New Boards of Canada?

Mar 02 2011 Published by under Music, Personal

BOC Disc

The photo above is a screenshot of Boards of Canada’s official discography page.  Notice the arrow?  It points to a blank space.

When you click the blank space, this pops up:

What you get when you click on the blank

More blankness.

The key here: these blank spaces weren’t on the site a few days ago.  Are these placeholders?  Will the blankness be replaced with an upcoming album cover and album information?  Who knows, but for Boards of Canada fans the world over–those of us who visit this site every damn day waiting and hoping for some news on the elusive duo’s next album (a rare event that only happens once or twice a decade)–this change to one of the three pages on the website made us jump out of our seats and spit up whatever caffeinated beverage we were drinking at the time.  Because this is about as close to an announcement about new Boards of Canada material that we’ve gotten for about five years.

So this better be the first stages of an album release.  Otherwise, I might have to kill the Internet.

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Boards of Canada’s “Everything You Do Is a Balloon”

Jan 24 2010 Published by under Film/TV, Music

“Everything You Do Is a Balloon” is one of the very best Boards of Canada songs, and it has been transformed into one of the best fan-made videos I’ve ever seen.  Check it out:

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Best Albums 2000-2009

Dec 29 2009 Published by under Music

Cover of Basinski's Disintegration Loops

Rather than pick and choose between different albums, I’m focusing on artists here.  Sigur Ros released a lot of music in the past decade, and it’s all (or nearly all) worthy, so I just lump it all together here in the #2 spot.  The same goes for Basinski, The Caretaker, Boards of Canada, and so on.  Mind you, I don’t add everything by these artists–only the cream of their crop (so to speak).   My attitude is: why focus on one work when so many great artists created multiple works of incredibly high quality?

As a result, I think you’ll find that the top albums list comes out to about 29 individual works (and more, if you count The Caretaker’s work individually).  That doesn’t include the multiple-CD releases here like The River and Kesto.  What does this mean?  Despite the near-death of the music industry, there’s still a hell of a lot of great music out there.

  1. William Basinski’s The Disintegration Loops I-IV and The River
  2. Sigur Rós’s Agaetis Byrjun, ( ), Takk…, and Hvarf – Heim
  3. Joanna Newsom’s Ys
  4. Tod Dockstander’s Aerial #1, #2, and #3
  5. The Caretaker: The Complete Digital Collection
  6. Boards of Canada’s Geogaddi and The Campfire Headphase
  7. Tim Hecker’s Radio Amor, Harmony in Ultraviolet, and An Imaginary Country
  8. Pan Sonic’s Aaltopiiri and Kesto
  9. The White Stripes’s De Stijl, White Blood Cells, Elephant, and Get Behind Me Satan
  10. Radiohead’s Kid A, Amnesiac, Hail to the Thief, and In Rainbows

Honorable Mentions (in alphabetical order)

  • The Advisory Circle’s Other Channels
  • Amiina’s Kurr
  • Antony & The Johnsons’ I Am a Bird Now and The Crying Light
  • Gevorg Dabaghyan’s Miniatures: Masterworks for Armenian Duduk
  • Fennesz’s Endless Summer, Venice, and Black Sea
  • Flying Lotus’s Los Angeles
  • Hildur Guðnadóttir’s Without Sinking
  • Jacob Kirkegaard’s 4 Rooms, Eldfjall, and Labyrinthitis
  • Kode9 & The Spaceape’s Memories of the Future
  • Leyland Kirby’s Sadly, The Future Is No Longer What It Was
  • Nick Cave & The Bad Seed’s Abattoir Blues/The Lyre of Orpheus
  • Random Inc.’s Jerusalem: Tales Outside the Framework of Orthodoxy
  • Rechenzentrum’s Director’s Cut and Silence
  • Stars of the Lid’s The Tired Sounds of Stars of the Lid and And Their Refinement of the Decline
  • The Silk Road: A Musical Caravan
  • Tom Waits’s Alice, Blood Money, and Real Gone

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