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After the release of Horse Rotorvator, Coil left Some Bizzare Records, since they fell out with its owner Stevo Pearce. [43] Gold Is the Metal (With the Broadest Shoulders) followed as a full-length release in 1987, marking the beginning of the band's own label, Threshold House—the album is described in the liner notes as "not the follow-up to Horse Rotorvator, but a completely separate ...
The Ape of Naples is composed of reworked material that Coil had created in varying forms since the inception of Backwards, their aborted Nothing Records album created during a period that Christopherson dubbed "the New Orleans era", [3] as well as songs that were previously only played live in improvisational form on the mini-tours Coil undertook in the early 2000s.
He was responsible for the majority of Coil's vocals, lyrics and chants, along with synthesizers and various other instruments both commonplace and esoteric. Outside Coil he collaborated with Cultural Amnesia (at the beginning of the 1980s), Nurse with Wound , Death in June , Psychic TV , Current 93 , Chris & Cosey , [ 6 ] Thighpaulsandra , and ...
Coil 4:22 CD Unnatural History, Transparent: 1983 The Elephant Table Album "S Is for Sleep" Coil 3:31 CD, 2×LP Unnatural History: 1984 Bethel "Red Weather" Coil cassette Unnatural History II: 1984 Life at the Top "Homage to Sewage" Coil 2:13 LP Unnatural History: 1985 Devastate to Liberate "Restless Day" Coil 4:24 cassette, LP Scatology (CD ...
Some copies have a paper sticker on the back of the CD jewel box with the band name, album title (with "1991 e.v." underneath), tracklist, an address for World Serpent Distribution and a UPC barcode. The later release changed the titles of all of the songs from this edition, albeit with some only having different punctuation.
Going Up, a musical comedy that opened in New York in 1917 and in London in 1918; Going Up, a 1923 film starring Douglas MacLean "Going Up" (TV episode), an episode of PBS's POV series; Going Up, starring Nandita Chandra "Going Up", a song by Echo & the Bunnymen from their 1980 album Crocodiles "Going Up", a common announcement played in elevators
How to Destroy Angels is the debut extended play by British experimental band Coil. At this point, the group consisted only of John Balance and Peter Christopherson . [ 2 ] It was originally released in 1984 on L.A.Y.L.A.H. Antirecords , but was later re-pressed in 1988.
It should only contain pages that are Coil (band) songs or lists of Coil (band) songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Coil (band) songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .