Boards Of Canada / Tomorrow's Harvest
Album: Tomorrow's Harvest   Collection:General
Artist:Boards Of Canada   Added:Jul 2013
Label:Warp Records  

A-File Activity
Add Date: 2013-07-08 Pull Date: 2013-09-08
Week Ending: Sep 8 Sep 1 Aug 25 Aug 11 Jul 21 Jul 14
Airplays: 5 2 3 2 2 2

Recent Airplay
1. Oct 18, 2022: Alien Hour
13
4. Apr 04, 2019: Alien Hour (Demo)
Nothing Is Real
2. Mar 06, 2022: Alien Hour
Nothing Is Real
5. Mar 22, 2017: deep storage
Transmisiones Ferox, Telepath
3. Apr 20, 2019: Alien Hour
Nothing Is Real
6. Sep 29, 2016: subwoofer etc
Nothing Is Real

Album Review
DJ Away
Reviewed 2013-07-06
Downtempo electronic/ambient/IDM
Here’s the duo’s first album in seven years, and it’s a beauty. The sound is full, characteristically trippy, and amply gritty. Tonally and conceptually dark stuff—supposedly there are a lot of hidden messages in here that point to apocalyptic themes. (You go way, way down the rabbit hole if you look up internet forum discussions of this album. It’s pretty cool.) Think old electronic horror/sci-fi B-movie soundtracks on big budgets. Favorites: 2, 4, 8, 13, 15, 17. No FCCs.

1. (2:56)—Beatless. Starts like the intro to an old sci-fi film, turns dark and a little noisy.
2. *(4:47)—Slow and heavy on the warm drones. Crackling beats, deep bass. Beats and synths get more active and fill out the high-end in the second half.
3. (3:13)—Slow, dreamy, rhythmic synth interplay. Barely-there bass beat enters near the end.
4. *(6:35)—Slow. The woozy, iconic science movie synths on seasick loop. Halfway through this starts building and adds a synth line that sounds about as close to electronic weeping as you could get.
5. (1:32)—Beatless. Dark drones. Warped, deep voice: “Testing…1, 2, 3….”
6. (3:42)—Slow crawl. Heavy beat, chopped-up voices, layers of slow synths piling up. Imagine some movie scene where the hero is walking across the tundra.
7. (2:18)—Beatless. Pulsing, watery synth loops, heavily manipulated voice clip. Mash of backgrounded synths and soundbites at the end.
8. *(4:16)—Medium-fast. Especially pretty, melancholy synth lines. Driving, slightly glitchy beat. Fades into a ghostly ending that makes me think of the sound the BART makes as it approaches.
9. (2:49)—Classic arpeggiated synths. Ominous, windy drones. Apparently this track is structured as a palindrome—sounds exactly the same backwards or forwards. Whoa.
10. (4:05)—Slow. Now this is bouncy. Manipulated vocals chanting, “We have everything.” Sounds like a royal procession constructed entirely of electronics.
11. (4:28)—Slow. The background synths and sound effects make this sound particularly sci-fi. Chopped and screwed clip of a conspiracy doc.
12. (1:59)—Beatless and bleak. Transmitter failure never sounded so elegiac.
13. *(3:52)—Slow, glitchy, psychy. Another ominous, dark voice sample.
14. (2:16)—Great, warm drone. Uncannily similar to more recent Stars of the Lid.
15. *(5:39)—Slow. The dominance of synth blips over drones makes this the tensest piece on the album. Sounds like the intro a full-on dance song. Melody takes a more peaceful turn near the end.
16. (4:07)—Another slow, psychy banger. Apparently a reprise of track two. Slow fadeout.
17. *(3:30)—Beatless. Terrifying lo-fi bass drone and scary, woozy drones alongside. Like something from the Mulholland Drive soundtrack—had to check to make sure it wasn’t a sample. What a great, dour ending.

Track Listing
1. Gemini   10. Palace Posey
2. Reach For The Dead   11. Split Your Infinities
3. White Cyclosa   12. Uritual
4. Jacquard Causeway   13. Nothing Is Real
5. Telepath   14. Sundown
6. Cold Earth   15. New Seeds
7. Transmisiones Ferox   16. Come To Dust
8. Sick Times   17. Semena Myrtvykh
9. Collapse   18. Everything You Do Is A Balloon