What ever happened to her? This strange and evocative "voice from another world"?
I am perhaps the only person in the world imagining what a Jon Anderson-Elizabeth Fraser duet may sound like?
What ever happened to her? This strange and evocative "voice from another world"?
I am perhaps the only person in the world imagining what a Jon Anderson-Elizabeth Fraser duet may sound like?
I dunno about the Anderson/Fraser teamup, but I did rather enjoy her work on Peter Gabriel's OVO, in particular the duet with Paul Buchanon (Blue Nile) on Downside Up.
Not sure what she's up to these days.
Fraser vs. Anderson: 12-1. Sorry.
"Improvisation is not an excuse for musical laziness" - Fred Frith
"[...] things that we never dreamed of doing in Crimson or in any band that I've been in," - Tony Levin speaking of SGM
what happened to the Cocteau Twins?
one of my favorite songs from her/them..
this one showcases her voice..
love her voice
my fave from FCC..
Last edited by UnephenStephen; 07-06-2013 at 09:44 PM.
"She said you are the air I breathe
The life I love, the dream I weave."
Unevensong - Camel
Huge fan here. Actually Pat and I both and you'd never think it but they influence us in the guitar sound choices we make. I'm partial to their last 4 albums, especially HEAVEN OR LAS VEGAS. Her singing with Massive Attack on "Teardrop" is just perfect. Not sure what she's up to but I'm bummed she hasn't made a bunch of her own albums because I miss her voice a lot.
on the two yt links where she's alone, she sounds like a Tori Amos and Kate Bush impersonator...
IMHO, of course
my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicts to complete nutcases.
She came out of retirement to do a concert at the South Bank in 2012, as mentioned on her (sadly not updated) website.
To me she's always been quite an enigmatic figure, with her best work probably coming on the first This Mortal Coil album.
I believe that she used to keep company with Jess Buckley at one point; regardless of whether that's true, you can definitely hear a Cocteau Twins influence on Grace.
Oh, and just editing to say to Trane: no, you're miles off ... she was established many years before Tori, and there is no real similarity to Tori or Kate, although they may appeal to the same listeners.
No, that's fine ... I'm not criticising the opinion that you formed from those videos, but you shouldn't walk around with that opinion. I'm a huge fan of Tori and Kate (less so of EF) but in all fairness to Fraser she's way more important than Tori and sounds nothing like her. It would be like saying that Diamanda Galas or Meredith Monk sound like Tori Amos: in some ways flattering but in others catastrophically mistaken.
This the song that I think of when I think of Fraser at her best:
Oh, and I just found this video directly juxtaposing Fraser's & Bush's versions of "Another Day" (although, to be honest, you'd be better off listening to the Fraser version complete):
Last edited by Sordel; 07-07-2013 at 04:24 AM.
yes.
This Mortal Coil did prominent cover versions on some of Tim Buckley's most haunting ballads ("Morning Glory", "I Must Have Been Blind" and of course "Song to the Siren"), but I never heard of a Jeff Buckley/Elizabeth Fraser connection. I agree that This Mortal Coil peaked with that debut album and that this was arguably her best recorded work, though. With the Dream Academy and the LA Paisley Underground scene, they were among the first to seriously revisit the 60s psych-folk realm - Tom Rapp/Pearls Before Swine, Tim Hardin, David Ackles etc.
"Improvisation is not an excuse for musical laziness" - Fred Frith
"[...] things that we never dreamed of doing in Crimson or in any band that I've been in," - Tony Levin speaking of SGM
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2009...aser-interview
"After parting from Guthrie, but still in the same band, Fraser struck up an intense relationship with Jeff Buckley after they became infatuated with each other's voices. Again, emotion produced music. A sublime duet they recorded called All Flowers in Time Bend Towards the Sun is floating around the internet, to her irritation."
I'm telling you, she's gonna be on the Olias sequel.
I wonder how many of of us 80s kids who were weened on 4AD saw a connection back in time to that creative English rock of the 1970s? I mean, really, 4AD was the "Prog" trojan horse of the punk movement. I'm gonna go listen to my This Mortal Coil and Clan of Xymox albums today.
"Improvisation is not an excuse for musical laziness" - Fred Frith
"[...] things that we never dreamed of doing in Crimson or in any band that I've been in," - Tony Levin speaking of SGM
There's interview clips with here throughout this documentary. She claims Jeff and her were soulmates.
...not sure what she's like on stage now but I saw the Cocteau Twins in, I think, 1986, (with Throwing Muses and Dif Juz in support, IIRC) and Elizabeth Fraser remains to this day the single most uncomfortable and ill-at-ease person I've ever seen on a stage. It was painful to watch, especially during the long silences between songs while they cued up/fixed the tapes. Sounded great, though, when the music began.
Last edited by Pangolin; 07-07-2013 at 11:36 PM.
Cocteau Twins spawned and influenced countless other bands. At the time they were active I just lumped them in with all the other indie-rock/alternative bands of the day. Wish I'd paid more attention back then. But there are other places to go for that sort of thing today. Autumn's Grey Solace, for example...
And here they are ...
http://www.hackettsongs.com/blog/tour56.html
There are recordings of the Hackett/Fraser live collaboration floating around out there....
She has just been spotted in the new Massive Attack show a day or two ago performing several songs, including one by famed Russian "accursed songstress" Yanka Dyagileva.Originally Posted by Pangolin
Probably nothing of major interest to Western folks (unless you follow the show's curved plot), but it made headlines over here - it's probably the first time Yanka's music is getting heard abroad, the first time a real Western star gave it a nod, and the way she is singing it in Russian, complete with the expletive in the song's punchline, is just an all around WTF thing (but in a good way!).
There has been a long-promised Elizabeth Fraser album for some time now. She does appear with Massive Attack occasionally. Saw her at a Hollywood Bowl show. Her duet with Richie Havens "Time of the Turning" on Gabriel's Ovo is sublime. If you dug the Cocteaus, Robin Guthrie, her ex, has been producing incredible albums of shoegaze guitar instrumentals for years, including collaborations with Harold Budd.
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