Entry tags:
[516] wonk uoy ,sem tnereffid fo tol a era ereht
Work is crazy, but life goes on! Also various wrestling companies keep announcing additional Canadian dates that line up with my vacation time so I keep having to move things around??? TJPW tickets (two dates during Dynasty weekend) on sale tomorrow, Mystery Wrestling 23 in Edmonton on Thursday. AND THEN THAT'S IT. I gotta start booking the actual travel! Gonna be a crazy couple of weeks!
Theatre still closed. Trying to be optimistic about it this month!
Got a new pair of open earbuds for work so I can wear two instead of just one and have been catching up on KEXP live sessions while I deal with the insane neverending onslaught of sold units and ridiculous sales requests and warranty nonsense. Which I should get back to now!

Wikipedia Sez: Music Has the Right to Children is the debut studio album by Scottish electronic music duo Boards of Canada, released on 20 April 1998 in the United Kingdom by Warp and Skam Records and in the United States by Matador. The album was produced at Hexagon Sun, the duo's personal recording studio in Pentland Hills, and continued their distinctive style of electronica, featuring vintage synthesisers, degraded analogue production, found sounds and samples, and hip-hop-inspired rhythms that had been featured on their first two EPs Twoism (1995) and Hi Scores (1996).
Genre: Electronic
Styles: Ambient Techno, Electronica, IDM, Downtempo, Techno
Release Date: April 20th, 1998
Prior Familiarity: None, though Boards of Canada is definitely one of those bands I've heard a ton about.
What I Did While Listening: Did some chores, opened some Pokemon cards, and then just tried to chill because the goddamn internet went down midway and was out for like two hours in the middle of the night, my prime productivity hours.
Verdict: It never really rises into greatness at any point, and a lot of it is pointedly pretentious nonsense, but you know what, it's a hell of a vibe, and I really liked it a lot.
Favourite Song: Aquarius
Leshia's Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Theatre still closed. Trying to be optimistic about it this month!
Got a new pair of open earbuds for work so I can wear two instead of just one and have been catching up on KEXP live sessions while I deal with the insane neverending onslaught of sold units and ridiculous sales requests and warranty nonsense. Which I should get back to now!

Wikipedia Sez: Music Has the Right to Children is the debut studio album by Scottish electronic music duo Boards of Canada, released on 20 April 1998 in the United Kingdom by Warp and Skam Records and in the United States by Matador. The album was produced at Hexagon Sun, the duo's personal recording studio in Pentland Hills, and continued their distinctive style of electronica, featuring vintage synthesisers, degraded analogue production, found sounds and samples, and hip-hop-inspired rhythms that had been featured on their first two EPs Twoism (1995) and Hi Scores (1996).
Genre: Electronic
Styles: Ambient Techno, Electronica, IDM, Downtempo, Techno
Release Date: April 20th, 1998
Prior Familiarity: None, though Boards of Canada is definitely one of those bands I've heard a ton about.
What I Did While Listening: Did some chores, opened some Pokemon cards, and then just tried to chill because the goddamn internet went down midway and was out for like two hours in the middle of the night, my prime productivity hours.
Verdict: It never really rises into greatness at any point, and a lot of it is pointedly pretentious nonsense, but you know what, it's a hell of a vibe, and I really liked it a lot.
Favourite Song: Aquarius
Leshia's Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐
