This is a historical tome in the
Coil discography that the pioneering U.K. industrial group released as a cassette-only album on Nekrophile Records. Performances of early
Coil as a harsh industrial noise/performance art group are captured in various live settings during 1983, including Berlin and London concerts, as well as studio/rehearsal room sessions that predate the
Coil of the legendary 1884 album
Scatology, which subsequently became a massively influential recording in the post-industrial movement. Here are the earliest
Coil recordings, exhibiting the band as it develops a fierce noise music that later became some of the most poetic and elegiac of the era. Whether reshaping electro, new wave, hyper-minimalism, or futuristic folk,
Coil remained one of the most vital groups of the '80s post-punk movement. For fans of the group, this early archival material is essential listening. The disc is packaged in a mini-LP-style cardboard slipcase, and includes a booklet with photos from
Coil/Zos Kia performances. A text of the
Coil manifesto penned by
John Balance and a transcription of a conversation between founders
Balance and
Peter Christopherson are included in the booklet. Newcomers to the group are advised to explore first the albums
Scatology,
Horse Rotorvator, and
Love's Secret Domain, though
Coil fans and collectors will not be disappointed by this obscurity.
Transparent provides a much-needed insight into the very early work of the extraordinary industrial music institution.