemicals themselves. '''[[Geogaddi]]''' is host to a wide variety of styles.}}
 
{{boc| Marcus: I think that it is a reasonable interpretation. I wanted to make something which isn't limited to feeling like it is a specific style of music within a particular time period. The psychedelic element is certainly there to a certain extent, but it comes more from the music surrounding psychedelics as opposed to the chemicals themselves. '''[[Geogaddi]]''' is host to a wide variety of styles.}}
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{{question| Children learn both the positive and negative from their elders in the vast majority of cases. Are you able to tell us anything of your interpretation of 'God' and what it represents to you?}}
 
{{question| Children learn both the positive and negative from their elders in the vast majority of cases. Are you able to tell us anything of your interpretation of 'God' and what it represents to you?}}
  
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{{boc|Marcus: I have nothing real to say on the subject, although, if you don't belong to any particular religion, God may appear to be the same to you as it would if one were to make an independent idea of god, coming soley from their heart and autonomous ideas and sentiments.}}
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{{boc|Marcus: I have nothing real to say on the subject, although, if you don't belong to any particular religion, God may appear to be the same to you as it would if one where to make an independent idea of god, coming soley from their heart and autonomous ideas and sentiments.}}
  
 
{{question| With '''[[Geogaddi]]''', I often feel that there is a dark and sometimes even agressive mood to your music, but the accumulation of the entire piece leaves me with a sense of optimism and peace. It is quite emotionally ambiguous...}}
 
{{question| With '''[[Geogaddi]]''', I often feel that there is a dark and sometimes even agressive mood to your music, but the accumulation of the entire piece leaves me with a sense of optimism and peace. It is quite emotionally ambiguous...}}
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== Original text (Japanese) ==
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Image:2002 03 Buzz Vol31 Cover.jpg
 
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Image:2002 03 Buzz Vol31 pg12 pg13.jpg
 
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Image:2002 03 Buzz Vol31 pg16.jpg
 
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Image:Marcus Buzz 2002 3.jpg
 
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* First known Japanese interview
 
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== External Links  ==
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
 
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[[Category: Interviews]]
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[[Category:Geogaddi era]]
 
[[Category:Geogaddi era]]

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