

Miniscule Rocking: "Ready Lets Go", "Beware the Friendly Stranger", "Dandelion", "In the Annexe", "The Smallest Weird Number", "Energy Warning", "Opening the Mouth", "I Saw Drones", "A is to B as B is to C", "Over the Horizon Radar" and "Diving Station".The Immodest Orgasm: The moans in "Dawn Chorus" sound an awful lot like this."The Devil is in the Details" into "A is to B as B is to C" into "Over the Horizon Radar".Fading into the Next Song: "The Beach at Redpoint" into "Opening the Mouth".Epic Rocking: "Sunshine Recorder" and "Alpha and Omega".Drone of Dread: There's at least one present in every track (with the obvious exception of "Magic Window") some tracks are little more than a drone.Daylight Horror: The album feels like an audio version of this, due to the use of bright, happy synths and samples contrasted with Subliminal Seduction, distorted vocals, and references to cults.Darker and Edgier: In comparison to Music Has the Right to Children, with Geogaddi's more uneasy sound and occultist themes.Call-Back: "Sunshine Recorder" features a sample of a child saying "a beautiful place" and samples modified to sound like "an eagle in your mind", referencing "In a Beautiful Place Out in the Country" and "An Eagle in Your Mind", respectively.all lowercase letters: All text on the cover is in lowercase."From One Source All Things Depend" note Japanese bonus track (2:10).Easily one of their darkest records (alongside Tomorrow's Harvest), it is also one of the most controversial, continuing to inspire debates about its themes and meaning to this day. Satanic/occult themes and drones of dread abound in the album self-described as a "claustrophobic, twisting journey" and a reflection of a chaotic period in the duo's lives. While BoC's been noted to make songs with unsettling atmospheres, Geogaddi cranks it up a notch. Geogaddi is the second (publicly available) album by Scottish electronic duo Boards of Canada, released in 2002.
