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Last Updated: 11/22/2009

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Status: Single
City: Hi-Ho Wolver’ampton
State: Midlands
Country: UK
Signup Date: 3/19/2009
August 23, 2009 - Sunday 
I was up late chatting with a fellow BoC fan the other night.

We were discussing that BoC is not just music, but it always points towards something ultimate and mysterious. It's impossible to say what that is, but it's palpable in their music, photography and films. Even when they do not create the photographs themselves, the discovery and presentation of such images, sounds, quotes or films seem to contain their consciousness. My friend said that they must have some form of cosmic consciousness and I couldn't agree more.

I think when I first heard the campfire headphase, I had massive expectations, a fault that I admit to being my own, and it affected the way I received that album in a negative way. I was one of those geogaddi obsessives who enjoyed hunting for meaning and messages, spinning the record backward and at different speeds, but only because I knew it was there, and it was intentionally provoked. So, greedily, I wanted more post-geogaddi.

There is an art to listening as well as to making, and what I have learned from Zen has made me reconsider how I hear albums. Hear it now, without dragging a past, without expectations, hear it in its own light in its own moment, not as a comparison.

Campfire seems to deliberately quieten after geogaddi, steps back outside into the fresh air and, perhaps, meditates. It still contains that pointer towards the mysterious, but it is not so concentrated. Geogaddi seems like an overwhelming psychedelic experience full of introverted claustrophobic entanglements of fractals, spirals and wholetone outlandishness. Campfire is like when soberness has started to return and you are staring into the fire, recalling perhaps, but the profundity and mystery is residually echoing around your mind as it begins to settle into its everyday condition. So if there is a link between the albums, it seems to be that.

I listened to campfire start to finish yesterday, no distraction, no analysing, no expectation. I felt like I had been on a journey, I felt like I had witnessed a whole day and night, or perhaps longer, maybe years. I felt like I had been on a road trip, looking out of a car window, waking up in a tent in the morning, and then in the latter part of the album, somewhere up in the clouds before watching the fire die and smoulder into a micro landscape of black and orange shimmering waves.

I was looking through the photos on their myspace, even they have this powerful indescribable wordless message that I became familiar and addicted to back in 1999 when I first heard MHTRTC.

I can't rate them highly enough. I don't think anyone has ever done what they have done. At surface level you may hear hip hop beats, synth melodies, vocal samples... all of which have been done a million times, but it's not those elements I talk about, it's what's between them, or within them, and I don't mean literally intervals, syncopation or timbre, those are but a vehicle for something far more mysterious that, as far as I have found, is only present in their music.


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A HUMAN

 
amen

 
Posted by A HUMAN on August 23, 2009 - Sunday - 7:36 PM
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drumVektor
DrumVektor Friends and

 
Gonna have to agree here, what they do can't just be passed off as music, just like they can't be pigeonholed as an electronic group or an "idm" group; they go completely beyond music when they're writing, not only pouring their heart but their entire being into it. It becomes a doorway to a new way to look at life on a broad scale - I don't think I was ever the same after listening to Geogaddi for two hours, forwards then backwards.

I got into all of this a bit late though. Trans-Canada Highway came out just after I really got into BoC, and was the only album of theirs I ever saw on a music store shelf. But regardless, there was an acute shift from that day forward for me - it might've just been me learning how fantastic this sort of music is, or it might have been something more, but regardless it'll be something I'll remember for a goddamn long time.

Just saying...

 
Posted by drumVektor on August 23, 2009 - Sunday - 8:06 PM
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Patrick R

 
I love when groups become more than just a group that makes music, but a completely new universe in which their music happens to live in. BoC was the first group that I was ever engulfed in.
 
Posted by Patrick R on August 23, 2009 - Sunday - 8:12 PM
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TEARZ

 
to me they are like shamans of sound, able to harness something that is so innately mysterious. music/sound creation in general, but their sound especially so...it has a wise depth. i've always wondered how mckenna would have received geogaddi...

how sound happens and how it resonates with you is such a bizarre and immensely fascinating thing given study.

i'm very interesting to see if they release more music and what it will sound like.

 
Posted by TEARZ on August 23, 2009 - Sunday - 8:30 PM
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TEARZ

 
on a peripheral sidenote, stephen, you may enjoy the photography of neil krug:


 
Posted by TEARZ on August 23, 2009 - Sunday - 9:02 PM
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Elite Fitness
Ian Robertson

 
Perfect. There really is something ineffable about BOC's music. It's as if they learned the esoteric art of bottling peculiar dreams. 
 
Posted by Elite Fitness on August 23, 2009 - Sunday - 10:27 PM
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RobotnikButton

 
MHTRTC is a masterpiece!
 
Posted by RobotnikButton on August 24, 2009 - Monday - 6:41 AM
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notre soleil d'air d'or
Tristan Whitehill

 
psssssttt...bibio...its in your music too, like for real, you both see the light of bending the listeners emotions, modal music is king

 
Posted by notre soleil d'air d'or on August 24, 2009 - Monday - 12:38 PM
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jason
jason cawood

 
i tend to bring out campfire headphase more than the previous two albums, and i'm surprised it maintains its staying power, especially since it's a more subtle record than the other two.  perhaps it is this subtlety that i am drawn too.  i love geogaddi but occasionally i think it tries a bit too hard.  and after a decade, music has the right to children is still a masterpiece but has grown too familiar.  i need to put it away for about five years and then rediscover it. 

campire
seems to strike the perfect balance between restraint and excess, laying on thick the waves of emotive melodies while never letting one element dominate the others (the drums are particularly understated.)  likewise, it taps into a "vintage" aesthetic (at times sounding like a pared-down hissing of summer lawns) without jumping on any retro bandwagon.  "oscar see through red eye," for me, is the real gem here, unfolding like an expertly conducted mini symphony, every bell and whistle resounding precisely on cue, meanwhile that sinister, vertigo-inducing chord progression keeps churning underneath it all like molten lava, propelling the whole thing forward.

their sporadic releases mean that i've had to search out other artist who fulfill a similar musical need in me (yourself, stars of the lid, & a very small handful of others) during their lengthy downtime, but their influence always remains bubbling under the surface in a lot of what i do, especially the photography series i started in the late 90s as a response to music has the right. (see: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jasoncawood/sets/72157602099512976/)

 
Posted by jason on August 24, 2009 - Monday - 4:19 PM
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bibio

 
Nice collection!
 
Posted by bibio on August 24, 2009 - Monday - 5:37 PM
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jason
jason cawood

 
thanks!  there's still twice as many i haven't posted yet from the archive.

 
Posted by jason on August 24, 2009 - Monday - 5:51 PM
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Fumon Tonko

 
I love you collection too

 
Posted by Fumon Tonko on August 26, 2009 - Wednesday - 4:58 PM
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arctier

 
Excellent post. They definitely posses some kind of "cosmic consciousness", there's no way it's accidental. Listening to Alpha and Omega can tell you more about the universe than any science or metaphysics. Its like the sound of the universe expanding. Even those stretching sounds throughout the track, they know what they're doing. They seem to be in line with creation itself or the "whole" or whatever you want to call it. They understand that anything of quality cant be described with fragmented concepts. I think most of it has to do with the way they manipulate energy, which is music itself. I can hear a boc melody played on practically any instrument and still "feel" "it", I'm sure you know what i mean. The textures and surface things (which is what people ussually talk about when they mention boc) are crucial but its more this kind of fractalish, infinite, perfect yet chaotic structure to their rhythyms and melodys and the way they communicate with one another, the energy. Its like the texture of the music is the humaness, but the melodies and arrangements and everything are universal. So human warmth and incredible space and the possibillities created by that space, they should have sent this music up on the satellite instead of the beatles or whatever haha (no offence to the beatles).

I dont know where music goes from here to be honest (generative? haha), they have created the highest plateu. I cant even imagine what the next plateu might be like..it might have to be a collective effort of some kind, who knows.

 
Posted by arctier on August 25, 2009 - Tuesday - 6:39 AM
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THAN©

 
your right on. its impossible to even attempt to compare them to anything else. its sad how most bands nowadays spew out music without really putting much thought/effort into it. b.o.c takes months/years working on single songs/sounds. nuff said
 
Posted by THAN© on August 25, 2009 - Tuesday - 11:27 PM
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SEAFAR @FSOLdigital.com ElectricSpaceMusik

 
true dat
 
Posted by SEAFAR @FSOLdigital.com ElectricSpaceMusik on August 26, 2009 - Wednesday - 1:33 PM
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Foxes in Fiction

 
Probably the most succinct description of the Boards of Canada effect that I've ever read.

 
Posted by Foxes in Fiction on August 26, 2009 - Wednesday - 7:40 PM
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Epic45

 
I remember having a conversation about Campfire with you a while ago, interesting to hear your thoughts on it now. I haven't listened to it fully for a while, but am drawn to it frequently, usually only cherry picking a few tracks or listening to the last quarter. As I think I've said before, it's definitely not a bad album but always seemed to lack a certain depth that I was used to from them (Geogaddi was always going to be awkward one to follow up). Time to give it another spin.


I still think they ripped you off though........

 
Posted by Epic45 on August 26, 2009 - Wednesday - 10:06 PM
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bibio

 
Nah, they didn't rip me off. I think there might be a nod in there but to be honest my music has been shaped by them more than vice versa, I honestly don't think the tiny portion of bibio-esque guitar in that album warrants it being called a rip off.

When I first heard Chromakey Dreamcoat and heard the wobbly guitar I couldn't believe the cycle that had happened.

If CH was released by some new unknown band, everyone would be thinking "who the hell is this?" but because it followed 2 boc masterpieces, then it was destined to have the heaviest burden of expectation put upon it. I was guilty of that as much as anyone, but I'm learning to listen to a piece of music in its own light and context, not an easy thing to do, the mind is so easily conditioned. There are many modes of listening, part of being an artist or just a music lover is exploring those modes... all the manual dexterity in the world don't mean shit if one hasn't got a creative mind. It's so rewarding when one gets into stuff that wasn't a hit on first listen... MBV, ISB, Cocteau Twins...

 
Posted by bibio on August 27, 2009 - Thursday - 1:13 AM
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Epic45

 
from Ben by the way....

 
Posted by Epic45 on August 26, 2009 - Wednesday - 10:07 PM
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bibio

 
There was a kid in my year at primary school called Martin Bytheway... pretty cool name I always thought.
 
Posted by bibio on August 27, 2009 - Thursday - 1:14 AM
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roy.G.biv
Patrick Tucker

 
Both you and Boards have created a journey i never thought possible in music, by just keeping it real with out a word. I am a fairly new listener and already the music ive heard will always be resonating in my mind.....

 
Posted by roy.G.biv on August 27, 2009 - Thursday - 4:59 AM
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Dual at Dawn

 
Campfire is a really great album...many didn't like it when it came out, but I personally have always loved it.  Side note- another artist who has a very similar aesthetic & communicates the unspeakable is Casino vs Japan.  Still don't know why he is so slept on and doesn't receive the attention that people like BOC get.  He has been around for just as long.  His sound is definitely a little more underproduced, but is so lush.  The mystery element is definitely there
 
Posted by Dual at Dawn on August 28, 2009 - Friday - 6:54 PM
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Zoon van snooK

 
Even the really early stuff from the late 80s has their distinct, beguiling 'Storytelling' ability.
Everything changed for me after hearing MHTRTC (and Four Tet to a similar degree). It's difficult to quantify how you can get locked into a song/moment/section/album in such a complete way as you do when listening to Boards...

I'm sure you guys have heard him already, but 'Christ.' on Benbecula records in Scotland has a very similar aural aesthetic, I love his stuff too. I was told that there might have been a connection between BoC and Christ., perhaps the latter made music with the two brothers years ago or something?

Anyway, what a fantastic discussion to get drawn into. My friends and I judge a persons character and intelelctual wherewithal on how many Boards of Canada tatoos they have!!!

Al

 
Posted by Zoon van snooK on September 2, 2009 - Wednesday - 11:36 AM
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Andrew Jarson
Andrew Jarson

 
I love CH!  I never understood the flack it received, I always thought it felt like a full album version of In A Beautiful Place.  Geogaddi was a hard cracker to follow(yes i said that) but it goes on smooth and gentle...because they know how shaken up we still are from the bad trip that was Geogaddi...
 
Posted by Andrew Jarson on September 13, 2009 - Sunday - 11:00 PM
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malek boom

 
i understand what you mean by different modes of listening, and it really isn't easy to do such a thing. I think it's not only easy, but it is also not given to anyone. Further to that, most people tend to forget the difference between listening and hearing. 

Campfire Headphase was in my opinion miles ahead of geogaddi.  I had a hard time with geogaddi as it explored places that Boc had already visited, it was like re-visiting an all too familiar territory.  But of course, i am not putting it down.  There are big stand outs in Geoggadi, absolutely gorgeous tunes!!!
I always loved boc...  Really great flute like melodies, and old, warm sounds...

Love your guitar compositions skills btw... dont ever put the guitar down mate!  I myself did loads of guitar recordings... im yet to have a real breakthrough though...  hehe...   Anyway.... 

To all a goodnight!!!!  Im off to greet my pillows..............................................................

 
Posted by malek boom on September 15, 2009 - Tuesday - 10:54 PM
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custardBoy

 
BOC make me think of the weather, the natural landscape, the sun, time, fleeting memories, Universal sounds that make us feel part of something bigger. I described it to someone else as psychedelic folk music, but I retrospect it is so special that I don't want to tag with any labels.

 
Posted by custardBoy on October 3, 2009 - Saturday - 1:46 AM
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shea the man stays up late

 
boards of canada has been creeping around in my mind today so when i came upon this blog, you know...

about the mysterious thing, it isn't something that they have created, but it is something they have harnessed.

sort of like an ethereal, renewable resource, that has been floating around in peoples' heads for as long as people have been around.

that said, i think it is so interesting that most boc listeners liken the music to 70's home movies and grainy photography.

when I heard the beginning of "everything you do is a balloon," i got this crystal clear picture of some memory that wasn't mine.

i thought 70's, (even though that might as well be the 1700's to me since i wasn't born until 1988,) but yeah, 70's, at some transitional time of day when the sunlight makes you feel like you have just landed on an alien planet, and it was all through the filter of an old, dirty lens.

my mind crafted together footage inside an airport, and it was interlaced with that sort of reverent feeling that brian eno talked about when he released "Music for airports." i wasn't aware of eno's statements at the time i heard the song though.

i'm sure many other listeners think of some variant of this as well.

call it zeitgeist, or maybe it is an archetype, or perhaps it is plato's form theory, but for BoC listeners, it is irrefutable.

but i think this is what all good music does... it taps into those metaphysical spheres of thought; it helps you see one true thing about the world.

i agree, though, that boc is the only one that points to this particular thing.

 
Posted by shea the man stays up late on October 12, 2009 - Monday - 11:52 PM
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