Everything related to our favorite Scottish duo.
Sat Jun 06, 2026 2:46 am
I've been thinking a lot about the discussion around Inferno and, honestly, I felt the need to get all of my thoughts in one place and out of my head. So I wrote a piece that pulls together and refines different posts I've made over the past two months since I joined. I was going to include more but quickly realized some of that stuff would be better served in a different piece. Special thanks to Joshu_atx for sharing the Giraud's Mirror connection--I quoted you in one spot here. That idea really ignited my imagination.
Please note that I hold all of my speculation here with a very open hand and am very probably wrong on many counts, feel free to please poke at them all you want (or walk away from the wall of text). I'm just a rando on the internet and I have no connection to or insider knowledge of Boards of Canada. I just get carried away sometimes--hopefully once I post this I'll be able to give my rekindled BOC obsession a bit of a rest for a while!
PS, no AI was used in writing this. I just use a lot of emdashes, I promise. Old habits die hard.
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Inferno. Where to begin? I have an old copy of In A Beautiful Place Out In The Country framed and hanging on my wall. The morning after my first listen to the new album, I found myself entranced with the words "boards of canada" as they appear on that now 26-year-old EP. Those familiar words were RADIATING a new energy to me. The roundness of the letters is now intermixed with memories of the fever dream that is Inferno. It's as though those shadows always stretched dancing behind them, but only now have come into view. Like everything they've done was all pointing somewhere off the map, and Inferno was that somewhere.
I also felt a sense of peace. Like if they ended it here, I'd be perfectly content. In the 13 years between Tomorrow's Harvest and Inferno I'd almost accepted that a new release might not come. Then it did.
It started with a VHS tape. The part of that cryptic video that interested me the most was the opening disclaimer prohibiting the diffusion of its contents. There's an irony in how this was part of a campaign intended to get the word out, yet it mirrors the story of betrayal in BOC's Old Tunes era tapes. They only shared those 4 tapes with a few trusted people, but they were leaked anyway. Fast-forward to 2026. Fans receive a VHS tape that expressly asks them not to distribute its contents--and what happens? It is digitized and diffused online, picked apart frame by frame, and is now free for all to view. Tape 5 indeed!
Not only does it feel self-referential, but it also reflects the surrender in release. Works of art that are released are truly let go of by the creator. In the Inferno VHS we saw in real time how they are consumed, distributed at scale, and digested by not just the fanbase but today's consumer technology itself in the exploitative shadow of genAI.
BOC didn't need to do anything more than send out this tape: the machine did the rest! This is a gastronomic--perhaps infernal--process. When something is put online it is literally consumed either by the abyss or by frenzied masses (eg, BOC fans). Inferno is both another log on the fire and a mirror reflecting back what could be considered the all-consuming hellfire of the internet and its influence on people and civilization.
After the VHS tape went out, the stakes were high. 13 years is a long time to go without releasing a scrap of new music, so when Tape 05 dropped, the Brothers Boards weren't messing around. Fortunately for us, its beauty was met with a virtual standing ovation from fans across the Youtube comments section, the Twoism fan forum, and beyond.
I think its use of harp says a lot. In the context of faded media music from the past, its crisp live harp is real: it's the present. Organic. Ringing out with lucidity while enrobed in the fingerprints of time. The eerie reminiscence of this piece to so many threads of BOC's past work all woven masterfully into three minutes and twenty-two seconds evokes absolution. Release--as a new release, a return, and possibly the completion of Boards of Canada. If Inferno is the final Boards of Canada release, then in some sense the band is dead and their body of work enters an afterlife: so you hear angelic harp. The vocals fading in at the end of Tape 05, a community of listeners that live on after the music is done. Followers. It is really fitting in this context that the lucid harp comes in to play what may be the most quintessentially Boards of Canada melody ever written. I feel it captures that moment when you're one with your instrument and a melody just comes out of your fingers like it was channeled through you by the univese, and you're just a medium. Like this is what BOC came to do. Culmination. Not just the past inside the present, but the whole of time in this one moment.
But is Inferno really it? Will there be another album? Or at least another EP? Dare I say, the fabled BOCset?
Before I weigh in on my thoughts around that question, let's take a look at another mystery, one that sits apart from Inferno. One that falls enticingly from its pages--small, flimsy, diaphanous, hexagonal, unassuming, yet contains apparent multitudes:
Giraud's Mirror.
What is the significance of 177? Why the 1983 recording date? The McDonalds sample enjoining us to gift one's brother with a smile? The Blue Rose? I won't dig into all the questions it raises here, but I'd like to focus in on a few trailheads.
Let's start with the artifact itself. Not the hexiflexidisc, but the eponymous mirror. Twosim user Joshu_atx discovered that this unique mirror was created by author and artist Marcel Giraud. To quote Joshu_atx, the mirror has "6 sides (hexagon, akin to the flex-disc) and 5 loops (5 BoC albums) with a beginning and ending place for the candles but connected overall. This bonus disc is like a bookmark / reset and unifies the whole discography together. It’s 'everything' self-contained in one journey. The candles illuminate the mirror. The mirror is what the listener gets from their music reflected back on them." I'd also like to add that the frame is vaguely turquoise in color.
Giraud's Mirror, among other things, suggests the possibility of a model for the arc of Boards of Canada's mainline albums. Several quotes from the brothers could imply this is something they had in mind since their early days. Based on one of their earliest interviews from 1997, it appears it wouldn't be the first time they had a grand project in mind involving a framework of 5 entries:
Mike Sandison: "We have a small company called Music70 and it also produces Super 8 and video films, many of which are quite experimental. I myself am also doing some of these film works and we will soon be shooting our first Super 8 film in feature film length, complete with our own music."
What is the theme of this film?
MS: "It will probably be a road movie, but also in a rather broad concept. It is supposed to be a road movie in five parts and that is all we know at the moment."
Digging through some of their allusions to mirrors in other interviews extends this line of thinking:
"Like the intro on 'Julie and Candy' for example, we just played the melody on a couple of whistles and then we bounced it back and forward between the internal mics of two tape-decks until the sound started disappearing into hell. Like when you look at an image reflected within two mirrors forever, in the distance it gets darker and greener and murkier." -Mike
"Fish and Humans help to form the hexagonal mirror image of the world, as does the presence of birds and all wildlife." -Mike
"We create music that seems to have its own universe and time. That place is another reality. It always exists just around the corner, or beyond the mirror."
"[It's] probably 'a soundtrack to a place like the other side of the mirror'. Listening to it, you can dive into an alternate version of the world you know, where history branches off and everything heads in a strange direction." -Mike
"When I was a kid, about five or six years old, a relative of mine had one of those tacky ceramic owls on their mantelpiece, and it had multifaceted diamante eyes. I as totally obsessed with those sparkly glass eyes, for ages. I felt like looking into them was like looking sideways though everything, right through time. That's what we're trying to do with our music." -Mike
As fans of David Lynch's Twin Peaks may recall, the owls aren't what they seem. This brings us to the blue rose. The apparent decision to connect the dots between Turquoise Hexagon Sun and blue rose in Giraud's Mirror has some rich thematic implications. That cultural link in the artifact of this hexiflexidisc is a succinct symbol that summarizes a lot of the thematic and stylistic direction of Boards of Canada.
Unpacking what I mean a bit here, it helps to know Twin Peaks and some of David Lynch's artistic vision. In short, the blue rose represents phenomena that are perpendicular to reality as we usually perceive it, that transcend time and space in some way, that are supernatural. Lynch in more than one place has said that he thinks electricity and its ubiquity and power in our modern lives is a fascinating and underexplored topic. Electronic or electronically-mediated recordings (eg, music, photographs, websites) offer a means of transcending time. Without going into any spoilers, this is a major aspect of virtually all of Lynch's works, alongside the notion that we live in, essentially, a sort of dream. The illusory electrical world of perception.
BOC explores overlapping territory in the fallibility of memory and perception as well as the insidious influence that organizations can have on followers and world. Inextricably tied in with this, again, is electricity. Not just the electrical activity of the brain, but also technology as a mediator of power and control.
Related to this is the negative edge of nostalgia--not necessarily trauma, but the momentum of habit that we are often blind to while ending up in the same difficult situations time and again. Behavioral loops that get stuck on repeat in our psyches even as we age and conditions change, that continue to manifest in different guises that we mistakenly perceive as coming from outside of ourselves. In this way, our past, present, and future selves are contained in this one moment, with parts of ourselves frozen in the past.
Feedback loops are an extreme manifestation of this, the closed loop producing monstrous things with exaggerated features in our lives, dreams, and societies, frightening us until we can cultivate enough equanimity to face them head-on. The exaggerated, maybe even cartoonish, character of our demons when left unchecked kind of fits with the bit of camp horror in the design for Inferno.
Moreover, the relationship between electronic materials and folks who consume/use them involves power dynamics. The internet as it exists today, threatening presence of social media, surveillance capitalism, genAI, and all, is an extreme example of this--truly a sort of inferno in its own right. It exploits and amplifies our human faults to a point of self-destructive feedback. Simultaneously, it offers a hypnotizing facsimile of experience in the form of a never-ending kaleidoscope of recorded past events while the powers that be exploit and destroy more and more of the world and the human spirit.
Inferno isn't strictly a dark album. It's also about the process of turning to face your demons--individually and as a society--in order to transcend and move beyond them. To thaw the frozen parts inside. To befriend those exiled aspects of our psyche so we can rescue ourselves from the havoc they wreak when left unchecked.
Inferno is an invitation to shadow work, and Giraud's Mirror points to an artifact that seems to reach toward--but never quite succeeds in--transcending time.
Perhaps Giraud's Mirror encapsulates even more than the 5 albums of their mainline discography. Its supposed 1983 recording date is another piece of the puzzle--and this is where things start to appear grander. Before Boards of Canada, it's known that the brothers were dabbling in recording music at least as early as 1983. If Giraud's Mirror contains material that one or both brothers recorded in 1983, and Inferno finished production in 2025, that would, technically speaking, make Inferno an album 42 years in the making. What is Inferno about?
In the words of Douglas Adams: "life, the universe, and everything!"
So let's bring everything in. Let's go all the way back to the beginning:
If the structure of their mainline discography is around Giraud's Mirror, maybe the 5 pre-Twoism albums were like an early iteration or blueprint of this idea. Two mirrors:
Giraud's Mirror 1:
Catalog 3
Acid Memories
Closes Vol. 1
Play By Numbers
Hooper Bay
Middle Releases:
Twoism
Hi Scores
Giraud's Mirror 2:
Music Has The Right To Children
Geogaddi
The Campfire Headphase
Tomorrow's Harvest
Inferno
Between mirror 1 and 2 we have leaked materials--the old tunes tapes et al--that amount to compilations and demos. And, of course, Twoism and Hi Scores are the public middle releases between these two mirrors, with the later EPs offering a place to explore A-side outtakes.
I find it interesting that these two "middle" EPs both imply a mirroring, splitting, or dualism. In Twoism's case, note that in various spiritual traditions "sin" or "evil" is seen as coming from forgetting that we are all one--two-ism. As for Hi Scores, the "HI" has been speculated to stand for Hell Interface, Boards of Canada's mysterious and more sinister-sounding side project.
I believe Inferno's opener, Introit, offers potential support for this hypothesis: its looping melody not only employs a 5 beats per measure rhythm, but it's also palindromic. Maybe their mostly unheard first 5 albums and their 5 publicly-released mainline albums circle around Twoism and Hi Scores in the same way that the tracks of Tomorrow's Harvest do around Collapse, with 5 pairs of somehow related albums mirrored across over 40 years of work.
Looking at just the 5 mainline albums, there's a beauty to The Campfire Headphase sitting in the middle. It was intended to evoke the sort of sanctuary of sitting around a campfire. If you compare that symmetry to the symmetry of Collapse being the middle track on Tomorrow's Harvest, the same image of a radial pattern around a fire exists. The yin and yang relationship of one being a welcoming bonfire and the other, presumably, an atomic blast, reinforces the themes of precarious spiritual bliss and religious devotion teetering on wrath, corruption, and downfall. Notably, all five albums imply such a pattern in various ways: Music Has The Right To Children's TV glow, Geogaddi's burning Waco compound, the campfire, the atomic blast, and Inferno's nine rings of hell.
What if all of their releases follow this same grand pattern?
At this stage, I'll just leave you with three "very important thoughts."
One: Maybe "the greatest gift is the smile you give to your brother" sample in Giraud's Mirror isn't just a sweet recongition of BOC's musical journey together, but also a victory lap after completing a second conceptual Giraud's Mirror of releases. Two brothers, two mirrors.
Two: based on all this hypothesizing, my hunch is that we're not going to get another Boards of Canada album. However, I do believe we'll get fifth EP (assuming Aquarius and Peel Sessions don't count as EPs, but rather as a single and a live album respectively), and we may yet see a compiliation of unreleased materials.
Three: a quote from Marcus Eoin in the 2000 interview "Boards of The Underground," published right after the release of In A Beautiful Place Out In The Country: "One time we were out in the woods on a really wet day. My friend bet me I couldn't start a fire using only one match. But I managed to get this meagre little flame going in this damp little patch of ground. Then when we were about a mile down the road, we looked back and it was like, 'whoosh!' - the whole wood was on fire!"
Inferno!