Cocteau Twins vs. Dead Can Dance |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35949 |
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Posted: August 20 2023 at 15:29 |
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Two bands that have definite similarities, particularly for me when comparing the early albums of each band with gothic rock qualities.
RYM labels Cocteau Twins generally as Dream Pop, Ethereal Wave, Post-Punk, Gothic Rock. RYM labels Dead Can Dance generally as Neoclassical Darkwave, Darkwave, Tribal Ambient, Ethereal Wave, Gothic Rock, New Age For the discography: Cocteau Twins (studio albums): Garlands (1982) Gothic Rock, Ethereal Wave, Post-Punk Head Over Heels (1983) Ethereal Wave, Gothic Rock, Post-Punk (Dream Pop) Treasure (1984) Dream Pop, Ethereal Wave Victorialand (1986) Dream Pop, Ethereal Wave, Ambient Pop (Ambient) The Moon and the Melodies (1986) Ambient, Dream Pop, Ethereal Wave* Blue Bell Knoll (1988) Dream Pop, Ethereal Wave Heaven or Las Vegas (1990) Dream Pop (Ethereal Wave, Shoegaze) Four-Calendar Café (1993) Dream Pop (Ethereal Wave, Jangle Pop) Mile & Kisses (1996) Dream Pop (Ethereal Wave) * a Harold Budd, Elizabeth Fraser, Robin Guthrie & Simon Raymonde album Dead Can Dance (studio albums): Dead Can Dance (1984) Ethereal Wave, Darkwave, Gothic Rock (Post-Punk) Spleen and Ideal (1985) Darkwave, Neoclassical Darkwave (Gothic Rock) Within the Realm of a Dying Sun (1987) Neoclassical Darkwave The Serpent's Egg (1998) Neoclassical Darkwave (White Voice) Aion (1990) Neoclassical Darkwave, Neo-Medieval Folk (Medieval Classical Music, Renaissance Music, Gregorian Chant) Into the Labyrinth (1993) Neoclassical Darkwave (Byzantine Music, Arabic Classical Music, Tribal Ambient) Spiritchaser (1996) Tribal Ambient, New Age (African Folk Music) Anastasis (2012) Neoclassical Darkwave (Turkish Folk Music, Greek Folk Music, Arabic Folk Music) Dionysus (2018) Tribal Ambient, Neoclassical New Age (Turkish Folk Music, Balkan Folk Music, Persian Folk Music, Greek Folk Music) I made a playlist with a favourite track of mine (alternating) for both band's first seven studio releases (including the Harold Budd and Cocteau Twins album) in case anyone wished to check out music from the bands without checking out full albums. I wasn't familiar with Spiritchaser. While Heaven or Las Vegas was the first Cocteau Twin album that I really fell for, and with Dead can Dance it was In the Realm of the Dying Sun, currently I'm more into earlier albums of each. I'd be more likely to play the first two by DCD and the first three by CT today. Here's that playlist (happy for any to critique and or come up with your own -- easy to do if you have an account): https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IZR8prIYPmrST9ll-GQ1Xh |
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14754 |
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For every poll comparing two bands there is one penalty point for each option beyond two. So you stand at five penalty points now. My vote is for Dead Can Dance. I don't know that much of the Cocteau Twins but what I know could never win me over. DCD are great though.
Edited by Lewian - August 20 2023 at 17:07 |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35949 |
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Haha, the poll is just a silly accessory to comparing, appreciating and discussing these bands (I expect that including a poll for such topics is not a great strategy for discussion commonly, but I am still learning...). I think both Lisa Gerrard (DCD) and Elizabeth Fraser (CT) are excellent vocalists. I have learned not to surprise easily, but from what I thought I knew of your tastes, I would have thought that you could have been won over by Cocteau Twins quite easily (maybe you just don't know the right stuff for you -- I wonder if my choices in the past have put you off). To me the sounds of the two bands overlap significantly. Edited by Logan - August 20 2023 at 17:34 |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 02 2016 Location: Philly burbs Status: Offline Points: 18301 |
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I don't know both well enough.
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Offline Points: 11696 |
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Except for Spiritchaser (which isn't that bad, but it's not that memorable either. And while I totally buy their Neoclassical style etc... on this album they feel more like musical tourists) I've not heard an album by any of them I don't love or at least enjoy. I've never heard Milk & Kisses before. I guess I steered away because I it's supposed to be not very good. So I'm listening for the first time now. The singing is wonderful as always and it sounds perfectly splendid. Some songs feel a little flat and uneventful at first listen - musically and melodically speaking. But sometimes seemingly anonymous songs grows on me eventually. -It won't be enough to not vote for Dead Can Dance, though. All of their albums up to 1990 (maybe even 1993) have been a favorite at some point. I love both of their comeback-albums too. All in all I got a deeper relationship with more of their music.
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14754 |
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Yeah, you know what of my posting to take seriously and what rather not. I knew some Cocteau Twins before joining PA (and wasn't particularly keen), so it certainly wasn't you who put me off. It may well be that they have some stuff I'd like more, but then there's of course too much music too little time, so if a band doesn't win me over in a few attempts, I wouldn't normally invest more trying time into them. Music is irrational, magic and very individual, and sometimes two bands are seen as very similar by many and are similar according to lots of descriptors, and still for me just the way one of them sets up their melodies and sounds and the voice of the singer resonate a lot with me and the other one doesn't. I'm a scientist and have collaborated in musicology research, but I see no rational way explaining such things.
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BrufordFreak
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: January 25 2008 Location: Wisconsin Status: Offline Points: 8213 |
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Big fan of both: DCD moreso recently due to my involvement with PA; CTs immediately. (I bought their first three albums totally based on album cover art and the name of their record label.)
I can definitely see (and agree) with the pairing or the two bands as well as the comparisons. I'm always impressed with DCD; their evolution has been fascinating--over 40 years time! Cocteau's, for me, rose quickly, peaked in the period of 1984-1989 and then kind of rode out on a blaze of glory in a niche they had created. Must give a bit of a shout out to Robin Guthrie for his continued solo output: especially 2006 when an LP and two EPs found me satisfying an itch for some new Treasure-era music. Tough vote because of DCD's wonderfully long and consistent career, but I can't think of much music I like more in history than that 1984-1989 period of Elizabeth Fraser, Robin Guthrie, and Simon Raymonde (and Harold). |
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Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/ |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35949 |
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^ Thanks guys, it's much appreciated. I do plan to respond to those posts later, which might mean the dreaded triple-post, but this time I don't want a very long post full of different quotes from different people as I often do to avoid double-posting while acknowledging various people. Not expecting any response back, but I do like all topics to act like discussion/ conversation topics.
I had noticed that I misspelled Milk and Kisses in my OP not long after posting, but I wanted to have a topic unedited, which is all too rare for me since I am so mistake-prone. I still have not heard that album, or the one that precedes it. While I have known of and heard some music by Cocteau Twins since the 80s, it wasn't until the last couple of years that I really became a fan: first with Heaven or Las Vegas, then with Treasure, then Head Over Heels and now all of the albums until 1990. As I mentioned in another topic, I got into Cocteau Twins because I was, and still am, so into Portishead (got into that only a few years ago), and I came across a youtube video titled “Massive Attack vs Portishead - Teardrop on Roads” (excellent mash-up). I had known that Massive Attack song before, but it got me looking into the vocalist, which is Elizabeth Fraser, who is the singer in Cocteua Twins, as we know, which led me to get very into Cocteau Twins. Dead Can Dance I have been into for considerably more years, although I don't recall knowing of the band before joining Prog Archives. You and others influenced me to check out the band. While the first two albums are the ones that I have been favouring more recently, returning to post Spleen and Ideal ones due to this topic, Paul's topic before, and various other topics, has been a joy. Over the years I have been most into the first four Dead Can Dance albums, but I have a much more significant appreciation for later ones, especially Aion, Into the Labyrinth and the live album Toward the Within which I listened to in full in preparation for Paul's still active 7 x 7 topic. *to myself, I wonder if people are as likely to check out the playlists I make for such topics as the individual videos Paul posts for his topics across various posts? Probably not. That said, the playlist is more for me and so I can more easily listen to others choices because I am interested and I like those to feel like communal listening rooms. I like the interactive aspect of that approach. And in the case of my playlist in this topic, it's mostly a way for me of recalling and replaying songs that have been meaningful to me, or I just plain like from the albums.* Edited by Logan - August 21 2023 at 06:51 |
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Nogbad_The_Bad
Forum & Site Admin Group RIO/Avant/Zeuhl & Eclectic Team Joined: March 16 2007 Location: Boston Status: Offline Points: 20869 |
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Love DCD, only really know CT from their singles but they never really did anything for me, should I explore further?
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Ian
Host of the Post-Avant Jazzcore Happy Hour on Progrock.com https://podcasts.progrock.com/post-avant-jazzcore-happy-hour/ |
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Offline Points: 11696 |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35949 |
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And I commonly will play the straight man (I am straight, but I mean something else) even when not taking things very seriously. I am glad you responded especially because I was not at all happy with my post but resisted changing it. Although you are going to get fairly different experiences from listening to, say, as the three albums that had the biggest impact on me, Head Over Heels, Treasure and Las Vegas (and certainly if you include the debut) it's not like there is nearly as much variety over those not many years as with, say, Swans over its career, or over its Holy Money to Soundtracks period. And it's the same singer in CT. I think even if you sample a bit from various of the albums you'd have a pretty good idea with Cocteau Twins. I don't know if you like early Dead Can Dance (say the first two albums) as much as later ones, but I especially get an early Cocteau Twins feel from those (goth, ethereal wave, post-punk, the female vocalists). I do see definite similarities with later music by both too. But as you say, even if bands can share similar attributes/ descriptors it does not mean that both will resonate with you. Can totally get one singer appealing and the other not. I'm neither a scientist nor a musicologist, and while I am confident in the assumption that it is potentially knowable and understandable, and rational, that does not mean that we can explain such things in the same way that it is assumed that the universe is rational, knowable and understandable but that doesn't mean that we will every fully understand or know it (or "grok" it, a term I very much like from the novel Stranger in a Strange Land). I think I have a good handle on why I like certain things and not others generally (knowing my personality, following the associations), but I have been naval gazing since I had an umbilical cord. :) |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35949 |
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I'd suggest trying Head Over Heels as a somewhat transitional album. Maybe even try some of my playlist in the OP (which alternates between Cocteau Twins and Dead Can Dance). Of course that playlist represents my peculiar tastes, and others here might think my choices generally suck. EDIT: As said in my next post, I like Head Over Heels (1983) partially because it's edgier than later albums. It;ls little more raw and has an energy I like. And Garlands, the debut, has more of a post-punk vibe. Here is the playlist for Head Over Heels: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI6kLIhBBwmSqc0q7DjbZ7AgUE0Mhqtv5 I love Treasure too. Edited by Logan - August 21 2023 at 07:57 |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35949 |
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Thanks, I'll have to check out the Robin Guthrie solo output (heard some of his music with Harold Budd before). For me the 1984-1988 period had been Dead Can Dance's primo period with the first four albums, but I have grown to like much more. For Cocteau Twins, I like the 1982 to 1990 period as I like the debut very much as well as Heaven or Las Vegas. While it is generally not as highly regarded as the follow-up Treasure, I really like 1983's Head Over Heels. It has an energy that I like, it's a little rawer, more punk. It has tracks like Gold Dust Rush and Musette and Drums that rock and also the more ethereal pieces. And it has a kind of experimentation and industrial qualities in a song like When Mama Was Moth. I think that is my favourite CT album at this time. I find it edgier than later work. EDIT: Oh, speaking of collaborations, I really like Yann Tiersen with Elizabeth Fraser music (Kala having been one of my favourite songs she sung in particular). Edited by Logan - August 21 2023 at 08:13 |
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suitkees
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 19 2020 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 9050 |
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Listened to a couple of Cocteau Twins albums these last weeks, because of the thread you dedicated to them, and although I like almost all of the individual songs I find there is not that much variation in their music within an album to keep my attention. This is a similar problem I have with later Dead Can Dance albums (the two more recent ones being a bit more interesting again), but their first four, and especially the Spleen to Egg ones are excellent listens, from start to finish. So, I prefer DCD, despite the pleasure I can have listening to individual CT tracks.
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The razamataz is a pain in the bum |
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