Geogaddi

Released

“1969 in the sunshine,” from “1969,” is the perfect Boards of Canada lyric because they weren’t there and probably you weren’t either. I was two, and they were born in 1970 and 1971, so we were all kinda there, culturally. (Did you know they’re brothers? They are.) I’m not calling bullshit—I’m giving them credit. None of this happened and this is exactly how it felt. That’s how memory works, and also how Boards of Canada albums work. All of their ViewMaster clouds and scratched color negatives are born of the analog age, swiped right through the digital and then suspended above us in some realm that is neither here nor there. There was no hip-hop in 1969 but there was funk but neither one of them makes a BOC track move. Their rhythm is a beast that’s a bit funk played by machines, with the quietest hi-hats in town, if there hi-hats at all. The is melancholy as a physical act, a kind of queasy addiction to reviewing the same two year period over and over, both therapeutically and neurotically.

Sasha Frere-Jones

Suggestions
Playthroughs cover

Playthroughs

Keith Fullerton Whitman
Peel Session cover

Peel Session

The Black Dog
Plight & Premonition cover

Plight & Premonition

David Sylvian, Holger Czukay
Cruel Optimism cover

Cruel Optimism

Lawrence English
Dr. Joy cover

Dr. Joy

Dr. Joy
Ishi cover

Ishi

M. Geddes Gengras
Pomegranates cover

Pomegranates

Nicolas Jaar
Mysterious Traveller cover

Mysterious Traveller

System 7, Derrick May
Perfect Lung cover

Perfect Lung

Ipek Gorgun, Ceramic Tl