Cover of Coil Astral Disaster
Cervovolante

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For fans of coil, lovers of ambient and experimental electronic music, and those interested in thematic albums about environmental decay and mysticism.
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"Astral Disaster" by Coil is a ritualistic and hypnotic work that explores the theme of sea pollution caused by humanity's greed for profit. To date, it may be my favorite Coil album (I suspect for the music that evokes that of the Cosmic Couriers). Recorded in a fascinating setting—under the waters of the River Thames in the UK—the album succeeds in distilling a sense of desolation into music, as if the ocean waves and sacrificed marine life find a dark yet sublime voice here. The project, initially released in an extremely limited edition of 99 copies for the Acme/Prescription label, was born almost as a dark amulet, a warning for a chosen few, sealed in a deliberately sparse packaging, almost suggesting its nature as a relic.

Musically, "Astral Disaster" pays homage to German Cosmic Music and echoes the sounds of "Zeit" by Tangerine Dream, projecting the listener into an otherworldly and submerged dimension. Tracks like "The Mothership & The Fatherland" unfold in soundscapes of twenty-two minutes of pure ambient music, where the sound waves of synthesizers and the cryptic, manipulated voice of John Balance envelop the listener, leading them into an unsettling and meditative trance. There’s a subtle lament that permeates the entire work, a musical cyclicity that recalls the perpetual motion of waves, but here transfigured into a hymn of pain and resignation.

The track "The Sea Priestess," inspired by the symbolic figure of Aleister Crowley, is the emotional peak of the album. In fourteen minutes without percussion or guitars, the piece builds an atmosphere of increasing heaviness. Metallic strikes accompany the keyboards in a disturbing crescendo, like an echo of industrial chains crossing and ravaging the sea beds. Balance’s words emerge from the shadows, distorted and slow, invoking a sort of apocalyptic mysticism in which the listener feels like a witness to a forbidden rite. The Coil succeed, without the use of clear words, in evoking the majesty of a wounded ocean, the weight of pollution that settles layer after layer, and the human indifference to this disaster.

"Astral Disaster" has the same evocative and sinister energy of an ancient magical ritual.

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Summary by Bot

Coil's "Astral Disaster" is a ritualistic ambient album dramatizing sea pollution through immersive, hypnotic soundscapes. Recorded beneath the River Thames, it evokes desolation and apocalyptic mysticism. Influenced by German Cosmic Music and Tangerine Dream, the album features long, meditative tracks rich with haunting synths and distorted vocals. The project was originally a rare release symbolizing a dark warning. "The Sea Priestess" stands out as a heavy emotional centerpiece, blending industrial sounds and mysterious voices to powerful effect.

Tracklist Videos

01   The Sea Priestess (14:11)

02   Second Son Syndrome (02:47)

03   I Don't Want To be the One (02:45)

04   The Avatars (03:21)

05   The Mothership and The Fatherland (23:03)

Coil

Coil was a British experimental music group formed by John Balance and Peter Christopherson, active from the early 1980s until 2004. They are known for blending industrial, ambient and electronic approaches and for a later "moon-music" phase.
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Other reviews

By caesar666

 With "Astral Disaster", Coil discovered themselves as legitimate heirs of the German Cosmic Music.

 "Astral Disaster" is an album of immense value and one of the best in the entire Coil discography.