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Best Track from Tomorrow's Harvest?
 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2013-06-06 15:18 [#02458055]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



I like 'Telepath', what's your favourite?


 

offline Jaser from Castle Greyskull (United Kingdom) on 2013-06-06 16:38 [#02458058]
Points: 2101 Status: Regular



I am really disappointed. It is quite minimal, boring. It is
like somebody else remixing BOC sounds. Album flows alright
but it is the worst one so far. thumbs down :( To answer
your question "cold earth" )


 

offline Jarworski from The Grove (United Kingdom) on 2013-06-06 16:55 [#02458059]
Points: 10836 Status: Lurker | Followup to Jaser: #02458058



I kind of agree, it sounded good on first listen then I
played it again and all the tracks I liked sounded somewhat
ordinary. It sounds good outside in the sun. In the house,
meh. The beats are nice and weighty though, I'll give it
that.


 

offline obara from Utrecht on 2013-06-06 17:10 [#02458061]
Points: 19368 Status: Lurker



the last track

I'm waiting for some sunshine to have a walk with this
album. Maybe I'll appreciate it more then.


 

offline Jaser from Castle Greyskull (United Kingdom) on 2013-06-06 19:13 [#02458064]
Points: 2101 Status: Regular | Followup to Jarworski: #02458059



Personally I can't believe it but I am more interested in
the new u-ziq album after buying the 12" Xtep on Planet MU
:0!!!!


 

offline RussellDust on 2013-06-06 23:39 [#02458071]
Points: 16053 Status: Lurker



People always expect of their favourite artists, or just an
artist responsible for an album that please-raped them for
life to continue to climb. Doesn't happen. Once you've
reached everest you're fucked.

It sounds like BOC. I don't mind it at all. It's pleasant
and i prefer it to TCH. But my goodness we're not going
anywhere we haven't been, are we?


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2013-06-07 00:20 [#02458074]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker



'Cold Earth', 'Sick Times', 'Palace Posy', 'Nothing Is
Real', 'New Seeds' and 'Come to Dust' are for me enjoyable
solid BoC tunes. I don't really enjoy 'Reach For The Dead'
that much, and I have serious issues with 'Jacquard
Causeway', so it's really hard for me to pick out the
favorite per se.


 

offline ecnadniarb on 2013-06-07 00:23 [#02458076]
Points: 24805 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



I haven't heard anything other than Reach for the Dead so
far...but I love that. Can't wait for the vinyl to arrive.


 

offline Gwely Mernans from 23rd century entertainment (Canada) on 2013-06-07 03:09 [#02458092]
Points: 9856 Status: Lurker



telepath actually stuck out for me to. felt very
geo-mhtrth.
im loving several tracks on this, making it an overall
decent record.
it would be easier to state that the only track im not fond
of at all is palace posy. and im still surprised why
jacquard causeway isnt getting some love.


 

offline Skink from A cesspool in eden on 2013-06-07 05:09 [#02458093]
Points: 7483 Status: Lurker



My faves so far are:

Gemini
Cold Earth
Palace Posy
Nothing Is Real

I really like the record as a whole. It's really good to
hear new BoC. :)


 

offline jnasato from 777gogogo (Japan) on 2013-06-07 05:28 [#02458094]
Points: 3393 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



LAZY_INTERVIEW


 

offline Gwely Mernans from 23rd century entertainment (Canada) on 2013-06-07 05:52 [#02458095]
Points: 9856 Status: Lurker



"There's actually more use of subliminals on this record
than on any previous album we've done, so we're interested
to see what people will pick up on."


 

offline impakt from where we do not speak of! on 2013-06-07 08:23 [#02458103]
Points: 5764 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



Come to dust


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2013-06-07 11:07 [#02458104]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to jnasato: #02458094 | Show recordbag



It's interesting that they still seem to be claiming it's
all done on barely functioning vintage hardware. In recent
years, I've failed enough blind tests to know it's foolish
to say "this sound was made on synth x/software synth y" as
I've heard lots of things done digitally that purport to be
analogue, which have fooled me. The reverse, however, is
less true: Generally speaking when I've said something
"sounds digital" it tends to have been made on a computer
and I usually find out later that I am correct.

This was the first (and only) BoC release where something
about the overall 'sound' made me think it had come out of a
DAW rather than a tape multi-tracker and that several of the
synths were softsynths, rather than old hardware.

Maybe it's just artifacts of a relatively low quality stream
and once I have the vinyl and CD in my hands and can hear
what it really sounds like, I'll want to retract this
comment.

Not that any of the above matters of course; music is music
and if it transpired that they made the whole thing in
Ableton, it shouldn't matter. Although of course,
with Boards, part of the magic is imagining them sat in
amongst banks of vintage equipment, coaxing beautiful sounds
from it.


 

offline jnasato from 777gogogo (Japan) on 2013-06-07 11:18 [#02458105]
Points: 3393 Status: Regular | Followup to Ceri JC: #02458104 | Show recordbag



Ceri JC- the Golden Ears of XLT

But yah, that interview brings to mind the whole BOC working
for 10 months on 10 minutes of audio in a shack ting.
Wheeeeether they actually care and actually put that much,
somewhat hidden depth in the album... who knows? Like chock
full of subliminal messages? Oookay. But often knowing the
truth behind the sound, can make it sound different. BOC
are a whole concept and story, not just music. Somewhat
like Richard Devine. Like listening to Ice Ice Baby and
going "OK", then listening to it again if the story was that
Vanilla Ice just jumpkicked his mother in the face 5 minutes
before recording the vocals... which would then add a kind
of WHOA. Or like if BOC were masturbating dogs during every
working session.


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2013-06-07 11:38 [#02458108]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #02458104



was thinking along the same lines when i read the interview.
though i really feel that it's inevitable to go through some
form of digital converter, for any music that's produced
today, therefore nothing is purely analog.

i'm actually in love with tame impala's sound, because of
the apparent ability to not sound digital.


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2013-06-07 11:41 [#02458109]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to jnasato: #02458105



the subliminal message-thing made me think of tool's '10,000
days'-album. they made one track, that layered upon two
other tracks on the album gave you a fourth track. need
trick, but it ruined to overall feeling of the album,
because of the repetitiveness of reoccurring rhythm.
jacquard causeway makes me think of that - complex patterns
maybe with hidden messages, but sucky for the overall flow
of an album.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2013-06-07 11:52 [#02458111]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to Junktion: #02458108 | Show recordbag



Tame Impala sounds good from the couple of tracks I just
googled. Not heard of him/her/them before. You're right
about their sound, it could be authentic 70s pyschadelic
stuff.


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2013-06-07 12:05 [#02458112]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #02458111



if you look at the back cover of the lonerism album by
tame impala, which is from 2012, you see there's loads of
analogs mixed with digital equipment. the 4-track tape
recorder might have a lot to do with the overall sound
before final stages.


 

offline Junktion from Northern Jutland (Denmark) on 2013-06-07 12:07 [#02458113]
Points: 9713 Status: Lurker | Followup to Junktion: #02458112



...not to say that they haven't been in pro studio, but it
indicates a search for the sound, which seems to be
successful.


 

offline Combo from Sex on 2013-06-07 13:47 [#02458119]
Points: 7538 Status: Lurker



There's no great song here. My favorite is "New Seeds" but
"Jacquart Causeway" is good also (especially the first 4
minutes) and the last 2 minutes of "Palace Posy" also are
good. The rest is not bad but still sounds boring to my
ears.

I can't hear that the artists are having fun on this record.
It is dark, but I miss the ambiguity fun/dark that made
their two first albums.

This morning I was chilling at home, I played the BoC then
the new Daft Punk and had more pleasure with that 2nd
record.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2013-06-07 14:59 [#02458120]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular | Followup to jnasato: #02458094



they namedrop jaron lanier in that interview, which explains
a few things. lanier makes some good points, but by and
large i regard him as a paranoid old techno-hippie who has
let his dissatisfaction with adulthood translate into a
general sentence of doom for mankind. and it half makes me
wonder if they're on about the downfall of the west, not
nuclear shizz.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2013-06-08 09:35 [#02458143]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to EpicMegatrax: #02458120 | Show recordbag



The whole nuclear shizz is an interesting subject.

The idea of it (and the Fallout-like remnants of society
afterwards) is both fascinating and terrifying. I can see
why it makes for an interesting 'theme' and why it still
hangs heavy in the minds of people of a certain generation.
The thing is, even with North Korea dicking about with
weapons tests, we are far less likely to have that
scenario arise any time soon than we were 30 years ago. A
good demonstration of this? The UK recently discussed doing
away with our nuclear deterrent, Trident. The reason? Too
expensive; £20 million a year to run. To put that into
perspective, we spent £300 million on translation services
in our courts last year for people who can't speak English
and the Dutch just spent a similar figure on renovating a
museum.

Can you imagine doing away with Trident even being up for
discussion during the cold war, even if the cost were 100
times that?

I think for the generation who grew up old enough to be
aware of it and that it kicked around in their head since
childhood, it is probably deeply ingrained in their psyche
and they'll never be able to "let go" of that fear, no
matter how irrational it becomes.


 

offline Steinvordhosbn from London (United Kingdom) on 2013-06-08 10:31 [#02458147]
Points: 3185 Status: Regular | Followup to Ceri JC: #02458143 | Show recordbag



This is true, of course. I remember being a kid at school
and looking at a plane going overhead (it was doubtless just
a regular passenger flight) and that combined with some grim
grey clouds made me think at the time "is this the plane
that drops the bomb". So there is now this kind of cosy
nostalgic feel from nuclear armageddon, which seems somehow
preferable to dirty bombs or having your head hacked off in
the street.


 

offline beefqueef on 2013-06-08 11:03 [#02458148]
Points: 28 Status: Regular



would you care to produce a source for that £20 million per
year figure ceri? sounds like bollox to me.

the reason it's being discussed isn't that it's too
expensive to run at the moment, it's that the subs we have
are near the end of their operational lives and need
replacing. greenpeace estimate the total cost of replacing
the trident program at £97 billion, so if it takes 30 years
we're dealing with a figure of £3.2 billion per year.

so, er, check yer decimal place maybe


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2013-06-08 12:21 [#02458149]
Points: 10671 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



My vinyl arrived this morning. I have listened to it once
only so far but I really enjoyed the album. It is in line
with my current 'sensibilities'. I don't know the track
names yet but the first track on side B was a stand out.

It's pretty dark though. Maybe the brothers are having a
midlife crisis. Do they live in America now?


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2013-06-08 12:35 [#02458150]
Points: 10671 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



Wait I mean the second track, 'Cold Earth'


 

offline beefqueef on 2013-06-08 12:54 [#02458151]
Points: 28 Status: Regular



i like jacquard causeway a lot but it's twice as long as it
needs to be. new seeds and telepath are nice, the rest just
sort of drifts by


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2013-06-09 14:55 [#02458214]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to beefqueef: #02458148 | Show recordbag



My source: A news BBC Radio 4, about 2 months ago.


 

offline beefqueef on 2013-06-09 17:00 [#02458221]
Points: 28 Status: Regular



Successor to the UK Trident system

A December 2006 Ministry of Defence white paper
recommended that the nuclear weapons should be maintained
and outlined measures that would do so until the 2040s. It
advocated the currently preferred submarine-based system, as
it remained the cheapest and most secure
deterrence option available.

Costs for this option are estimated at £15–20 billion
based on:

- £0.25 billion to participate in U.S. Trident D5 missile
life extension programme.

- £11–14 billion for a class of four new SSBNs.

- £2–3 billion for refurbishing warheads.

- £2–3 billion for infrastructure. [2]

These 2006/7 prices would equate to about £25bn in out-turn
price for the
successor submarines; the 2011 Initial Gate report confirmed
estimates of £2-3bn each for the warheads and
infrastructure. [9]

These cost estimates exclude the Vanguard 5 year life
extension and decommissioning, and it is unclear if new
Trident missiles will need to be purchased for the
lifeextension programme.[8]

Running costs would be about £1.5 billion per year at 2006
prices. [8]


figures from the actual govt white paper recommending
replacement (and when was the last time the MoD managed to
stay on budget?)

either you misheard or radio 4 slipped up by several orders
of magnitude. but seriously, have a think. £20 mil a year
really sounded plausible? the real figures make a nonsense
of your comparison


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2013-06-09 18:13 [#02458226]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to beefqueef: #02458221 | Show recordbag



I admit, I was surprised by how cheap it was quoted. It was
not my intent to mislead.

Do you think we ought to scrap Trident?
Should BoC still be worried about a nuclear apocalypse?


 

offline beefqueef on 2013-06-09 19:04 [#02458227]
Points: 28 Status: Regular



aye, they should go, we can't afford them and they're
irrelevant in today's situation. i mean, what are you going
to do if one day some beardy dude manages to van a rogue
soviet one into london? hunt him down and nuke him and his
mates back?

speaking of radio 4 there was a great little play on the
other week called "the letter of last resort" about trident
and it's role after a possible all-out attack on the uk, not
on iplayer any more but you might be able to find it
somewhere or other


 

offline Wolfslice from Bay Area, CA (United States) on 2013-06-10 06:05 [#02458257]
Points: 4881 Status: Lurker



New Seeds is my favorite after ~5 listens of the album.
Split Your Infinities a close second, particularly for that
one sci fi dark bass note.


 

offline obara from Utrecht on 2013-06-10 07:50 [#02458260]
Points: 19368 Status: Lurker



today it's Sick Times. lush beat and lush melody.


 

offline Haft from Tublin (Ireland) on 2013-06-11 22:38 [#02458355]
Points: 884 Status: Lurker



Sick Times Sick Times Sick Times

tyvm


 

offline Combo from Sex on 2013-06-11 22:42 [#02458356]
Points: 7538 Status: Lurker



Uritual is dark and nice.


 

offline The_Funkmaster from St. John's (Canada) on 2013-06-13 23:07 [#02458461]
Points: 16280 Status: Lurker



I haven't listened to it all the way through yet, but yeah
Reach for the Dead is really great. Also, Jacquard Causeway
really caught my attention while it played in my car
earlier. Can't wait to check that one out later with some
headphones on.


 

offline Sano on 2013-06-17 23:32 [#02458625]
Points: 2502 Status: Lurker



White Cyclosa and the last one but I only listened to the
stream.


 

offline Geoffrey Mills on 2013-06-18 02:14 [#02458630]
Points: 498 Status: Regular



anything from the 2nd half. or the 4th quarter.

it's still only a 6.5

good but not great.



 

offline Geoffrey Mills on 2013-06-18 02:15 [#02458631]
Points: 498 Status: Regular



they've been overtaken by their peers, it's as simple as
that. basically it's rubbish.


 

offline Geoffrey Mills on 2013-06-18 02:17 [#02458632]
Points: 498 Status: Regular



it sounds like they did this 6 yrs ago. no progression,
nothing new.

no wait, its awful. i want my money back.


 

offline Geoffrey Mills on 2013-06-18 02:18 [#02458633]
Points: 498 Status: Regular



possibly the worst album i've ever heard. what garbage. i've
heard more melody coming out of kenny wheeler's arsehole.


 

offline The_Funkmaster from St. John's (Canada) on 2013-06-18 03:55 [#02458634]
Points: 16280 Status: Lurker



After listening to it a bunch more times I'm pretty
disappointed. There are some nice tracks on there, but
nothing I'd put up with the best tracks of BoC I don't
think.


 

offline MutterMenace from Groton (United States) on 2013-06-18 19:58 [#02458680]
Points: 435 Status: Regular



Uritual, Palace Posy, and Nothing is Real are my favorites.
Nothing is Real is the one that gave me those bittersweet
feels. Uritual is a spacey bleak track. Semena Mertvykh to
me sounds like something they'd play in an 80's documentary
about satanic killings or cannibalism.


 

offline obara from Utrecht on 2013-06-25 07:07 [#02458944]
Points: 19368 Status: Lurker



this week I like 'nothing is real' best


 

offline The_Funkmaster from St. John's (Canada) on 2013-06-25 08:43 [#02458945]
Points: 16280 Status: Lurker | Followup to obara: #02458944



I like that one as well, but I always find myself wishing it
had more of a progression with the beat.


 

offline RussellDust on 2013-06-25 10:56 [#02458949]
Points: 16053 Status: Lurker



Growing on me. Definitely needs to be played in it's
entirety for me to enjoy it.

The best? No idea. A chord change in New Seeds raised
a few hairs when it first took me by surprise.


 

offline Steinvordhosbn from London (United Kingdom) on 2013-06-25 14:53 [#02458960]
Points: 3185 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



It's got to be "Uritual" followed by "Nothing is Real" you
fucking idiots! Do you know nothing!?!?!?!?


 

offline obara from Utrecht on 2013-06-25 16:06 [#02458962]
Points: 19368 Status: Lurker | Followup to The_Funkmaster: #02458945



yeah, even a few delay bits [or something] would bring some
variation

uritual is ok, too

new seeds is ok, too

I find more and more tracks enjoyable on this album. Either
played reversed or not.


 

offline Portnoy on 2013-06-26 09:29 [#02459008]
Points: 1491 Status: Regular



Cold earth.


 


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