Dais ooze a first legit reissue of Coil’s cult 2004 tour CD, hailing the legendary duo’s transition from moon music phase toward the beyonds and ultimately trailing the untimely passing of Jhonn Balance that same year.
‘Black Antlers’ was first presented as a 6-song release in 2004 by Coil’s Threshold House label and sold at shows on their ‘Even an Evil Fatigue’ tour. Just over 20 year later, it now arrives as part of Dais’ reissue agenda as a comprehensive 10-song album including all songs from both their original CDr and the 2 x CD, which was completed by Sleazy with Danny Hyde and reissued in 2006 from his base in Thailand.
It is arguably a key stepping stone in the Coil canon to ‘The Ape of Naples’, sharing much of its black lit, trip hop-adjacent gloom and unearthly allure across a clutch of works long hailed as classics within their cult microcosm. An official vinyl cut of the album has been at the top of many wants-lists for decades and this pressing finally, thoroughly sates the demand.
Renowned for inclusion of their noise-queered take on lullaby ‘All the Pretty Little Horses’ (as also referenced by their peer C93), plus a mutant cover of Bam Bam’s darkside Chicago house classic ‘Where’s Your Child’, and a version of their own ‘Teenage Lightning’, the album represents a late high water mark of Jhonn & Sleazy’s combined powers in effect, and hence its high status with their legion acolytes.
Dais take the liberty of reshuffling the tracklist wth an absorbing grip in its 83 run time, starting in the web of insectoid glitch and goopy bass to ‘Departed’, and shoreing up in skewed ballad ‘Sex with Sun Ra (Part Two - Sigillaricia)’. In between the likes of curdled torchsong ‘The Gimp (Sometimes)’ and the queasy downtempo slosh of ‘Things We Never Had’ are resplendent in their unsettling beauty, along with subtly contrasting slants on the slithering sashay of ‘Wraiths and Strays’, from Montreal and Paris, respectively.
There’s a space awaiting on every Coil collector’s shelf for this one.
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Dais ooze a first legit reissue of Coil’s cult 2004 tour CD, hailing the legendary duo’s transition from moon music phase toward the beyonds and ultimately trailing the untimely passing of Jhonn Balance that same year.
‘Black Antlers’ was first presented as a 6-song release in 2004 by Coil’s Threshold House label and sold at shows on their ‘Even an Evil Fatigue’ tour. Just over 20 year later, it now arrives as part of Dais’ reissue agenda as a comprehensive 10-song album including all songs from both their original CDr and the 2 x CD, which was completed by Sleazy with Danny Hyde and reissued in 2006 from his base in Thailand.
It is arguably a key stepping stone in the Coil canon to ‘The Ape of Naples’, sharing much of its black lit, trip hop-adjacent gloom and unearthly allure across a clutch of works long hailed as classics within their cult microcosm. An official vinyl cut of the album has been at the top of many wants-lists for decades and this pressing finally, thoroughly sates the demand.
Renowned for inclusion of their noise-queered take on lullaby ‘All the Pretty Little Horses’ (as also referenced by their peer C93), plus a mutant cover of Bam Bam’s darkside Chicago house classic ‘Where’s Your Child’, and a version of their own ‘Teenage Lightning’, the album represents a late high water mark of Jhonn & Sleazy’s combined powers in effect, and hence its high status with their legion acolytes.
Dais take the liberty of reshuffling the tracklist wth an absorbing grip in its 83 run time, starting in the web of insectoid glitch and goopy bass to ‘Departed’, and shoreing up in skewed ballad ‘Sex with Sun Ra (Part Two - Sigillaricia)’. In between the likes of curdled torchsong ‘The Gimp (Sometimes)’ and the queasy downtempo slosh of ‘Things We Never Had’ are resplendent in their unsettling beauty, along with subtly contrasting slants on the slithering sashay of ‘Wraiths and Strays’, from Montreal and Paris, respectively.
There’s a space awaiting on every Coil collector’s shelf for this one.
Dais ooze a first legit reissue of Coil’s cult 2004 tour CD, hailing the legendary duo’s transition from moon music phase toward the beyonds and ultimately trailing the untimely passing of Jhonn Balance that same year.
‘Black Antlers’ was first presented as a 6-song release in 2004 by Coil’s Threshold House label and sold at shows on their ‘Even an Evil Fatigue’ tour. Just over 20 year later, it now arrives as part of Dais’ reissue agenda as a comprehensive 10-song album including all songs from both their original CDr and the 2 x CD, which was completed by Sleazy with Danny Hyde and reissued in 2006 from his base in Thailand.
It is arguably a key stepping stone in the Coil canon to ‘The Ape of Naples’, sharing much of its black lit, trip hop-adjacent gloom and unearthly allure across a clutch of works long hailed as classics within their cult microcosm. An official vinyl cut of the album has been at the top of many wants-lists for decades and this pressing finally, thoroughly sates the demand.
Renowned for inclusion of their noise-queered take on lullaby ‘All the Pretty Little Horses’ (as also referenced by their peer C93), plus a mutant cover of Bam Bam’s darkside Chicago house classic ‘Where’s Your Child’, and a version of their own ‘Teenage Lightning’, the album represents a late high water mark of Jhonn & Sleazy’s combined powers in effect, and hence its high status with their legion acolytes.
Dais take the liberty of reshuffling the tracklist wth an absorbing grip in its 83 run time, starting in the web of insectoid glitch and goopy bass to ‘Departed’, and shoreing up in skewed ballad ‘Sex with Sun Ra (Part Two - Sigillaricia)’. In between the likes of curdled torchsong ‘The Gimp (Sometimes)’ and the queasy downtempo slosh of ‘Things We Never Had’ are resplendent in their unsettling beauty, along with subtly contrasting slants on the slithering sashay of ‘Wraiths and Strays’, from Montreal and Paris, respectively.
There’s a space awaiting on every Coil collector’s shelf for this one.
Dais ooze a first legit reissue of Coil’s cult 2004 tour CD, hailing the legendary duo’s transition from moon music phase toward the beyonds and ultimately trailing the untimely passing of Jhonn Balance that same year.
‘Black Antlers’ was first presented as a 6-song release in 2004 by Coil’s Threshold House label and sold at shows on their ‘Even an Evil Fatigue’ tour. Just over 20 year later, it now arrives as part of Dais’ reissue agenda as a comprehensive 10-song album including all songs from both their original CDr and the 2 x CD, which was completed by Sleazy with Danny Hyde and reissued in 2006 from his base in Thailand.
It is arguably a key stepping stone in the Coil canon to ‘The Ape of Naples’, sharing much of its black lit, trip hop-adjacent gloom and unearthly allure across a clutch of works long hailed as classics within their cult microcosm. An official vinyl cut of the album has been at the top of many wants-lists for decades and this pressing finally, thoroughly sates the demand.
Renowned for inclusion of their noise-queered take on lullaby ‘All the Pretty Little Horses’ (as also referenced by their peer C93), plus a mutant cover of Bam Bam’s darkside Chicago house classic ‘Where’s Your Child’, and a version of their own ‘Teenage Lightning’, the album represents a late high water mark of Jhonn & Sleazy’s combined powers in effect, and hence its high status with their legion acolytes.
Dais take the liberty of reshuffling the tracklist wth an absorbing grip in its 83 run time, starting in the web of insectoid glitch and goopy bass to ‘Departed’, and shoreing up in skewed ballad ‘Sex with Sun Ra (Part Two - Sigillaricia)’. In between the likes of curdled torchsong ‘The Gimp (Sometimes)’ and the queasy downtempo slosh of ‘Things We Never Had’ are resplendent in their unsettling beauty, along with subtly contrasting slants on the slithering sashay of ‘Wraiths and Strays’, from Montreal and Paris, respectively.
There’s a space awaiting on every Coil collector’s shelf for this one.
Clear vinyl.
Estimated Release Date: 27 June 2025
Please note that shipping dates for pre-orders are estimated and are subject to change
Dais ooze a first legit reissue of Coil’s cult 2004 tour CD, hailing the legendary duo’s transition from moon music phase toward the beyonds and ultimately trailing the untimely passing of Jhonn Balance that same year.
‘Black Antlers’ was first presented as a 6-song release in 2004 by Coil’s Threshold House label and sold at shows on their ‘Even an Evil Fatigue’ tour. Just over 20 year later, it now arrives as part of Dais’ reissue agenda as a comprehensive 10-song album including all songs from both their original CDr and the 2 x CD, which was completed by Sleazy with Danny Hyde and reissued in 2006 from his base in Thailand.
It is arguably a key stepping stone in the Coil canon to ‘The Ape of Naples’, sharing much of its black lit, trip hop-adjacent gloom and unearthly allure across a clutch of works long hailed as classics within their cult microcosm. An official vinyl cut of the album has been at the top of many wants-lists for decades and this pressing finally, thoroughly sates the demand.
Renowned for inclusion of their noise-queered take on lullaby ‘All the Pretty Little Horses’ (as also referenced by their peer C93), plus a mutant cover of Bam Bam’s darkside Chicago house classic ‘Where’s Your Child’, and a version of their own ‘Teenage Lightning’, the album represents a late high water mark of Jhonn & Sleazy’s combined powers in effect, and hence its high status with their legion acolytes.
Dais take the liberty of reshuffling the tracklist wth an absorbing grip in its 83 run time, starting in the web of insectoid glitch and goopy bass to ‘Departed’, and shoreing up in skewed ballad ‘Sex with Sun Ra (Part Two - Sigillaricia)’. In between the likes of curdled torchsong ‘The Gimp (Sometimes)’ and the queasy downtempo slosh of ‘Things We Never Had’ are resplendent in their unsettling beauty, along with subtly contrasting slants on the slithering sashay of ‘Wraiths and Strays’, from Montreal and Paris, respectively.
There’s a space awaiting on every Coil collector’s shelf for this one.
Estimated Release Date: 27 June 2025
Please note that shipping dates for pre-orders are estimated and are subject to change
Dais ooze a first legit reissue of Coil’s cult 2004 tour CD, hailing the legendary duo’s transition from moon music phase toward the beyonds and ultimately trailing the untimely passing of Jhonn Balance that same year.
‘Black Antlers’ was first presented as a 6-song release in 2004 by Coil’s Threshold House label and sold at shows on their ‘Even an Evil Fatigue’ tour. Just over 20 year later, it now arrives as part of Dais’ reissue agenda as a comprehensive 10-song album including all songs from both their original CDr and the 2 x CD, which was completed by Sleazy with Danny Hyde and reissued in 2006 from his base in Thailand.
It is arguably a key stepping stone in the Coil canon to ‘The Ape of Naples’, sharing much of its black lit, trip hop-adjacent gloom and unearthly allure across a clutch of works long hailed as classics within their cult microcosm. An official vinyl cut of the album has been at the top of many wants-lists for decades and this pressing finally, thoroughly sates the demand.
Renowned for inclusion of their noise-queered take on lullaby ‘All the Pretty Little Horses’ (as also referenced by their peer C93), plus a mutant cover of Bam Bam’s darkside Chicago house classic ‘Where’s Your Child’, and a version of their own ‘Teenage Lightning’, the album represents a late high water mark of Jhonn & Sleazy’s combined powers in effect, and hence its high status with their legion acolytes.
Dais take the liberty of reshuffling the tracklist wth an absorbing grip in its 83 run time, starting in the web of insectoid glitch and goopy bass to ‘Departed’, and shoreing up in skewed ballad ‘Sex with Sun Ra (Part Two - Sigillaricia)’. In between the likes of curdled torchsong ‘The Gimp (Sometimes)’ and the queasy downtempo slosh of ‘Things We Never Had’ are resplendent in their unsettling beauty, along with subtly contrasting slants on the slithering sashay of ‘Wraiths and Strays’, from Montreal and Paris, respectively.
There’s a space awaiting on every Coil collector’s shelf for this one.
Estimated Release Date: 27 June 2025
Please note that shipping dates for pre-orders are estimated and are subject to change
Dais ooze a first legit reissue of Coil’s cult 2004 tour CD, hailing the legendary duo’s transition from moon music phase toward the beyonds and ultimately trailing the untimely passing of Jhonn Balance that same year.
‘Black Antlers’ was first presented as a 6-song release in 2004 by Coil’s Threshold House label and sold at shows on their ‘Even an Evil Fatigue’ tour. Just over 20 year later, it now arrives as part of Dais’ reissue agenda as a comprehensive 10-song album including all songs from both their original CDr and the 2 x CD, which was completed by Sleazy with Danny Hyde and reissued in 2006 from his base in Thailand.
It is arguably a key stepping stone in the Coil canon to ‘The Ape of Naples’, sharing much of its black lit, trip hop-adjacent gloom and unearthly allure across a clutch of works long hailed as classics within their cult microcosm. An official vinyl cut of the album has been at the top of many wants-lists for decades and this pressing finally, thoroughly sates the demand.
Renowned for inclusion of their noise-queered take on lullaby ‘All the Pretty Little Horses’ (as also referenced by their peer C93), plus a mutant cover of Bam Bam’s darkside Chicago house classic ‘Where’s Your Child’, and a version of their own ‘Teenage Lightning’, the album represents a late high water mark of Jhonn & Sleazy’s combined powers in effect, and hence its high status with their legion acolytes.
Dais take the liberty of reshuffling the tracklist wth an absorbing grip in its 83 run time, starting in the web of insectoid glitch and goopy bass to ‘Departed’, and shoreing up in skewed ballad ‘Sex with Sun Ra (Part Two - Sigillaricia)’. In between the likes of curdled torchsong ‘The Gimp (Sometimes)’ and the queasy downtempo slosh of ‘Things We Never Had’ are resplendent in their unsettling beauty, along with subtly contrasting slants on the slithering sashay of ‘Wraiths and Strays’, from Montreal and Paris, respectively.
There’s a space awaiting on every Coil collector’s shelf for this one.