* En anglais uniquement
Primarily consisting of vocalist/musician
John Balance and programmer/visual artist
Peter Christopherson, along with various other members and contributors,
Coil were one of the most beloved, mythologized groups to emerge from the British post-industrial scene. Initially established as an offshoot of
Throbbing Gristle and
Psychic TV in 1982, the band spent more than two decades making uncompromising, often unspeakably beautiful music that explored themes related to alchemy, dreams, the occult, drugs, and sexuality. They have remained a longstanding influence on genres such as goth rock, dark ambient, neofolk, techno, and experimental music in general. The apocalyptic Horse Rotorvator (1986) is often regarded as
Coil's masterwork, and one of the best albums of the 1980s. The group flirted with acid house on 1991's
Love's Secret Domain before embarking on side projects such as ELpH and Black Light District, which explored the possibilities of drone. Subsequent releases alternated between lyrical works such as 1999's
Musick to Play in the Dark and more experimental recordings like 2000's noisy Constant Shallowness Leads to Evil. Following
Balance's untimely death in 2004,
Coil officially ceased to exist, and the group's final album, The Ape of Naples, was released in 2005. Since
Christopherson's death in 2010, numerous additional posthumous releases and reissues have surfaced, including the '90s-era studio album
Backwards and soundtracks such as
Sara Dale's Sensual Massage.
John Balance began using the name
Coil for his solo work in 1982.
Christopherson joined the following year, and the duo made their debut performance at London's Magenta Club. The pair also collaborated with John Gosling (who, like both
Balance and
Christopherson, had participated in
Psychic TV) as part of the
Zos Kia project. Transparent, credited to both
Zos Kia and
Coil, was released in early 1984. Soon after,
Coil released the one-sided, 17-minute single How to Destroy Angels.
Balance and
Christopherson then recruited the aid of Possession's
Stephen Thrower,
J.G. "Foetus" Thirlwell, and
Gavin Friday to record their full-length 1984 bow, Scatology, an intense, primal work of sculpted industrial noise thematically devoted to the concepts of alchemy and transmutation.
Coil spent the next period of their existence exploring visual media. In late 1984, they recorded a rendition of "Tainted Love," producing a widely banned, hallucinogenic video clip featuring Soft Cell's
Marc Almond as the Angel of Death. Despite considerable controversy at home, the video ultimately found its way to the archives of the Museum of Modern Art.
Coil wrote the music to Derek Jarman's 1985 film The Angelic Conversation, eventually issuing the soundtrack in 1994. Following 1986's Nightmare Culture -- a collaboration with
Boyd Rice produced as a split release with
Current 93 --
Christopherson and
Balance invited
Stephen Thrower to join the group in a full-time capacity. As a trio, they recorded 1986's Horse Rotorvator, an LP introducing classical, jazz, and Middle Eastern textures into the mix, as well as the EP The Anal Staircase.
In 1987,
Coil issued The Unreleased Themes for Hellraiser, a collection of atmospheric gothic instrumentals commissioned for but ultimately cut from the Clive Barker horror film, followed by Gold Is the Metal (With the Broadest Shoulders), a collection of demos and outtakes from the Horse Rotorvator sessions. Unnatural History, a compilation of rare and unreleased tracks, effectively ended the first phase of the band's career in 1990. When
Coil resurfaced a year later with
Love's Secret Domain, their music reflected the strong influence of acid house culture.
Stolen and Contaminated Songs, another outtakes album focusing on the
Love's Secret Domain era, followed in 1992.
Drew McDowall began working with
Coil during the early '90s, becoming a full-fledged member in 1995. During this era,
Coil were signed to
Nine Inch Nails frontman
Trent Reznor's Nothing Records label, which was to release the group's album
Backwards. While the record wasn't released at the time,
Coil received a significant amount of mainstream exposure through their appearances on
NIN's remix releases Fixed,
Further Down the Spiral, and
Closer to God. Additionally, they recorded the LP Worship the Glitch, issued under the name ELpH, and in 1996 cut
A Thousand Lights in a Darkened Room as Black Light District.
Across 1998 and 1999,
Coil issued a series of four themed EPs: Spring Equinox, Summer Solstice, Autumn Equinox, and Winter Solstice (later compiled for Moon's Milk [In Four Phases]). After adding
Thighpaulsandra to the lineup, they released Astral Disaster (1999),
Musick to Play in the Dark, Vol. 1 (1999) and 2 (2000), Queens of the Circulating Library (2000), and several other limited releases. They also resumed concert activity for the first time since the early '80s, issuing a series of four Live albums in 2003.
On November 13, 2004,
Balance fell from the second-floor landing of his house and passed away. The final
Coil recordings featuring his involvement, including ...And the Ambulance Died in His Arms and The Ape of Naples, were released the following year. After
Balance's tragic death,
Christopherson relocated to Thailand, continued recording music as the Threshold HouseBoys Choir, and performed concerts with a briefly reunited
Throbbing Gristle, in addition to beginning several
Coil archival projects, including a projected reissue of their entire catalog.
The New Backwards, an updated version of the
Backwards sessions, was given a limited release in 2008 as part of a vinyl reissue of The Ape of Naples on Important Records, followed by a stand-alone CD release. A massive box set of live
Coil DVDs called Colour Sound Oblivion appeared in 2010.
Christopherson passed away in his sleep on November 24, 2010.
Coil associate
Danny Hyde authorized the 2014
Cold Spring release
Recoiled, which consisted of previously unreleased
Coil remixes of tracks from
Nine Inch Nails'
The Downward Spiral. The following year,
Backwards was given a release on the label, and several
Coil reissues briefly surfaced as part of the long-gestating Threshold Archives series. In 2017, Optimo Music released A Cold Cell in Bangkok, a 2008
Christopherson remix of The Ape of Naples track "Cold Cell." Further
Coil reissues and archival releases appeared on labels such as Dais and Prescription. Swanyard, a compilation of previously unreleased mixes and version from
Hyde's archive, was issued by Infinite Fog Productions in 2019.
The Gay Man's Guide to Safer Sex + 2, featuring music from a VHS-only 1992 sexual education documentary, appeared on Musique pour la Danse. Another previously unreleased soundtrack,
Sara Dale's Sensual Massage, was issued by Infinite Fog in 2020. ~ Jason Ankeny & Paul Simpson