Music Has the Right to Children
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Average customer review:Product Description
The first American release by this Scottish duo has drawn rave reviews on both sides of the Atlantic. The music ranges from goofball, Perry-Kingsley style retro-techno to ambient (in fact, sometimes eerily reminiscent of Eno's "Ambient Music I") to just about anything else you can dream up for a couple of synthesizers and a drum machine. Boards Of Canada's music has drawn frequent comparisons to wildlife documentaries from the '70s, but you've got to wonder what kind of nature documentary would have distorted drum machines and weird voices darting in and out of the mix. Weird? How about downright goofy? Like the nitrous-oxide flashback of "The Colour Of Fire" where a distorted girl's voice keeps repeating "I...love...you" through the dizzy haze. Much of the disc has delightful vignettes interspersed between the longer tracks, and the longer tracks will reveal something different with each listen. Unabashedly lo-fi, this is the soundtrack to a drug experience for which no drug exists.
Track Listing
- Wildlife Analysis
- An Eagle In Your Mind
- The Color of The Fire
- Telephasic Workshop
- Triangles & Rhombuses
- Sixtyten
- Turquoise Hexagon Sun
- Kaini Industries
- Bocuma
- Roygbiv
- Rue The Whirl
- Aquarius
- Olson
- Pete Standing Alone
- Smokes Quantity
- Open The Light
- One Very Important Thought
- Happy Cycling (Bonus Track)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1702 in Music
- Released on: 2004-04-05
- Number of discs: 1
Customer Reviews
Excellent electronica from two of the masters in the genre...
Best tracks: "Aquarius", "Roygbiv", "An Eagle in Your Mind", "Turquoise Hexagon Sun", "Smokes Quantity"
Eerie, strange, beguiling...Boards of Canada's debut album proper is a creepy, beautiful and inventive work of wonder which sounds perfect when played late at night, all alone... justly adored as one of the key players in all of electronic music, Boards of Canada have created a stunning run of dark, light, evocative, nostalgic and unusual pieces throughout their series of albums and EPs; despite garnering the most ecstatic praise of all of their works, Music Has the Right to Children may not be the most effective introduction to BoC's sound; maybe try erstwhile lost classic (but now easily available) Twoism or their astonishingly lovely In a Beautiful Place in the Country EP....maybe even the dark, frequently amazing second album Geogaddi (my first BoC experience) or the purely beauteous, relatively underrated wonder of The Campfire Headphase; this album is probably the slowest-burning of all their works. It takes its time to weave its magic, but the rewards are well worth the wait.
After a disconcertingly pleasant prologue, second song "An Eagle in Your Mind" is all itchy, uncomfortable percussion, withering, sinister atmospherics and a sense of something not quite right...like finding your home town desolated and empty, with only the chill air of the breeze to keep you company. "The Colour of the Fire" is very, very, very strange....a child saying "I love you" doesn't sound creepy, does it? Well, it sounds distinctly freaky here, with said vocal snippet stretched, echoed, warped and turned into something really eerie...Boards of Canada were masters at little interludes like this, short, minute or so long pieces interspersed between their longer, more spacious instrumentals...they're scattered all over their albums, and are just as impressive and lasting as the more obvious, epic highlights.
As someone who prefers the more synthesiser-driven BoC works over their percussive-led pieces, the out-of-step, jittery "Telephasic Workshop" initially grated on me somewhat, but like I said; this album's a grower, and this piece works very well in the context of its surrounding tracks; also, the backing synth-line throughout is really great. The two-part "Triangles and Rhombuses" provides a brief respite before the unsettling "Sixtyten", with its samples that sound like they're being quickly rewound and then let go again, and generally feels like a queasy trip into a place that's half-familiar, half spookily dreamlike. This album is less chill-out than it is creep-out; at times it's like the soundtrack to some long-lost zombie movie.
"Turquoise Hexagon Sun", a piece that's also featured on BoC's brilliant Hi-Scores mini-album, is one of the best things here, a strangely becalming and lullaby-esque piece with a chilly undertow to it. A trio of shorter pieces follow, each one better than the last; the futuristic, sci-fi tinged "Kaini Industries" leads into the radiant "Bocuma" which in turn leads into the absolutely fantastic "Roygbiv", one of the closest things to a catchy piece of...er, `pop' music BoC have ever created; to be honest, it's not going to trouble the charts at any time, but it's got a strolling, delightfully playful rhythm and feel that's quite addictive. It's got a vaguely trip-hop beat, an eccentric, beautiful piano refrain and cute samples that retain the unusualness of the preceding pieces yet none of its mildly disturbing undercurrent. It's a real gem.
"Rue the Whirl" moves from the hypnotic, repetitious beat of its two-thirds to a strange, dreamy finale; this piece is a good one, but wow....the next piece is astounding. "Aquarius" is definitely this album's zenith, and way, way up there with BoC's greatest works. The lushest, most delightfully spooky synthesiser imaginable swirls around a quietly funky beat and the silliest, most wonderfully right samples on the record ever; essentially, there's some kids giggling and saying `yeaaaaahh....that's right', as well as some self-satisfied bloke and a calm, almost robotic woman taking turns to say the word `orange"! This piece has got such a beautiful, wonderful to it, and then the second half takes off into somewhere else entirely! Such glorious music, such loveliness....there's moments where the sheer beauty of this piece take my breath away, and then that guy says `orange!' again and I start to laugh. Oh yeah, there's also the woman who starts counting upwards but loses it somewhere around the forty mark and then starts counting at random and then begins to make up numbers all of her own.
The following "Olson" is gorgeous too, a lovely little instrumental to calm the listener before "Pete Standing Alone" shuffles and worms its way into your head with its fuzzy beats and ambient feel. "Smokes Quantity" (also available on Twoism) has a hazy, lazy, loping feel; this is one of my favourites here, it's just so damn creepy, yet so damn gorgeous! "Open the Light" appropriately retreats from the darkness and into sweeter territory, and "One Very Important Thought" is an effective, thoughtful closer.
Overall, Music Has the Right to Children is my least favourite of the three BoC albums, but that's not to indict it - I just like Geogaddi and The Campfire Headphase even more - it's still a terrific work, with many glorious moments.
PS: Some editions of this album feature the astonishing "Happy Cycling" as a bonus track; however, as much as I love this piece, it doesn't really belong here as "One Very Important Thought" makes for a more appropriate closing piece.
Bland
I find this album to be extremely bland and boring, the music isn't interesting in the slightest and most of the tracks sound the same. If you want good electro get anything from air or royksopp.
A must for all students.
My friend introduced me to BoC last year and it's one of the greatest things he's done for me. I never really listened to electronica at all but now I'm totally converted! I found 'Music Has the Right,' is perfect for studying. Had a rough day at school/college/work? Well then stick this CD on and relax, let BoC's ambient feel help you unwind =]
Roygbiv is a total masterpiece!





