Time Machines

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Time Machines
TimeMachinesEskaton10.jpg
Studio album by
Released26 January 1998
Genre
Length73:32
LabelEskaton
ProducerCoil
Time Machines chronology
Time Machines
(1998)
Coil Presents Time Machines
(2000)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic4/5 stars[1]

Time Machines is a 1998 album by English experimental group Coil, originally released under the alias Time Machines. The album was created under the premise of drones named after hallucinogenic chemicals, "tested and retested" in the studio for apparent narcotic potency. Main member John Balance also described the album as an attempt to create "temporal slips".[a]

Background and composition[]

Time Machines is composed of four electronic drone pieces created with modular synthesizers, which as hinted at in their track names are an attempt to recreate the chemically derived psychedelic and narcotic potency of telepathine, DOET, DMT and psilocybin mushrooms (telepathine and DMT being primary components of ayahuasca). As well as this, Balance intended the album to cause "temporal slips": he commented that the musical effect was demonstrated when the group "listened to it loud [and] lost track of time".[2] Drew McDowall created the original demo for the record, at first inspired by what he saw as a hypnotic state created in Tibetan music, but his final idea with Balance and Christopherson was to use filters and oscillators on the tones of the demo to induce trance-like effects.

When Time Machines was first released, the group was very conscious that it not be labeled as a Coil album, due to how abstract and different it was compared to previous Coil albums.[3] However, Coil later tended towards regarding Time Machines a part of the Coil catalog;[3] this led the 2000 follow-up album Coil Presents Time Machines to bear the Coil name on it.

Legacy[]

A five-disc Time Machines box set was announced in 1998,[4][5]:53 but never developed. A two-disc version was announced in January 2006 as a future release,[6] but this was never expanded on either, although an album by Peter Christopherson, called Time Machines II, was released posthumously. In retrospect, Drew McDowall has remarked that "[p]eople tell me how much of an impact it had on them – which is always pretty surprising."[7]

Reception[]

Sean Cooper of AllMusic gave the album four out of five stars and described it as "[e]njoyable, if a mite limited in scope."[1] Record distributor Boomkat praised the album upon its re-release, calling it a "now-classic chemical songbook".[8]

Track listing[]

No.TitleLength
1."7-Methoxy-β-Carboline: (Telepathine)"23:23
2."2,5-Dimethoxy-4-Ethyl-Amphetamine: (DOET/Hecate)"13:20
3."5-Methoxy-N,N-Dimethyltryptamine: (5-MeO-DMT)"10:02
4."4-Indolol, 3-[2-(Dimethylamino)Ethyl], Phosphate Ester: (Psilocybin)"26:46
Total length:73:32

Footnotes[]

  1. ^ In a 1998 interview, given to David Keenan for The Wire magazine, Balance explains:[2]

    One of the interesting things with Time Machines is that there's a handful of responses which we've had where what happened to the listeners was exactly what we intended to happen. There would be some kind of temporal disruption caused by just listening to the music, just interacting with the music. The drugs thing is actually a hook we hung it on - it originally came out of me and Drew talking that some of the types of music you listen to - sacred musics like Tibetan music or anything with a sacred intent which often is long ceremonial type music which could last for a day or three days or something. There are periods of time in that where you will come out of time. That's the intention of it to go into a trance and achieve an otherness. We thought can we do this sort of electronic punk-primitive? We did demos with a simple mono synth and we managed it. We sat in the room and listened to it loud and we lost track of time - it could be five minutes in or 20 minutes in but you suddenly get this feeling, the hairs on the back of your neck, and you'd realise that you'd had some sort of temporal slip. We fine-tuned, well, filters and oscillators and stuff, to try and maximise this effect. It was that we were after with simple tones - somehow you could slip through.

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Cooper, Sean. "Time Machines – Coil". AllMusic. Retrieved March 31, 2018.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Keenan, David (July 21, 1998). "Coil Interview". Brainwashed. Brainwashed Inc. Retrieved April 28, 2017 – via Brainwashed archive.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Strachan, Guy. "Coil, "Strangers In The Night" (Terrorizer #110, 2003)". Brainwashed.com. Retrieved 2012-03-12.
  4. ^ "The News". Brainwashed.com. Retrieved 2012-03-12.
  5. ^ Keenan, David (September 1998). "Time Out of Joint". The Wire. No. 175. pp. 48–53. ISSN 0952-0686 – via the Internet Archive.
  6. ^ [1] Archived January 5, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Lipez, Zachary. "Almost 20 Years Later, Coil's Drone Masterpiece Is Still a Record Out of Time - VICE". VICE. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  8. ^ "Coil - Time Machines - Boomkat". Boomkat. November 3, 2017.

External links[]

See also[]

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