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I think at some stage you should do 'A Design for Life'. A number two single about class consciousness; a hit that ushered in years of strings in indie music as a shorthand for maturity; part of and apart from Britpop. Oh also, the personal drama behind it isn't bad. Plus! Not from England.
The funny thing is that the Old Grey Whistle Test version of Lorelei is a rarity as it was me playing the guitar and Robin playing the bass! We were actually just on stage messing about while they got the lights and cameras in the right place and had swapped instruments for a laugh. At the end of the run through they said “great! That’s it, we have everything we need! Next band up please...” We argued that this wasn’t a proper take, and we weren’t even playing our right instruments” but they wouldn’t have it. We had a big falling out with the producers and didn’t appear on the bbc again for about 10 years or more! Pretty funny now though. Robin was always very self effacing about his guitar skills but even I, the fat fingered bassist, could just about manage the two notes that dominate this track. Haha.
monad we turned down Top Of The Pops but we simply didn’t get offered any tv or radio after this episode for many years anyway. No big deal as there weren’t many good tv shows and when we did come back we played a live radio set from the lovely Mark Radcliffe and Marc Riley. If only they’d been around 10 years earlier! Haha.
Damn TV and the precious videotape, they probably were always in need of more. These days you can just pop another hard drive on when you want to keep shooting. My first exposure to Cocteau Twins was the Lonely is an Eyesore compilation. I spent $26 of my hard earned cash on the limited edition, from the hot lady at Record Bar with the red hair. I spent one summer drinking cheap wine with my friends and playing as many Cocteau Twins songs as possible. And Moon in the Melodies. I fucking loved that too. There will never be another like Cocteau Twins, a confluence of circumstances and talent. Thank you, Simon.
Prince was a great music lover. He was obsessed with the Paisley Underground scene too. He wrote a song for the Bangles which made them jump from indie scene to mainstream. He was a great supporter of Rain Parade, the early incarnations of Mazzy Star and all. Great guy. His final years, the mental health issues and another very speculated health problem are a big sad chapter in his amazing artistic life.
Two things: 1) I consider every single fan of the Cocteau Twins to be a member of my soul family. 2) Sugar Hiccup takes you higher than any drug ever could!
It breaks my brain every time to find out these wonderful bands were top 40 in Britain. In the mid-80's U.S., this would be some deep cut indie music. Only the coolest older sibling or record store clerk would know about Cocteau Twins.
Same.I was just having a conversation with my partner about this. When I was young in the mid 80's in Canada nobody played or listened to music like this. It was so hard to find good music with all the mainstream garbage North America was producing. I was that older sibling that you spoke of and at that time music defined you and people thought you were weird or a freak for listening to this type of music.
Cocteau Twins were relatively well known in our area. As odd as it sounds, Northern Utah was musically progressive in the 80s for some reason. We had a huge goth scene.
Sorry but they weren’t top 40 at all… they were outside the mainstream top 40 by a calendar mile. The top 40 was for the people who lived in the realm of music mediocrity.
Its not dream pop, its just one of the many different sounds of the 1980s Post Punk. Dream Pop is a recently made up American named genre for stuff that sound like this. In the 80's and 90s there was no genre of music know as Dream Pop. Its was not considered pop or mainstream music at the time. The current generation, through Wikipedia is totally rewriting the history of music through Wikipedia when they were not there.
She deliberately did not use proper words for first few albums, just sounds. I thought this was common knowledge, it has surprised me how many seem not to be aware of this.
You're not really supposed to understand it. Even if you can hear words, it isn't meant to be telling you anything. Call it lyrical abstract art (surely music is an art form), you can interpret it however the hell you want....... Take for instance Prodigy's "Breathe" where Maxim is shouting "Exhale, exhale exhale" I can hear it "EggSale eggSale eggSale".
The Cocteau Twins are one of the most unique & beautiful bands ever. I am so fortunate to have seen them in 1985 at The Palace in Hollywood , CA. Treasure , is indeed a treasure of an LP. Ethereal & magical.
I remember that show! All my older friends went, I was heartbroken I couldn't go I wasn't old enough to get in - the palace was 18 & over!! & then the cocteau Twins took a break - five l o n g years not touring l.a. again until 1990!!
I was at that show, too! It was a miracle how we got in. We got there late. Everyone had gone in and we waltzed up to the front door and a guy met us (we didn't know him) and said "2 tickets for sale!" and we bought them and walked in. It was amazing timing. I don't remember much about the show, though.
They saved me at that highschool age...now I'm turning 29...it's still the best music I have ever needed. I hope everyone remembers the first time they heard the cocteau twins. They make the darkest moments in life redeemable.
Good for you! Im A Metal guitarist in my late 50s and I was introduced to the Twins in the late 80s early 90s and their sound influenced me as much as Van Halen and Fear Factory. They are THE BEST! Check Robin Guthries' solo work; his guitar sound influenced every single "Shoegaze" band that ever lived.
I discovered the Cocteau Twins with the Four Calendar Café album and absolutely fell in love with it. I still think it’s one of the more memorable 90s alternative albums
Have you ever recorded music with a dreamy effects heavy style with your band MetalJesus? Would be cool if you did and included it as a background track in your next 16bit themed video....
This was the CT recording that introduced me to them. I went on to get everything prior. If it wasn't for FCC I don't think I would have managed my life very successfully during that time.
This was basically a 20-minute endorphin rush. Cocteau Twins (and nearly all of their 4AD peers) were the backing track to my teenage years. What a band.
I've never really cared what her lyrics are or what they are about I just revel in the sound it's more about a feeling than anything literal. I've been happily singing my gibberish version of her gibberish for years. Let's face it she could sing the ingredients list off a medicine packet and make it sound fucking amazing.
I generally agree, except for 4CC, Bluebeard specifically. My introduction to the band was at age 17. My then-new boyfriend dragged me to see them on the Four Calendar Cafe tour. I hadn't ever listened to them before. My mind was blown and as I fell in love with him I also fell just as deeply for them. Unfortunately, though, our relationship was pretty volatile and "Are you the right man for me... or are you toxic for me?" became the running theme of the relationship until it finally ended for good 6 years later. At least we both got to keep the band in the divorce ;)
They didn't really hit here in the US till Heaven or Las Vegas. I walked into a little indy record store in 1990, heard it playing, instantly slapped my money down, and never looked back. Bought Treasure and Blue Bell Knoll on import vinyl (paying what was big bucks then). I think I own everything they ever recorded digitally. Wonderful summary, thanks!
They were huge on campus on the west coast in the early 90's. So it's odd seeing them linked to other bands I do associate with the 80's such as New Order.
I first heard them when I met these two girls in my dorm first few weeks of freshman year 88. One of them let me borrow her albums....and they were indeed vinyl albums 😂. This was a few years before HOLV and In Texas.
Back when you could run a cool local skateboard shop, my cool local skateboard shop had just a small stand on their counter with a hodge podge of alternative CDs in it that were preferred albums of the people who ran it. Everytime I came in for a new deck or shoes I'd pick an album at random out of it and that's how I came across the treasure album. Those guys had taste.
You are absolutely correct - 1990 heard Iceblink Luck on Live 105 (San Francisco), and had to buy the CD. Great album, great band with a sound all their own.
CT fans know that it is much more than the sound, it's the feelings you get when listening, which vary so much. That's why we can never agree on what song or record is the greatest, because they all are.
Slowdive are awesome. Glad they were shown in this video as I always think they're the only other band to do something in the same genre as Cocteau Twins.
I just love how everybody has a story on how they first heard the cocteau's... You wouldn't really get that now. I was 16, just out of school and had no direction in life, I got a job in a clothes store and remember "Treasure" being played over the loud speakers for the first time... Since that day, I don't think there has been a day in my life that I don't listen to at least one Cocteau song. Music is a great healer. This band changed my life and will always be the band I turn to when I'm feeling down.... Thanks so much for this documentary!
I took a punt on Treasure, due to liking the cover, while at University. I think it was probably purchased in 2000, enchanted though took time to fully adjust to as so otherworldly. Perfect music, not pop at all.
First I ever heard of them was a very short clip of Pearly Dewdrops' Drops on London Calling (a Sunday night show on MTV), likely around the time of the video's release. Zero record stores within my teenage reach (west side of Cincinnati, OH) carried anything by the band, but a few years later when I was a sophomore in high school this senior I had a huge crush on was talking about the band (she had been listening to them on her Walkman), and I remembered once having tried to find music of theirs. I asked her where she got the record, and this is how I learned of Wizard Record & Tapes (RIP), a dark little cave of a place that sold imported vinyl. I purchased The Pink Opaque (their "greatest hits" album, I guess) and I was hooked for life.
They changed my life too, but my story of finding them is very unremarkable and kinda nerdy haha. I literally was just reading wikipedia pages about goth stuff cause I was interested in it and reading about music I found Cocteau Twins, then I listened to an album online, then another, then another, eventually the whole catalogue, now one of their albums I reserve for meditation exclusively and the rest I play a lot when I feel down and need to get up again. Very weird that something so significant to me had such a silly start : P
My sister is three years younger than me and I was always ahead of her in discovering music, so I think I influenced her taste a lot when we were growing up. A couple of years ago, I was at her place and she had just bought a copy of Heaven or Las Vegas, which I wasn't familiar with. She put it on her record player and as soon as the needle dropped, I was blown away. Since then I've been listening to that album from start to finish probably a couple of times a week. I'm just getting more blown away after each listen. It's truly perfect.
My favorite album by Them is the one not mentioned here. Victorialand. An ethereal trip to icy lands exploring the unknown. The most beautiful and cohesive sounding album they have ever made.
I've never been one to care too much about lyrics, I just care how the music makes me feel. Cocteau Twins songs allow you to create your own meaning and it's perfect.
I was backstage with Swervedriver last year and Cocteau Twins was what they were listening to to get psyched for the show. The Twins one of the most important bands in history. But if you're here, you knew that already.
Elizabeth has quite possibly the most angelic voice yo ever grace our ears. Hope Sandavol from Mazzy Star is right there in a close second. I've been listening to Cocteau Twins since around 1988. Many thought I was strange because my music of choice around that time was punk/hardcore. But listening to them with a good set of headphones would put me in another world. Thank you to the Cocteau Twins for creating such amazing music for our souls.
Treasure was the first album of theirs that I ever heard when I was 17 in 1987. I fell in love with them from the first time I heard them and still do today. I was obsessed with collecting all of their music, whether it was on LP/EP, cassette, or CD. It’s a euphoric, spiritual experience to listen to them. 💜💜💜
This has got to be my favorite video of yours so far. Cocteau Twins means so such to me, I'm glad that others appreciate their music. They are criminally underrated.
"Heaven or Las Vegas" & "Blue Bell Knoll" are their best & "Lullabies to Violaine (singles & ep's boxset collection)" too. I'm big fan in Moscow, Russia from nineties. It's one from 20 best artists on my opinian & #1 in dreampop.
I was 39, watching the 88 Seoul Olympics in the early hours, I switched channels for a moment, and the presenter said "this is the Cocteau Twins with Carolyn's Fingers". That's how near I came to missing out on the Twins. I went out and bought all the vinyl they'd done, and a good hi fi. The first moment I got on the internet I put "Cocteau Twins" in Google, only to read that they had just split up. Triumph and disaster.
I remember.. i was 21 and had a date with the most beautiful boy i had ever seen.. i went to pick him up on my motorcycle and when I came up to his apartment the Pink Opaque was playing .. it was in that moment that i heard what i had been looking for.. the sound spoke to me. despite the fact that the boy of my dreams was ready to go... i had to stop at the turntable on the way out and catch a glimpse of what was playing. his roommate was home so we wandered off with the record still playing in his apartment... but i never forgot that label.. nor him. i dont think it was until i heard Boards of Canada Music has the right to Children that i knew .. again... and only for the second time in my life, i heard something that i knew changed me. i spent the better years of the 90s and 2000s djing and producing what little shit i could come up with.. but liz and simon and robin literally (sonically) influenced my entire life going forward. they still do. getting to hear liz with massive attack in philly back in sept of 18 (or 19 .. who can remember) brought me to my knees. i had seen and heard them live at least three times in my life.. twice at the Hot Club in philly and once in NY at Hurrah or Danceteria or who knows, but i was a dumb kid. and as we all know youth is wasted on the young... hearing her liz sing Teardrops (mind you i'm near fifty by now) perhaps one of the most beautiful tracks ever recorded, left we weeping ... i ran to the front... the audience was rather somber... the guard could see i was having a profound moment and just let me there on the floor up front crying. i wish i could have told liz i loved her.. thanked her. i followed simons career, still do.. and have all his records.. harold budd .. all of it. though whenever i saw him talk (the few times he did) he seemed bitter (i have all of his solo projects as well) .. perhaps it comes with the territory..artists often suffer. CT were clearly one of the most influential bands .. ever. .. every one from prince.. to madonna... to beach house.. and dozens.. hundreds more were influenced by them. simon's solo projects are exquisite and not to be missed. still, i always wished and held out hope that there was one more CT album yet to come. eventually i realized they were truly over. and as it turned, they knew exactly when that was supposed to be. that sound... when i first heard it on that cool autumn night ... with the most beautiful boy ever holding on for dear life on the back of my triumph ... went on to inspire me. it was like finally i found my place. i heard the sound i had been looking for. there is no greater memory in my life than remembering where i was the first time i heard their music. sublime.. and a life of inspiration .. still listening, djing, and occasionally producing, my only goal.. was to make something.. anything.. that even remotely sounded and felt like CT. no.. it was never to be.. but i listen regularly to their records. they knew when it was time to call it quits... many (most??) of us were begging.. even praying for another record. they knew when it was time to move on. i am forever grateful... endless gratitude and a lifetime of musical inspiration is what they gave me... and no doubt countless others. how does one ever repay this kind of gift...?
I first heard the Pink Opaque and Treasure in 1988 in El Paso, when I had just moved there at age 14. There were cool record shops and punks and skaters around...later I moved to Chicago and would lust after a singles box set behind glass cases.. People can’t understand how uk and euro imports were a lifeline to outsider American kids. We’d drive miles just to get the Face or ID magazine, nme and melody maker. They were a window to a world beyond the metal or grunge jock cultures of the US. Life changing, life saving. Their songs hold up just as powerfully as they did 35 years ago. Spiritual
In the mid 80's i was living in a house on the edge of a cliff 350 feet above the Pacific ocean, listening to CT, Dead Can Dance, Eno, Lush, Shriekback gazing out at the Farallone Islands as the sun set over the blue horizon ( on the 5 days a year when i wasn't wrapped in an opaque fog).
Thank you for this. As a American kid wandering around aimlessly in Manhattan (yes you can do a lot of that in NYC), my discovery in a shoe store on St. Marks Place of The Cocteau Twins bellowing out over the speakers (song: P-DD's) forever changed my outlook on music.... Hooked ever since. Of all the fantastic bands mentioned in this video, none come close to the sound and uniqueness of The Cocteau Twins.
first time i heard carolyn's fingers i cried. i was a small child when this happened. you dont have to understand the words. you feel the cocteau twins. they will forever be in my heart.
Cocteau Twins were among the many artists I listened to on my headphones to not hear the fireworks in this summer quarantine. I almost forgot everything except for the fact that I was cradled to sleep by music I love
I listened to the Cocteau Twins for the first time in my life a week ago today! I am amazed. I have returned to them and This Mortal Coil every night this week. Are you psychic? Are you watching me? How did you know I needed this video?
in the 80s, when I was 25 and moved 1,000 miles from home, I was blessed to find George Gimarc's "Rock & Roll Alternative" radio program each Sunday night. I got to hear all sorts of new music--much from Europe--long before they hit the mainstream. I remember being absolutely gobsmacked upon hearing "Song to the Siren" and to this day--35 years later--it's one of my all time favorite songs, or renditions of that song. It also introduced me to 4AD and many of their other amazing artists like Dead Can Dance, Bauhaus, and Modern English. So much great music!
I bought a TR707 off Rob in 1985. We used to drink in the same boozer in Bayswater. The Moscow!! Liz was once telling me a story about lions - but used to call them ‘Plain Tigers’. Rob and Liz came with us to see Xmal Deutschland at the Lyceum!! Who else misses being young ??? 😀
Cocteau Twins are relatively unknown and do not usually receive the recognition that they deserve for the wide influence that they have had on music that came after them. I was introduced to them through the album “The Pink Opaque”, and the song “Lorelei” was the stand-out among so many beautiful and timeless songs on that album. One of my favorite concert experiences was seeing Cocteau Twins in Ann Arbor, Michigan in March of 1991 at a small venue, with Galaxie 500 opening for them. My friend and I sneaked down to some empty seats in the theater after Galaxie finished and some of the seats ahead of us were abandoned. We were maybe in the eighth or tenth row, near center, in front of Elizabeth Fraser. It was ethereal and surreal. I was a junior in high school then. A wonderful age to experience that show, on their “Heaven or Las Vegas” tour....
One of my favorite bands ever!! Along with RIDE. Slowdive, MBV, The Verve, Swervedriver, Stone Roses, Pale Saints, Moose and Jesus and Mary Chain. These bands still have loyal fans here in the States. 🇺🇸🇬🇧
Without, without a doubt. Without a doubt. These are the best lines from Lorelei. I sing this out loud when I am very certain. Thank you for this feature. I love CT. Hello from Manila, Philippines.
They´re just simply the most amazing thing ever recorded! The Aikea Guinea EP, which came out shortly after Treasure must be the moment when they actually realised the sound they wanted to achive. Kookaburra is just not from this dimension. Fun trivia: After Liz broke up with Robin, she started a passionate romance with Jeff Buckley, the son of Tim Buckley, who wrote Song To The Siren.
stellaVista Liz and Jeff are truly the most star crossed lovers of rock. Someone should do a movie. (Imagine the soundtrack!!!). I don’t know if it is true, but I heard she got the call while recording Teardrops on the Fire with Massive Attack (known for the House TV show about the cranky Dr.). They asked if they should come back later but she said no and completed the project then and there. I just never ever get enough of Liz or Jeff. And somehow after many listenings I always hear something new. Good doc. Also learned some things. Thanks! 🙏
@@HearturMind "she finally allowed a RU-vid release of “All Flowers in time turn toward the sun”" From what I've read, I don't think Liz was happy about that song being released. She apparently said “unfinished, you see. I don’t want it to be heard.”.
Blahdelablah-It has to be hard for her on so many levels. I am sorry to hear she did not want that release to happen though. I had hoped it was a sign she was in a better place with those things. Thanks for the clarification. I will edit.
13:20 "What's surprising ... is how little Guthrie's doing on guitar..." Um, that's Simon Raymonde, the bassist. The band thought they were just doing a sound-check for Whistle Test, so Raymonde and Guthrie switched instruments for laughs. They weren't happy with this recording being shown ... which is funny, since it's such a great performance!
As a k8d who was born in 1980 and from Falkirk near Grangemouth where Cocteau Twins were based thete records were always being played and Elizabeths voice was a constant and still is throughout my life.
I first heard them in ‘86 and they have been my obsession and musical inspiration ever since. Their b-sides are some of their best songs and Need Fire from the Judge Dredd soundtrack is criminally overlooked as the amazing track that it is. Hell they even made fruity carbonated drinks seem Dreamy and desirable...
To me there's "Love's Easy Tears" EP, and then there's everthing else. Besides "Five, Ten, Fifty- Fold" being my favorite Cocteau's song. Wore out "Love's Easy Tears" EP/Tape..... And it was my Sister's.
All possible and correct praise has already been given to Cocteau Twins in the comments. So, I'll just add that CT came to me in 1984, through the Treasure album, and it impacted me so much, that even today, 38 years later, they are still my number 1 band, as if they were a permanent soundtrack of my life, accompanying me in the car to work, on trips, at parties, on nights of reflection... They are always with me. Today my son is a big fan, his girlfriend loves them too. I can say that this band totally influenced my life. Be happy Liz, Robin and Simon.
I would love to see a video about John Peel! I've been going over some tapes I made of his show in the 80s and remembering what a force for good he was.
I have requested that my family play a cocteau twins song during my photo montage at my funeral. That request was made when I was 14 years old. I’m now 40 and I stand firm in my belief that no other bands music, has ever been so comforting. Dead can dance comes second and Diana Ross & the supremes comes third. That’s who I am !!!
The backstory on how the "Otherness" EP came together would be fascinating. Mark Clifford of SeeFeel remixing these key Cocteau tunes seems to have accidentally predated the advent of Burial-esque Dubstep (Various Production, Clubroot, etc) by at least10 years.
At the 2'14" mark in "Those Eyes, That Mouth" you can almost literally hear and feel the doors of the hereafter open and a chorus of angels take you up forever into their loving arms.
I'm so lucky to have grown up with spotify! I discovered Cocteau Twins last year but over the bast four months i've fallen in absolute love with their sound.
Love the Cocteau's. Never understood what Liz was singing about (I think she's Scottish) but it's like she used her voice as an instrument. She gives so beautiful textures in her singing. Her version of Song To The Siren makes me cry. No other song does that.
Back in the late 80's and early 90's a local Philadelphia radio station 97.5 pst had a truly wonderful show that took place every Friday night called "Post Modern PST". I was present and accounted for every Friday night, blank tape at the ready, finger hovering over the record button in anticipation of a song or artist that struck a chord, so to speak. Twas the year 1990 and Heaven or Las Vegas had been released and the single "Iceblink Luck" has just dropped and i was immediately smitten. I went out as soon as i was able and purchased the album straight away, listened to it in its entirety, and by the end of the last song, was moved to tears. I hadn't known such a thing was possible. That such sonic voluptuousness could be created by mere human beings. It was revelatory. On the long list of things that i am happy that exists, they are at the very top of the list. Thank you Liz, Robin, and Simon for everything you've done.
Garlands and Head Over Heels still continues to be my two favorite albums. I first heard them at the age of 17 in 1987. Hauntingly ethereal, right to my soul. Their music, Siouxsie & The Banshees and The Cure made me into the black eyeliner wearing, big blue-blacked hair goth boy that I was. I miss those days.
I had all their albums when I was a teenager, but knew almost nothing about them . Just totally mysterious. It's funny hearing that they didn't like those albums. To me they were my secret treasures, almost nobody else knew about in my school.
Cocteau Twins really aren't just mere music but are a force of nature, an invocation, an expression of every emotion and mood that exists in heaven and on earth transending all time and space. And like nature, she can devestate in one instant and then nurture regrowth the next. There has never been anything else to come from man even remotely comparable to their sound and there never will be. Cocteau Twins are indeed everything to me.
My brother had a goth friend in high school which was surprising since he was the opposite of goth. But that got us talking to him and he raved about Cocteau Twins, Coil and Skinny Puppy. It was a hard sell in 1998! It was at that awkward age of 10 to 15 years old and I didn't get it at all.In 2004 however, all of those bands were a revelation to me. I can't imagine not hearing them as anything but brilliant. Instead I liked Atari Teenage Riot and International Noise Conspiracy. But that was like, the new shit then.
@@little_horrors_05 A Swedish garage band from the 90s that, during the early 2000s, was lumped together with others bands on the so called "Garage Revival". In 2002 one of their singles, "Capitalism Stole My Virginity", got some airplay on MTV stations all around the world. After that, one of their albums was produced by Rick Rubin, but they never went beyond cult status.
Cocteau Twins are my everything. I love you. I cannot express adequately how this band has comforted, nourished, shaped, and inspired me. You always sound new. Absolute gratitude. ❤️
This was one of the most heartfelt entries for TrashTheory - thank you. I didn’t catch on to Cocteau Twins until Heaven or Las Vegas - incredible to learn what came before, in 2020 of all years
For Garlands, they were dubbed as heirs of Siouxsie And The Banshees because the guitars and bass sounded like what the Banshees did on their second album Join Hands (1979). The "Spellbound" video from 1981 including in this blog documentary is a bad choice and is irrelevant because the Banshees had already moved on to another sound back then. Fraser's voice was also reminiscent of the vocal abstract harmonies that Siouxsie had sung on the instrumental "Pure" from the debut album The Scream (1978). Cocteau Twins took the bass and guitar sound of the Banshees circa Join Hands (1979) and added an electronic drumsmachine, and there was also more fuzz on Guthrie's sound too. Liz Fraser was a huge fan of Siouxsie, she had a Siouxsie tattoo on one arm until the mid 1990s, the guys of Massive Attack related this in an interview for Mojo magazine in 1998 because the first conversation they had with Liz Fraser for the recording of Teardrop had been about the sample that Massive Attack did with a Siouxsie song Metal Postcard for their song "Superpredators", Liz loved the result, she told them and that's when she talked to them about her tattoo with Siouxsie's name that she kept for more than 15 years from the late 1970s until the mid-1990s
Interesting. I was more or less a worshipper of the Banshees, and it was after hearing the Cocteau Twins on John Peel and recognising a kindred - though highly individual - sound that I really got into them. I have every album, single, 12" and EP of theirs until the late 1980s on vinyl, but the hypnotic, fuzzed-up Banshee-esque buzzsaw guitar and supplicatory vocals of 'Blind Dumb Deaf' from the first LP is still my favourite. A couple of the early EPs remain as fresh and startling as ever too.
I had every Cocteau Twins album and 12" bc I worked at a record store in college 100 years ago 😉 same with The Cure - Siouxsie and the Banshees amongst others - Loved 4AD Label 😍
France in the 80s, 2 of my siblings, along with our mom were involved in a local radio and that's where I discovered the CTs. I can admit I didn't really get it at the time... I was in my early teens and although I sang and I liked pretty sounds and such, I don't know what it was at the time but I didn't click, fast forward to the 90s and Teardrop with Liz and Massive attack and I rediscovered their work, then on and on with Jeff Buckley... Thank you for your work and sharing their beautiful music, lyrics, quirkiness and overall impact on our souls and music in general.