That vocal overtopping is my favorite part of her performances, c.f. Pink Orange Red (The Tube version), Love’s Easy Tears, Hitherto (live version) etc.
Contrary to what people say is a, "squeak" in Liz's voice is actually a vocal method called, "breaking" which is very difficult to do and control. Most oftentimes you'll hear it in old American Country music. However, only Liz does it so well in many of her songs, that it became her hallmark of perfection.
i met her once, in 85 or 86 on a London underground tube train. I had seen them the night before outside London and i just happened to be in London heading to Liverpool street. I looked up and there she was sitting opposite me on the tube. She looked just like she does in this vid. I was in a state of shock. I got off at her stop just to speak to her for a moment. She was so other-worldly and beautiful to me and it was as much as i could do to approach her. I told her i was at the gig the previous night and she pulled a face, because that gig was a nightmare for the band and they even spoke about it years later in the music press. She was crying on stage because she couldn't hear herself singing, the sound was so bad. I told her 'Don't worry about it, it was a shit venue.' Nobody played in that place. They certainly never went there again.
Back when famous music acts could get on the tube 😂 Also, nothing worse than a bad sound guy doing your levels at a gig. I feel for her now even if this happened 30 years ago!
@@lj7169 That gig was Chelmsford, a small shitty hall that rarely did gigs. I think Half-man half-biscuit were the only other band i remember playing there, and that was shit too
If that was the Chelmsford Chancellor Hall gig, I was at that gig. We saw Liz, pre-show, leave the venue, with couple of guys and walk down the road, into a Boots chemist. She can back, a few minutes later, hold a little bag. I looked straight into her eyes, but was unable to speak, it was a religious experience. We exchanged shy smiles - magical. Later, in the venue, I was told by Simon, too move away from the lighting/mixing desk . I saw his hand written set list, the song Loves Easy Tears, was written down, as Loves ZZ Tears. 💘 In total I was blessed to see the Cocteau Twins play live 7 times.
@@andy2950 yes that was the gig. You must have seen her crying on stage and the band actually stopped playing and i think they left the stage for a while. I know they talked about that show in interviews later almost as something that bothered them a lot. I was at the front to her right and i felt for her because it was like she had nowhere to hide and the problem with the sound wasn't being dealt with. My work friends hung around and met the band after the show but i had already gone home. According to them, the band got pissed to forget the gig, or the men did, as I think they mostly talked to Robin and Simon. It was the next day i met her on the underground. The look on her face when i told her i had been at the show the night before was almost unbearable, as if i was the last person she wanted to meet to remind her of what had happened. So clearly it did bother her probably more than the others. I also saw the band at sadler's wells in London in 84 before that other gig, which was a much better show.
There's an interview with Elizabeth in which she said that it's all random words from different languages that sound good together. It works for me. The interview is on TH-cam.
I saw them live in the mid 80s, a Brazilian living in Japan at the time. It was a virtually empty theatre in Tokyo, so it was like listening to them in my living room. This is how I remember them. Including the tape recorder at the side.
My father turned me on to the cocteau twins when I got out of the army in the early 90's, he was online talking to people in Europe about music they were listening to and this band was one of them, I have been listening to them ever since, thanks Dad.
You can definitely hear New Order (specifically Peter Hook) and The Cure as influences for the boys on instruments but I’m convinced, Liz Fraser, is celestial. Liz is what sets them apart from every other band I’ve ever heard and makes them so unique. Before someone tries to say I’m wrong about the influences The Cure goes back to 1978 and obviously Peter Hook’s bass playing in Joy Division was similar to his bass playing in New Order.
@@thedudeabides4829 sorry but the cure isnt in same league as cocteau twins. The cure after masterpiece that was Pornography, started to record lesser pop. Smith should disband after Pornography and name New band something else. Cocteau twins never released crappy record, maybe Four calendar Cafe was a Little worse but they never record Such a bad music like the cure after Pornography.
Wow do you have some wonderful songs in store for you. I discovered them when i was 15, back in 1985. Been a fan ever since, never stopped listening to them and never will. Enjoy the journey you have ahead.
@@daveparry6642 Really I think, it's too good. I also discovered them around the same time, 1986 at 17. It was so good, now nothing compares. And the times it reminds me of. Never will be again. Got to get over this!
Hearing this as the last song of Halston was an emotional out of body experience for me. I love this song, to hear it in a show that already had touched my heart.
@@marionchatelin2809 I'm not a concert goer, but I made the effort for them, and saw them twice, thank heaven, in February and May of 1994. Could they reproduce that sound live? Yes they could; so put on a record, close your eyes, and you just might be there.
@@basehead617 I don't even think any song on FCC sucks tbh - on repeat I found out even a track like My Truth has something to it :) maybe some b sides like Frosty the Snowman
Listen to any bands under the Ethereal Wave genre, there are number of modern bands which influence by CT, this include Drab Majesty, Autumn's Grey Solace, Faith Disease etc. there lots of CT influence band that are still active today.🤘🏼🤘🏼
Why does my heart ache when I listen to songs from my past?? It literally hurts like I just got dumped by my true love..When I was 11yrs old, the 1st two cassettes I bought were Cocteau Twins & The Cure. Fortunately it was the start of my favorite music to this day. Music is very emotional for me, I had a hard time not stopping the video.🖤🦇🕸🕷
Probably because they remind you of youth. There is something very special about coming of age; the learning, the heartbreak, the discovering who you are, what music you like. You were still young and full of potential. And as we age, we discover less new and great things, start seeing how the world truly is, your potential gets stifled by adulthood and the responsibilities that come with it. In hindsight, nothing is ever as good as youth, just the feeling of still having your whole life and whole world ahead of you. Music just takes us back to that place. A place we can't get back to. That's my opinion anyways. It is how I feel. Hope all is well.
There is no precedent for this band and especially the transcendent alien siren song of Elizabeth. I would melt for that voice in perpetuity. Cocteau rule.
This killed me way back then and still kills me now. What a beautiful unworldly talent Liz was - but the music is hypnotically beautiful here too. And this is live. Jesus.
I have heard millions of bands in my time, but this is one of those you recognize after first measure, profile of the sound, amazing vocals, particular ambiance whether its from early days or 1997, that's CT for you. Jewel of a music concept I will always cherish.
Every song, new to me in 2019, a revelation. Best, most pleasing and innovative band to emerge since the 60s: Beatles, Stones and Byrds... And then along comes Liz...all i can add is a humble 'thank you '. The post 'cultural revolution' era. can and has been redeemed by this music. Sorry that overall America has lost sight of its soul; its ability to feel;. mesmerized by our compulsive, consumptive.corporate defined 'self'. .. we missed the best band of a generation. Cheers from Minnesota, Jon
At 33yo at the time, this band was the first time I bought something nobody I knew had even heard of, just because I liked it. My peers were still Rocking, younger friends were more Punk & New Wave. Still have 3 LPs, and no, they are not scratchy! I never worried about the indecipherable "lyrics", I just loved the rich sonic landscapes. Just searched & found this great vid when I realised it had never even occurred to me that they might have done live appearances. I had always imagined such stuff was purely done in the studio.
Cuantos corazones, inspirados para amar, voces inspiradas a cantar, espíritus inspirados a elevarse. Gracias a la música de Cocteau Twins. Y gracias a quienes comparten la pasión por ella.
This brings me to tears and I HAVE to share it with my adult children so that they can understand what I was listening to when I made them beautiful beings with their Momma's!!
This is the only song I've heard whose recorded and the live versions sound almost identical to the point that you can't differentiate between the two at a glance. Other songs just sound so different in the on-stage versions. Also, her voice is absolutely incredible!
I love the fact that she’s called “Liz Fraser”. Just the ordinariness of that name. It makes her sound like a staff nurse from a Glasgow acute receiving ward. Don’t know why but I just like that.
Having attended my fair share of parties at the "Sou Gen" and "Gartnavel" during the 80's and in a transcendental state, I can confirm that this is quite true
I think that Liz's voice is difficult to understand even by a native English speaker, her splendid way of singing is not immediately intuitive. But not for this, I would not always listen to it
One of the best songs of those times. My childhood hopes, fears, pretentious ideas and self doubts all wrapped up in 3 mellifluous minutes. A sonic wall of beautifully rendered pubescent angst.
The hiccup in her voice at :48 still amazes me to this day. It never was about actual lyrics to me in their music. It's the places the music took me. Music that touches the depths of your soul.
When she sings the line “Taciturn and pillow”,the way she delivers the pillow lyric sounds like the mating call of some exotic bird. In all seriousness,her voice is so otherworldly it sounds like it comes from a different reality,and she delivers it so effortlessly it seems almost surreal.A proper Liz Fraser solo career would have been immense.
Genius. They never did a bad track. This mortal coil. Sound of the siren. Wow. What a band. 4AD were great at putting out unusual music. Love this band. Dave Fielding and Ooshka.xx
Never enough credit is given to Robin Guthrie's distinctive guitar style. It was very much of it time but remains as fresh as ever and provided the perfect counterbalance for Liz's voice.
I still get goosebumps listening to this - how many years later from when I saw this on the BBC? Cocteau Twns at the peak of their powers (1984-1986). There will never be an era like the 1980s.
I saw these in around 88 oh my God no one ever had they're sound and they were magicall no sound like them and her voice was wonderful! Oh how I miss bands of this originality which aliss no longer exists
Brooding and abstract... you can tell that Johnny Marr incorporated this sound into the next year's Meat is Murder, particularly "That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore."
Just a bunch of words from all kinds of languages that sound good together. These songs are none the less beautiful for it. Elizabeth Frasers voice has become more beautiful over the years
it's like a gaelic fairy ethereal woodland language. a song you hear in dreams...can't figure the words. or can't read a letter in a dream but you just see the writing. it captures that feeling between the living world and mystical world.
I was lucky enough to see them at the Town & Country Club in London, 1986. One of the loudest gigs I ever went to...came away deaf, but with a big smile on my face! Brilliant and totally unique.
Takes me back to some great years of my life had this album and more from them and played some great awesome music on weekends after working all week ....
god it is just absolutely insane how calmly and effortlessly she delivers one of the greatest vocal performances ever
she also co-wrote and sang teardrop with massive attack - a true talent
Shes not human
Yep.
No exaggeration.
Her vocal control is unbelievable. With that little Celtic flair
I love how she does the squeak in her voice during the verse even in live performances
She did a lot more squeaking in 1994, I can tell you!
That vocal overtopping is my favorite part of her performances, c.f. Pink Orange Red (The Tube version), Love’s Easy Tears, Hitherto (live version) etc.
when i heard that squeak live for the first time, i nearly lost my mind
And the purrr
Contrary to what people say is a, "squeak" in Liz's voice is actually a vocal method called, "breaking" which is very difficult to do and control. Most oftentimes you'll hear it in old American Country music. However, only Liz does it so well in many of her songs, that it became her hallmark of perfection.
i met her once, in 85 or 86 on a London underground tube train. I had seen them the night before outside London and i just happened to be in London heading to Liverpool street. I looked up and there she was sitting opposite me on the tube. She looked just like she does in this vid. I was in a state of shock. I got off at her stop just to speak to her for a moment. She was so other-worldly and beautiful to me and it was as much as i could do to approach her. I told her i was at the gig the previous night and she pulled a face, because that gig was a nightmare for the band and they even spoke about it years later in the music press. She was crying on stage because she couldn't hear herself singing, the sound was so bad. I told her 'Don't worry about it, it was a shit venue.' Nobody played in that place. They certainly never went there again.
Great story!!
Back when famous music acts could get on the tube 😂
Also, nothing worse than a bad sound guy doing your levels at a gig. I feel for her now even if this happened 30 years ago!
@@lj7169 That gig was Chelmsford, a small shitty hall that rarely did gigs. I think Half-man half-biscuit were the only other band i remember playing there, and that was shit too
If that was the Chelmsford Chancellor Hall gig, I was at that gig. We saw Liz, pre-show, leave the venue, with couple of guys and walk down the road, into a Boots chemist. She can back, a few minutes later, hold a little bag.
I looked straight into her eyes, but was unable to speak, it was a religious experience.
We exchanged shy smiles - magical. Later, in the venue, I was told by Simon, too move away from the lighting/mixing desk . I saw his hand written set list, the song Loves Easy Tears, was written down, as Loves ZZ Tears. 💘
In total I was blessed to see the Cocteau Twins play live 7 times.
@@andy2950 yes that was the gig. You must have seen her crying on stage and the band actually stopped playing and i think they left the stage for a while. I know they talked about that show in interviews later almost as something that bothered them a lot. I was at the front to her right and i felt for her because it was like she had nowhere to hide and the problem with the sound wasn't being dealt with. My work friends hung around and met the band after the show but i had already gone home. According to them, the band got pissed to forget the gig, or the men did, as I think they mostly talked to Robin and Simon. It was the next day i met her on the underground. The look on her face when i told her i had been at the show the night before was almost unbearable, as if i was the last person she wanted to meet to remind her of what had happened. So clearly it did bother her probably more than the others. I also saw the band at sadler's wells in London in 84 before that other gig, which was a much better show.
me: damn i love cocteau twins
cocteau twins: AhmAAAAHHn grrrAaaahhHvr
facts
she's speaking the language of gods.
when Liz sang "AhmAAAAHHn grrrAaaahhHvr" i really felt that
Edgy af pfp
@@leae3750 thank u
Beautiful song and 35 years later I still can't understand a single word! The best things in life stay the same.
That makes the music better. Less thinking. :)
If you manage to find a song of theirs where you can understand the words please
let everybody know.
Something about Ruby Suns and a penny penny penny bicycle and auahahahahaauuagoraiaiaaa.
There's that bit where she sings pearly dewdrops drops. I know that for sure. 😊
There's an interview with Elizabeth in which she said that it's all random words from different languages that sound good together. It works for me. The interview is on TH-cam.
I saw them live in the mid 80s, a Brazilian living in Japan at the time. It was a virtually empty theatre in Tokyo, so it was like listening to them in my living room. This is how I remember them. Including the tape recorder at the side.
Wow that's so cool!!!! Thanks for sharing :)
q experiência incrível. você é um cara sortudo
My father turned me on to the cocteau twins when I got out of the army in the early 90's, he was online talking to people in Europe about music they were listening to and this band was one of them, I have been listening to them ever since, thanks Dad.
This had to be amongst the finest of all Cocteau twin's songs ever.
Iceblink Luck.
Spangle Maker
Heaven or Las Vegas is my favorite.
Lay your hands on me, Doctor Doctor, King for a day, Hold me now. So many to choose from
Pur
She has to be the greatest singer of that time.
Not quite. That accolade goes to Billie Holiday. Which might be why Cocteau Twins did a version of "Strange Fruit" for Peel.
@@TheSpikehere so Billie was still singing in the 80s? Read man
I can’t really understand a bloody word she’s saying, but this probably my favourite vocal performance I’ve ever seen. Incredible.
She is known for developing a ‘wordless’ musical language. Here it is half and half. Later in her career she abandoned ordinary language entirely.
That's the charm, you only hear the melody and texture of the voice devoid from lyrical meaning. Conceptually I think this is an awesome technique.
its gibberish! :)
@jokuko all is yellow to the jaundiced eye...
@@dsrtsnwit’s the best gibberish I’ve ever heard
Mesmerizing. That bass line...
was even better when Will Heggie was the bass player
Yes
Like simom Gallup bass
@@mufandduff one of the biggest reasons why Garlands slaps so hard is cuz of Heggie that man wrote so many bass hooks
There’s just something about this song that’s both incredibly beautiful & haunting at the same time.
I'm sorry, but there's The Cocteau Twins, and there's everything else. They are THAT unique.
You're spitting facts Big Dan
You can definitely hear New Order (specifically Peter Hook) and The Cure as influences for the boys on instruments but I’m convinced, Liz Fraser, is celestial. Liz is what sets them apart from every other band I’ve ever heard and makes them so unique. Before someone tries to say I’m wrong about the influences The Cure goes back to 1978 and obviously Peter Hook’s bass playing in Joy Division was similar to his bass playing in New Order.
@@thedudeabides4829 I think you are spot on. Liz Frazer's ethereal nonsense warbling is as essential to their sound as Jonsi is to Sigur Ros.
@@thedudeabides4829 sorry but the cure isnt in same league as cocteau twins. The cure after masterpiece that was Pornography, started to record lesser pop. Smith should disband after Pornography and name New band something else. Cocteau twins never released crappy record, maybe Four calendar Cafe was a Little worse but they never record Such a bad music like the cure after Pornography.
I adore cocteau twins but if you think they're the most unique artist of all-time you're unaware of ungodly HEAPTONS of music
Christmas Day 2020: the day I learned of the Cocteu Twins.
A good Christmas then
WOW!
better late than never. welcome to the fandom
Wow do you have some wonderful songs in store for you. I discovered them when i was 15, back in 1985. Been a fan ever since, never stopped listening to them and never will. Enjoy the journey you have ahead.
@@daveparry6642 Really I think, it's too good. I also discovered them around the same time, 1986 at 17. It was so good, now nothing compares. And the times it reminds me of. Never will be again. Got to get over this!
Hearing this as the last song of Halston was an emotional out of body experience for me. I love this song, to hear it in a show that already had touched my heart.
• I'm with you there ... goosebump moment
One of the most beautiful voices ever
Unreal how good this band was. So grateful I was able to see them twice.
I was a lucky person.....16 times in 1984 alone....
@@martinpercival63 "lucky" isn't enough to describe how lucky you are.... I wish I could see them. This band is unique
They rarely played America... saw them once '92 I think it was
Saw them around 92/93 in Atlanta -- Mesmerizing.
@@marionchatelin2809 I'm not a concert goer, but I made the effort for them, and saw them twice, thank heaven, in February and May of 1994. Could they reproduce that sound live? Yes they could; so put on a record, close your eyes, and you just might be there.
Massively underrated band. Liz Fraser's voice is hypnotic.
Respect your elders. 💝
@jimmy.. nah ! They were never underrated .
I bought this on 12inch when I was 18..Ive still got it 32 years later...beautiful!
I don't think this band have done a bad song...ever
I can confirm - they never did. Pure, utter, absolute, undiluted magic.
A few things on Four Calendar Cafe aren't great, but yeah mostly.
Every band has bad songs; they are no exception.
SunSky you are very correct!
@@basehead617 I don't even think any song on FCC sucks tbh - on repeat I found out even a track like My Truth has something to it :) maybe some b sides like Frosty the Snowman
So dreamy and haunting.
Damnnn, I want music like this again!!!!
You're aware that dream pop is huge and there are tons of new artists doing similar stuff, even if it's not as good Liz.
That's my problem, none of the newer performers in the genre have made me cry the way Liz has
Listen to any bands under the Ethereal Wave genre, there are number of modern bands which influence by CT, this include Drab Majesty, Autumn's Grey Solace, Faith Disease etc. there lots of CT influence band that are still active today.🤘🏼🤘🏼
emir 97 none of them are as good though with the exception of a few
@WilshirecityBlues Beach House is about as good as we get today
This is the house band up in heaven. No words in the lexicon to describe how unique, priceless and important The Cocteaus were.
This is the song that introduced me to this amazing band. When I first heard it I was in a state of bliss. A pathway to heaven you might say.
Why does my heart ache when I listen to songs from my past?? It literally hurts like I just got dumped by my true love..When I was 11yrs old, the 1st two cassettes I bought were Cocteau Twins & The Cure. Fortunately it was the start of my favorite music to this day. Music is very emotional for me, I had a hard time not stopping the video.🖤🦇🕸🕷
Christa Pryor i feel the same! Love From Brasil
Feel the same.
Probably because they remind you of youth. There is something very special about coming of age; the learning, the heartbreak, the discovering who you are, what music you like. You were still young and full of potential. And as we age, we discover less new and great things, start seeing how the world truly is, your potential gets stifled by adulthood and the responsibilities that come with it. In hindsight, nothing is ever as good as youth, just the feeling of still having your whole life and whole world ahead of you. Music just takes us back to that place. A place we can't get back to. That's my opinion anyways. It is how I feel. Hope all is well.
Nostalgia is a powerful drug especialy these days
Every time I listen to music from the 70's and 80's I feel like that, sometimes I tear up it's so heartbreaking, I miss those decades so much.
There is no precedent for this band and especially the transcendent alien siren song of Elizabeth. I would melt for that voice in perpetuity. Cocteau rule.
So glad we had music like this to listen to back in the day.
I could listen to Elizabeth sing the phone book and I wouldn't be able to stop smiling. She is one of the most original singers of all time.
This killed me way back then and still kills me now. What a beautiful unworldly talent Liz was - but the music is hypnotically beautiful here too. And this is live. Jesus.
Still one of my favourite bands after 36 years....
I have heard millions of bands in my time, but this is one of those you recognize after first measure, profile of the sound, amazing vocals, particular ambiance whether its from early days or 1997, that's CT for you. Jewel of a music concept I will always cherish.
elizabeth is a literal angel
YES
Given that "angel" means " messenger " absolutely.
@@nektekket852 Debbie downer
Thank you very much Liz, Robin & Simon. Your art is my salvation.
Every song, new to me in 2019, a revelation.
Best, most pleasing and innovative band to emerge since the 60s: Beatles, Stones and Byrds...
And then along comes Liz...all i can add is a humble 'thank you '.
The post 'cultural revolution' era. can and has been redeemed by this music.
Sorry that overall America has lost sight of its soul; its ability to feel;.
mesmerized by our compulsive, consumptive.corporate defined 'self'. .. we missed the best band of a generation.
Cheers from Minnesota, Jon
It doesn't matter when or where I see her sing ....I fall in love every single time
At 33yo at the time, this band was the first time I bought something nobody I knew had even heard of, just because I liked it. My peers were still Rocking, younger friends were more Punk & New Wave. Still have 3 LPs, and no, they are not scratchy!
I never worried about the indecipherable "lyrics", I just loved the rich sonic landscapes.
Just searched & found this great vid when I realised it had never even occurred to me that they might have done live appearances. I had always imagined such stuff was purely done in the studio.
flamencoprof aint she beautiful,a gift from god for all of us to enjoy
Cuantos corazones, inspirados para amar, voces inspiradas a cantar, espíritus inspirados a elevarse. Gracias a la música de Cocteau Twins. Y gracias a quienes comparten la pasión por ella.
This brings me to tears and I HAVE to share it with my adult children so that they can understand what I was listening to when I made them beautiful beings with their Momma's!!
This is the only song I've heard whose recorded and the live versions sound almost identical to the point that you can't differentiate between the two at a glance. Other songs just sound so different in the on-stage versions. Also, her voice is absolutely incredible!
I totally agree. This is one of the few instances where she sounds almost the same!
imo the live version is even better
My dad introduced me to this when i was 12....31 years ago...took me to a live show at 15 in manchester...still love the music now as does he at 63.
I love the fact that she’s called “Liz Fraser”. Just the ordinariness of that name. It makes her sound like a staff nurse from a Glasgow acute receiving ward. Don’t know why but I just like that.
Having attended my fair share of parties at the "Sou Gen" and "Gartnavel" during the 80's and in a transcendental state, I can confirm that this is quite true
I also find her look is quite ordinary, which makes it all the more mesmerising when you hear that voice
Liz Fraser was also the name of a comedy actress who appeared in Carry On films.
Her real name is Tourmaline Froo-froo Zappathrusta.
Diddnae change her look or name, went to school with Lizzy all those years ago in Grangemouth
I don’t really understand what she’s saying but this shit is beautiful
Tu Madre she sang in a made up language for a few albums it’s reminds me of Pakistani
I think that Liz's voice is difficult to understand even by a native English speaker, her splendid way of singing is not immediately intuitive. But not for this, I would not always listen to it
Keith Remedy Thought she sang in Esperanto?
Agreed!
MusicalElitist1 did I fucking say it was Pakistani
One of the best songs of those times. My childhood hopes, fears, pretentious ideas and self doubts all wrapped up in 3 mellifluous minutes. A sonic wall of beautifully rendered pubescent angst.
Taught Liam Gallagher everything he knows about how to stand in front of a microphone
Damn you’re right!
lol
Funniest comment of the year
.....yes..bloody funny.. true...
@@GregoryPaulDavisnot funny learn english ya wank
This was my favorite band growing up and I give them so much love and credit for getting through those years. No one can ever ever trump Liz Fraser,
Uff that vocal performance hits me so hard. It’s that perfect and well performed
The hiccup in her voice at :48 still amazes me to this day. It never was about actual lyrics to me in their music. It's the places the music took me. Music that touches the depths of your soul.
One of the bands that changed my music perception forever fundamentally. Love them to the core.
Absolutely stunning. Her voice is like no other and I am obsessed. Thanks for sharing.
When she sings the line “Taciturn and pillow”,the way she delivers the pillow lyric sounds like the mating call of some exotic bird.
In all seriousness,her voice is so otherworldly it sounds like it comes from a different reality,and she delivers it so effortlessly it seems almost surreal.A proper Liz Fraser solo career would have been immense.
The Cocteau twins are amazing and Liz is a musical Goddess with a voice of an extremely powerful angel, none like her!
I’m so glad to have lived my youth with this music.
I'm so happy to see that they are more popular now than they ever were in their heyday.
Genius. They never did a bad track. This mortal coil. Sound of the siren. Wow. What a band. 4AD were great at putting out unusual music. Love this band. Dave Fielding and Ooshka.xx
Never enough credit is given to Robin Guthrie's distinctive guitar style. It was very much of it time but remains as fresh as ever and provided the perfect counterbalance for Liz's voice.
As has been said already but the most underrated British female artist of all time.
Amazingly haunting music. Loved them forever.
Just amazing... I'll never grow tired of the Cocteau Twins, Iv'e been listening to Victoria Land solid since it was first released in 1986, now 2021!
I still get goosebumps listening to this - how many years later from when I saw this on the BBC? Cocteau Twns at the peak of their powers (1984-1986). There will never be an era like the 1980s.
I’d forgotten how much I have loved this band and all the wonderful times I’ve spent with their music in my head.
Criminally underrated, undiscovered and unknown by too many.
Their sound and style were unique.
i recently discovered this band, i get chills everytime i listen to their songs. this is one of my picks, i love it very much
Who came from Halston netflix movie
Love the way that bass player scrapes that bass line around, on par with anything Peter Hook ever played
True 80's classic. Caught them live on this tour, only bettered by Heaven or....
+Andy Baul-Lewis I'm so jealous!
That sent shivers up my spine! The most Artistic band ever! Thanks for upload SOFTLADI !!
Watching this on the TV in 1983 changed my life xx
I don’t know how I got here, but I feel like I’m back in the 80’s... and I think I like it! 😎😁
Bloody hell, I absolutly adored these as a kid.Elizabeth Fraser sings like an angel, wonderful. Thanks for posting mate.
I saw these in around 88 oh my God no one ever had they're sound and they were magicall no sound like them and her voice was wonderful! Oh how I miss bands of this originality which aliss no longer exists
Genius, one of my favorite bands.. So underrated 🙏🏻
Oh, how I love The Cocteau Twins forever and ever!
what a voice she has !
Brooding and abstract... you can tell that Johnny Marr incorporated this sound into the next year's Meat is Murder, particularly "That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore."
I hear a lot of 90's shoegaze in The Headmaster Ritual.
This is MY FAVORITE BAND EVER!! Discovered them in ‘82!!
Almost forgot about this band. The 80s will always be forever the greatest decade of music
As someone who was ten in 1990 and grew up with 90s music which I love. You are right!
I have the whole world’s music at my fingertips, yet what do I listen to, almost wall-to-wall, the Cocteaus!
If you "almost forgot' about this band you are not into music.
@@krasteff Ok skippy if you say so. :D
Have you listened to Close to the edge... lately?.I think the 70' s was the best.
Just a bunch of words from all kinds of languages that sound good together. These songs are none the less beautiful for it. Elizabeth Frasers voice has become more beautiful over the years
i get chills everytime i watch their live performances
More a vocalist than a singer in any particular language, pure beauty.
Every time this comes up in my recommended, it is an obligated view.
Thank you John Peel for this and many many more discoveries, loved his 10 till midnight broadcast in the eighties!
Saw them at The Royal Festival Hall in 84. Amazing live!
I was there, as I recall the tape machine was being very awkward that night
Great band, She has a great voice and she is a pure beauty... Great music!!!
this sounds great live, just magnificent
Thanks Cocteau for bringing beautiful music to the world. One of the greatest ever!
Her vocals are friggin flawless...
God must,ve breathed directly into her lungs,and out came that incredible voice,love you liz
I knew the name in the 80s and 90s but never got their music - until now when I am 50yo! I have pretty much uploaded all their LPs on iTunes.
Superb, this will never date.
Love, love , love. Transports me back to my mid teens.
christ this is magnificent.
it's like a gaelic fairy ethereal woodland language. a song you hear in dreams...can't figure the words. or can't read a letter in a dream but you just see the writing. it captures that feeling between the living world and mystical world.
💚😢miss my brother xx
Thanks for uploading and sharing. This group of people had a very special chemistry. A gift to us all.
Amazing. Absolutely amazing. It's her own song and i'm still surprised that she knows when to come in.
I was lucky enough to see them at the Town & Country Club in London, 1986. One of the loudest gigs I ever went to...came away deaf, but with a big smile on my face! Brilliant and totally unique.
A voz de uma deusa!
Takes me back to some great years of my life had this album and more from them and played some great awesome music on weekends after working all week ....
beautiful!
I absolutely love this band and I am still listening to them June 2024!!!
Had this on 12" Vinyl. Classic.