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Cocteau Twins were an influential and prolific Scottish band.
A group whose distinctly ethereal and gossamer sound virtually defined the
enigmatic image of the record label 4AD, the Cocteau Twins were founded in
Grangemouth, Scotland, in 1979. Taking their name from an obscure song from
fellow Scots Simple Minds, the Cocteaus were originally formed by guitarist
Robin Guthrie and bassist Will Heggie and later rounded out by Guthrie's
girlfriend Elizabeth Fraser, an utterly unique performer whose swooping,
operatic vocals relied less on any recognizable language than on the
subjective sounds and textures of verbalized emotions.
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In 1982, the trio signed to 4AD, the arty British label then best known as
the home of the Birthday Party, whose members helped the Cocteaus win a
contract. The group debuted with Garlands, which offered an embryonic taste
of their rapidly developing, atmospheric sound, crafted around Guthrie's
creative use of distorted guitars, tape loops, and echo boxes and anchored
in Heggie's rhythmic bass as well as an omnipresent Roland 808 drum machine.
Shortly after the release of the Peppermint Pig EP, Heggie left the group,
and Guthrie and Fraser cut 1983's Head Over Heels as a duo; nonetheless, the
album largely perfected the Cocteaus' gauzy formula, and established the
foundation from which the group would continue to work for the duration of
its career. In late 1983, ex-Drowning Craze bassist Simon Raymonde joined
the band to record the EP The Spangle Maker; as time wore on, Raymonde
became an increasingly essential component of the Cocteau Twins, gradually
assuming an active role as a writer, arranger, and producer. With their
lineup firmly solidified, they issued The Spangle Maker, followed by the LP
Treasure, their most mature and consistent work yet. A burst of creativity
followed, as the Twins issued three separate EPs -- Aikea-Guinea, Tiny
Dynamine, and Echoes in a Shallow Bay -- in 1985, trailed a year later by
the acoustic Victorialand album, the Love's Easy Tears EP and The Moon and
the Melodies, a collaborative effort with minimalist composer Harold Budd.
With 1988's sophisticated Blue Bell Knoll, the trio signed an international
contract with Capitol Records which greatly elevated their commercial
visibility. After 1990's Heaven or Las Vegas, the Cocteaus severed their
long-standing relationship with 4AD; notably, the album also found Fraser's
vocals offering the occasional comprehensible turn of phrase, a trend
continued on 1993's Four-Calendar Cafe. In 1995, they explored a pair of
differing musical approaches on simultaneously released EPs: while
Twinlights offered subtle acoustic sounds, Otherness tackled ambient grooves,
remixed by Seefeel's Mark Clifford. 1996's Milk & Kisses LP, on the other
hand, marked a return to the band's archetypal style. |
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COCTEAU TWINS PICTURES |
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