- Music Has the Right to Children
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Music Has the Right to Children Studio album by Boards of Canada Released 20 April 1998Europe) (
20 August 1998 (U.S.)Recorded Hexagon Sun studio
Pentland Hills, ScotlandGenre Ambient techno Length 62:58 (Original UK edition)
70:42 (1998 & 2004 edition)Label Warp, Skam, Matador Producer Michael Sandison and Marcus Eoin Boards of Canada chronology Aquarius
(1998)Music Has the Right to Children
(1998)Telephasic Workshop/Roygbiv
(1998)Music Has the Right to Children is the debut public album of the Scottish electronic music duo Boards of Canada. It was published by Warp Records and released on 20 April 1998 in Europe and 20 August in the United States. The album was produced at the Hexagon Sun, the duo's personal recording studio.
The songs utilize a number of field recordings and intense sound manipulation.[1]
Contents
Track listing
No. Title Length 1. "Wildlife Analysis" 1:17 2. "An Eagle in Your Mind" 6:23 3. "The Color of the Fire" 1:45 4. "Telephasic Workshop" 6:35 5. "Triangles & Rhombuses" 1:50 6. "Sixtyten" 5:48 7. "Turquoise Hexagon Sun" 5:07 8. "Kaini Industries" 0:59 9. "Bocuma" 1:35 10. "Roygbiv" 2:31 11. "Rue the Whirl" 6:39 12. "Aquarius" 5:58 13. "Olson" 1:31 14. "Pete Standing Alone" 6:07 15. "Smokes Quantity" 3:07 16. "Open the Light" 4:25 17. "One Very Important Thought" 1:14 Bonus track on 1998 U.S. Matador release and 2004 Warp re-release No. Title Length 18. "Happy Cycling" 7:51 Trivia
- "Smokes Quantity" first appeared on Twoism in 1995, and many other tracks appear on Boc Maxima, albeit in different forms.
- "The Color of the Fire" first appeared in a shorter form on A Few Old Tunes as "I Love U".
- The short songs appended to the end of "Triangles and Rhombuses" and "Sixtyten" predate the album and were later featured on the unofficial compilation Old Tunes, Vol. 1, where they are separate tracks.
- "Sixtyten" is how one would say "70" in the French language. 70 is the smallest weird number. A track found on their next album is called "The Smallest Weird Number" and is possibly a reference to the Boards of Canada's own music label, Music70.
- "Pete Standing Alone" is the name of a Blood Indian who is the subject of a documentary produced by the National Film Board of Canada.[2] It is also featured in many episodes of the BBC's motoring show Top Gear.
- "Roygbiv" is a mnemonic for colours of the visible spectrum.
- The track "Rue the Whirl" appears in the "Mettle" episode of Spaced.
- The track "Rue the Whirl" appears in a 2007 Mercedes Benz advertisement
- The track "Kaini Industries" was covered by Bibio for the Warp Records compilation Warp20 (Recreated) in 2009.
- The track "Aquarius" uses a sample from Galt MacDermot's "Aquarius" from the soundtrack of the 1979 musical film Hair.
- The track "Happy Cycling" was mistakenly left off 500 copies of the initial North American release of the album despite the artwork indicating that the song was included.
Reception
Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating Pitchfork Media (10.0/10, 2004 re-release) [3] Allmusic [4]
Slant Magazine [5]
The album received widespread acclaim upon release.[6][7][8]
It was ranked #91 in Mojo's 100 Modern Classics – "[T]hey took electronica into space. Cleverly referencing the esoteric side of '70s Test Card music in all its trippy glory."
Q Magazine called it "[A] thing of wonder....The aural equivalent of old Super 8 movies...".
Notes
Digipak-style packaging for the 2004 edition of Music Has the Right to Children- ^ Ariel Kyrou & Jean-Yves Leloup (1998). "Two Aesthetes of Electronic Music". Virgin Megaweb. http://bocpages.org/wiki/Interviews#1998-06:_Virgin_Megaweb. Retrieved 2006-11-22.
- ^ National Film Board of Canada (1982). NFB: "Pete Standing Alone". National Film Board of Canada. http://www.nfb.ca/trouverunfilm/fichefilm.php?id=13730&v=h&lg=en&exp= NFB:. Retrieved 2006-11-23.
- ^ [1]
- ^ Allmusic Review
- ^ Slant Magazine Review
- ^ John Bush (1998). "Music Has the Right to Children Overview". All Media Guide, LLC. http://www.allmusic.com/album/r354861. Retrieved 2006-11-22.
- ^ Sal Cinquemani (2002). "Music Review: Music Has the Right to Children". Slant Magazine. http://www.slantmagazine.com/music/music_review.asp?ID=255. Retrieved 2006-11-22.
- ^ review at Pitchfork, 2004
External links
- Music Has the Right to Children at the official Warp Records website
- "Roygbiv" at the official Warp Records website
- Music Has the Right to Children at Discogs
- Music Has the Right to Children at MusicBrainz
Boards of Canada Michael Sandison · Marcus EoinManagement Purported early albums Catalog 3 (1987) · Acid Memories (1989) · Closes Vol. 1 (1992) · Play by Numbers (1994) · Hooper Bay (1994)Studio albums Twoism (1995) · Boc Maxima (1996) · Music Has the Right to Children (1998) · Geogaddi (2002) · The Campfire Headphase (2005)Singles & EPs Hi Scores (1996) · Aquarius (1998) · Orange Romeda (1998) Roygbiv/Telephasic Workshop 10" (1998) · Peel Session TX 21/07/1998 (1999) · In a Beautiful Place Out in the Country (2000) · Trans Canada Highway (2006)Live recordings Related articles Old Tunes Categories:- Boards of Canada albums
- Warp (record label) albums
- 1998 albums
- Skam Records albums
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