From his work with steelpan, metal percussion and EMS synthesizers to his NHK documentary scores, seasoned multi-instrumentalist Yoshio Machida’s path has been wide-ranging. He now joins Portuguese drummer Jorge Queijo, whose practice spans free jazz, experimental gamelan, theatre soundtracks and collaborations with John Zorn and Chris Corsano.
Their latest release, TOKYO, follows 2016’s LUMINANT with bassist Hiroki Chiba, and again the two reveal a natural, intuitive chemistry. Queijo handled the mixing and editing, shaping their recordings into a cohesive whole.
The result is a delicate, atmospheric portrait of the city. Machida’s acoustic palette—steelpan, gamelan and ukulele—blends with Queijo’s light percussive touch and electronic textures to create something that moves gracefully between analog and digital.
The Tokyo they evoke isn’t the hard-edged metropolis, but its shadowed backstreets: the hush of a narrow alley, the clang of temple bells cutting through LED screens, the subterranean rumble of the metro beneath the drone of the expressway.
Tokyo is an album of nuance and atmosphere, capturing the fleeting stillness that lingers alongside the city’s constant motion.
In the late-1990s, after a successful career as an MTV-era music video director, Peter “Sleazy” Christopherson moved with Jhonn Balance – his partner in life and in Coil – from London to the rural Weston-super-Mare, creating an environment for all things “musick, musick, musick!” with a revolving door of new members, including Thighpaulsandra. This eruption in activity saw Coil’s discography nearly double, and during this fruitful period, Thighpaulsandra asked the simple question: why doesn’t Coil play live? After a 16-year wait, thanks to the rapid technological advancement in the form of MacBooks, DAWs, VSTs and plugins, Coil were able bring their music to the stage as always envisioned. In live performance, they could embrace the risks and freedoms of real time sonic manipulation, as noted by Sleazy: “Reshape the show minute by minute… the direction is very spontaneous, not so much in the way of like jazz improvisation but in a kind stream of consciousness… Thighpaulsandra brought us his wisdom, and he was able to convince us we could do it.”
From 1999 to 2003, Coil was “like a snake shedding its skin,” transforming every six months into something “completely different.” Their evolution was documented in real time through the recent advent of lower-cost CD-R manufacture, on limited edition albums including ‘Constant Shallowness Leads To Evil’ and ‘Queens of the Circulating Library.’ In preparing for 2004’s “Even an Evil Fatigue” live series, Coil began work on their next period-defining masterpiece, ‘Black Antlers.’
‘Black Antlers’ showcases late-period Coil at their purest: stripped down, tighter, and leaner. The music became more rhythmic, with a greater emphasis on beats: “the songs we did tend to be more… not rock in any sense of a word, but you know, more conventional in terms of structure, but now what we’re doing is sort of within an ‘electronic’ genre.” The sound of ‘Black Antlers’ is of an intoxicating energy, combining Thighpaulsandra’s advanced synthesis, Balance’s poetic lyricism and Christopherson’s flirtations with jazz and Ableton-aided PowerBook maximalism. Rounding out the trio were renowned hurdy-gurdy player Cliff Stapleton on a “specifically commissioned” electric variant, to merge into the band’s “strange and other-worldly music”; Royal Academy of Music trained percussionist Tom Edwards (who also appeared with Thighpaulsandra in Spiritualized’s live band); and European and Near East winds specialist Mike York on pipes, bombarde, duduk and balalaika. Initially released as an “album-in-progress” in June 2004, a post on the Threshold House website noted, “Please remember that September will see Coil recording the album “Black Antlers (Proper)”.” Jhonn Balance passed away that November; Christopherson would reunite with ‘Love’s Secret Domain’ collaborator Danny Hyde to complete ‘Black Antlers’ by May 2006.
Revitalized energy marked ‘Black Antlers”s recording, paired with the group’s signature wordplay and humor (the name came from a series of imagined adult film titles). At their “Evil Fatigue” tour opener in Paris, Jhonn Balance presented the revised “Teenage Lightning (10th Birthday Version)” as, “an updated version of one of our older-never ‘hits.'” The song, about the energy generated by “two teenagers, or old age pensioners” rapidly pulses, with Edwards’s marimbas electronically modified and arpeggiated by Christopherson. Album opener “The Gimp (Sometimes)” is hypnotic and hallucinatory, recalling Coil’s 90s period, with a potentially uneasy air, filled with repetition, distorted vocals, and Thighpaulsandra’s modulated drone. “Sex With Sun Ra (Part One – Saturnalia)” reveals the potentials of the 2004 lineup, as it writhes and glides through an imagined conversation with the legendary composer, building into overdrive. On the complementary piece, Christopherson & Hyde’s “Sex With Sun Ra (Part Two – Sigillaricia)”, the song evolves into a throbbing ouroboros of glitches and free flowing energy, with York’s pipe samples reverberating almost filmically. One highlight is “The Wraiths And Strays Of Paris”, an expansion of the song’s first release (as “Wraiths And Strays (From Montreal)”, available as a downloadable bonus track). “Of Paris” takes Thighpaulsandra synthesized warmth and Christopherson’s PowerBook manipulations & stylizations from the original, adding samples taken from multi-track recordings of the full live band – including Balance’s vocals from the Paris show – fully realizing Christopherson’s desire of “taking the (electronic) genre to a place that people would find unexpected, and more challenging.” Adding to the unexpected, and building upon their own uncompromising legacy, Coil delicately cover the traditional African American lullaby (and “friend’s song”) “All The Pretty Little Horses”, with Balance’s vocals soothing the listener in an almost hushed whisper.
For Christopherson, following Jhonn’s death, the relevance and power of Coil’s creative output changed. He had one goal in mind: “to maintain the availability of the archive for future generations.” In original form, ‘Black Antlers’ represented the possibilities of a new era for the group, built from the momentum of live performance, new sounds and ideas. For the final version, ‘Black Antlers’ reunited Coil members from over the decades, collaborating across the boundaries of fixed time. There would be no more new Coil, only the completion of unfinished projects, bringing them to a standard which Balance would “have loved and approved of.”
Dais Records would like to thank Thighpaulsandra and Danny Hyde for their collaboration on this reissue.
The Dais reissue presents Coil’s 2006 version ‘Black Antlers’ with 2004’s “Wraiths And Strays (From Montreal)” available as a downloadable bonus track.
Tracks 1-7: All songs by Coil except “All the Pretty Little Horses” (trad.) and “Where’s Your Child” (Bam Bam). Most versions of “Wraiths and Strays” feature a sample from the King of Woolworths’ track “Montparnasse” now used with permission. A shorter version of tracks 1-6 were originally released on cd-r format by Threshold House, to accompany Coil’s 2004 “Even an Evil Fatigue” live series in: Paris, Leipzig, Amsterdam, Rome, Fano, London. Tracks 7-9 were written, produced & mixed May 2006 by Peter Christopherson & Danny Hyde for the 2006 cd release.
Coil were: Jhonn Balance Peter Christopherson Tom Edwards Cliff Stapleton Thighpaulsandra Mike York
Artwork by Ian Johnstone & Jhonn Balance. Remastered by Josh Bonati. Layout & artwork restoration by Vinnie Massimino.
Label Description: for this, their fourth release, the duo of ANATOLY GRINBERG and MARK SPYBEY continue to carefully straddle the blurred lines between electronic and acoustic music and on a more personal level, the difficulties imposed by the political landscape and climate that separates and divides nations and people. friends, united in a common language. to create art.
Way way back in the early days I used to say a lot about ‘The Terminal Kaleidoscope’ , a concept comparing the fragile planet we live on to a drowning human being with life flashing before his or her eyes, the images constantly accelerating. It’s 2024, a little over 2 decades since the turn of this unbearably turbulent century and the concept appears to have become an unlikely soap opera where we are the cast. Let’s hang in there….. EK
SO LONELY IN HEAVEN – THE CREATION
‘So Lonely in Heaven’ is The Legendary Pink Dots’ second album since the World stopped for a Global Pandemic.
With members scattered across three countries and two continents, our guilty confession is that quite a few Air Miles were consumed in its creation.
Ideas were spun across Cyberspace for months, but the magic happened collectively in small spaces with the tape running.
SO LONELY IN HEAVEN – THE MESSAGE
The machine is everything we are. It sees everything, hears everything, knows everything and feeds, speeds, drinks us down, spits us out – we lost control of it at the instant of its conception.
You may cough, curse and die, but the machine will…more
credits
released January 17, 2025
Erik Drost- Acoustic and Electric Guitars, bass guitar; Randall Frazier- synthesisers, devices; Edward Ka-Spel – Voice, devices; Joep Hendrikx – live electronics, devices. Simon Paul – Cover design and layout. Raymond Steeg & Peter Van Vliet – mastering. Thank you Alena for your enduring support!