To bring you up to speed: For the past week, Boards of Canada have been slowly teasing some kind of new music or new project. It started with a mystery 12-inch found on Record Store Day, followed by another 12" found found later in the week, plus a couple snippets that made their way to radio, not to mention some mysterious YouTube uploads.

Now, as FACT reports, more clues have been unearthed by users of the BoC unofficial fan messageboard Twoism:

Today, BoC updated their YouTube playlist to reposition three videos related to their 1995 release Twoism to the top of the list.

A Twoism user then noticed that one of the banners on the board had changed, seemingly incorporating a kind of static pattern-- the same as on another recently unearthed video.

Opening the .gif image in a text-editing program revealed links to two Soundclouds, which feature music buried beneath static, and new diagrams. Both pieces are titled ∑: [#audiofile: /audiofiles/5929cce9c0084474cd0c421b]|||||| [#audiofile: /audiofiles/5929cce913d197565213ca58]||||||

When played together [#audiofile: /audiofiles/5929cce95e6ef95969324543]|||||| the pieces sound like the previously unearthed snippets and contain the number 628315, which would fit the sequence unearthed so far.

That currently looks like this: —— / 628315 / 717228 / 936557 / —— / 519225. NPR revealed the code 699742 during their broadcast, which has not yet been placed in the sequence.

After uploading the links into a text editor, a paragraph of coding jargon was uncovered, appearing to have come from a Mac source folder, and which contains the word "Cosecha" a number of times, leading people to assume it might be the title of a new album.

Hear a snippet of the first vinyl release below: