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Boards Of Canada - Music Has The Right To Children album flac

Boards Of Canada - Music Has The Right To Children album flac Performer: Boards Of Canada
Title: Music Has The Right To Children
Style: Abstract, IDM, Downtempo, Experimental
Released: 1998
MP3 album: 1979 mb
FLAC album: 1958 mb
Rating: 4.2
Other formats: APE ADX VOX AUD DXD MPC MP1
Genre: Electronic

Music Has the Right to Children is the debut studio album by Scottish electronic music duo Boards of Canada. It was released on 20 April 1998 in the United Kingdom by Warp and Skam Records and in the United States by Matador Records.

Boards of Canada’s 1998 album is a beat-music touchstone, a record that took the previous decade of home-listening electronic music and essentially perfected it. This reissue offers a chance for a fresh look. It's not a long list, but somewhere on it belongs Boards of Canada's Music Has the Right to Children. Earlier this month, Warp Records reissued Music Has the Right to Children worldwide, adding the bonus track "Happy Cycling" (which we Americans with our Matador-licensed copies have always known as the album closer) and redesigning the cover art as a foldout digipak. It's always a bit strange when an album is reissued when it has not, in any sense, ever gone away.

Boards of Canada is the duo Michael Sandison and Marcus Eoin, and is based on the Northern Coast of Scotland. They first burst onto the music scene in 1996 releasing an 8-track promotional EP entitled Twoism, which impressed experimental electronica label Scam. This EP prompted Scam to sign the band, and the band made their first release on the label in 1996, with an EP entitled Hi Scores. The sound on the EP was a mix of synth melodies, and hip-hop and electronic references, and drew comparisons to artists like Autechre. In 1998, the band released their first full length album in Music Has the Right to Children.

Although Boards of Canada's blueprint for electronic listening music - aching electro-synth with mid-tempo hip-hop beats and occasional light scratching - isn't quite a revolution in and of itself, Music Has the Right to Children is an amazing LP. Similar to the early work of Autechre and Aphex Twin, the duo is one of the few European artists who can match their American precursors with regard to a sense of spirit in otherwise electronic music. This is pure machine soul, reminiscent of some forgotten Japanese animation soundtrack or a rusting Commodore 64 just about to give up the.

Released April 20, 1998. Music Has the Right to Children Tracklist. 1. Wildlife Analysis Lyrics. Each songs' sonics are a vignette into the Boards' alien, yet familiar, chilling world, every cut packed with samples and synth-work inspired by documentaries and shows the brothers watched as children. MHTRTC is widely regarded as one of the best and most influential electronic albums of all time, tying as the highest rated electronic album on Pitchfork, and landing 22nd on Slant Magazine’s 25 greatest electronic albums of the 20th century. Music Has the Right to Children Q&A. Design Boards of Canada.

Music Has The Right To Children. With that said, BoC's first major release, Music Has the Right to Children, is an album that has a different meaning for every listener: some may get a hidden message of inspiration, while others (like myself) find this album awesome, but for reasons that aren't easy to explain. However you view it, this album is unique to each listener's taste.

Children have the right to music. 6. 3mo. Bandana surpassed high expecta. 89. Ran across this album at random. I didn’t even know who these guys were. Or consider a donation?