Current 93
Current 93 is an experimental music project founded in 1982 by David Tibet in London, England, with Tibet as its sole constant member and primary creative force.[1][2][3] The group's work spans industrial noise, dark ambient, and neofolk genres, evolving from abrasive early recordings influenced by 1970s and 1980s industrial music to more acoustic, folk-oriented apocalyptic expressions centered on themes of mysticism, eschatology, occultism, and existential dread.[2][4][5] Key albums such as Thunder Perfect Mind (1992) exemplify this shift, blending poetic lyrics with sparse instrumentation to evoke a hallucinatory, end-times atmosphere that has influenced the neofolk and post-industrial scenes.[6][7] While early collaborations with figures from the industrial milieu, including Death in June, sparked associations with controversial symbolism like swastikas—used provocatively in titles such as Swastikas for Noddy (1987)—Tibet has explicitly positioned Current 93 as anti-Nazi, emphasizing esoteric and Gnostic explorations over political ideology.[5]History
Formation and early career (1982–1986)
David Tibet, born David Michael Bunting on 5 March 1960 in Batu Gajah, Perak, Malaysia, relocated to England around 1970 and later immersed himself in the post-punk and industrial music scenes.[8][9] Early in his career, he contributed to Psychic TV, participating in their initial albums amid associations with Throbbing Gristle affiliates, before adopting the pseudonym "Tibet"—bestowed by Genesis P-Orridge—which nodded to his burgeoning fascination with Tibetan Buddhism and apocalyptic mysticism.[5][10][11] Current 93 formed in London in 1982 as an experimental collective led by Tibet, prioritizing raw sonic exploration through tape loops, noise collages, and ritualistic sound design over structured songwriting or commercial viability.[5][12] The group's inaugural output included contributions from collaborators like John Balance of Coil on a 1983 12-inch release featuring Fritz Haaman of 23 Skidoo, emphasizing abrasive industrial textures rooted in empirical manipulation of found sounds and electronics.[13] The debut full-length album, Nature Unveiled, emerged in 1984 via L.A.Y.L.A.H. Antirecords, comprising roughly 78 minutes of dark ambient rituals, sound collages, and industrial noise that evoked elemental chaos without conventional melodies.[14][15] Initial pressings of 1,000 copies included a bonus 7-inch EP with tracks like "No Hiding From the Blackbird," underscoring the project's cult, non-mainstream orientation amid the era's post-punk fringes.[16] Early efforts also intersected with figures like Douglas Pearce of Death in June through shared industrial networks, though Current 93's output remained distinctly Tibet-centric in its esoteric, noise-driven inception.[5]Shift to apocalyptic folk (1987–1999)
In 1987, Current 93 released Swastikas for Noddy, an album that initiated a marked departure from the group's earlier industrial noise experiments toward a more structured, acoustic-oriented sound incorporating folk elements such as guitars, percussion, and Tibet's increasingly narrative vocals.[17] This shift retained traces of dissonance but emphasized melody and ritualistic chants, reflecting Tibet's growing interest in esoteric and apocalyptic themes expressed through song cycles rather than pure sonic assault.[18] The album's production involved collaborators like Douglas Pearce (of Death in June) on guitar and vocals, alongside Tibet's core contributions, signaling evolving personnel dynamics that prioritized intimate, layered arrangements over abrasive tape loops.[19] By the early 1990s, this evolution coalesced into what Tibet termed "apocalyptic folk," evident in releases like Thunder Perfect Mind (1992), which featured extended tracks blending acoustic instrumentation, Tibetan throat singing, and biblical invocations drawn from Gnostic texts such as the poem "Thunder, Perfect Mind."[20] Issued on Tibet's own Durtro label—established to maintain artistic control and a DIY ethos amid underground distribution networks—the album showcased contributions from Steven Stapleton of Nurse with Wound on mixing and effects, enhancing its ethereal, hymn-like quality without commercial compromise.[21] Sales remained modest, typically under 10,000 units per release in niche markets, yet the group's cult audience expanded through tape trading, fanzines, and European festival circuits, fostering loyalty untainted by mainstream exposure.[22] Throughout the decade, collaborations deepened the folk pivot, including Thomas Ligotti's textual input on Soft Black Stars (1998), where Tibet intoned the horror author's cosmic pessimism over sparse guitar and drone, underscoring a maturation in lyrical depth tied to personal explorations of mysticism and decay.[19] Tibet's songwriting refined narrative arcs around eschatological visions, with personnel like Michael Cashmore on guitar providing consistent acoustic frameworks, while Stapleton's intermittent involvement preserved experimental edges. This period solidified Current 93's niche, prioritizing thematic integrity over accessibility, as evidenced by limited-edition runs on Durtro that emphasized handmade aesthetics and direct fan engagement.[23]Contemporary era and revival (2000–present)
In the early 2000s, Current 93, under David Tibet's direction, sustained its output with refined acoustic folk recordings, exemplified by the 2001 album All the Pretty Little Horses, which emphasized intimate, eschatological themes through minimal instrumentation and Tibet's poetic vocals.[24] This period marked a consolidation of the band's neofolk style, prioritizing esoteric depth over commercial accessibility, with releases handled through independent labels like Durtro Jnana to preserve artistic autonomy amid shifting music industry dynamics. Tibet's unwavering leadership ensured continuity, collaborating selectively with figures such as Michael Cashmore while avoiding mainstream dilution of the project's hallucinatory gnostic core.[24] The 2010s and 2020s saw a revival through archival reissues and new material, adapting to digital platforms like Bandcamp for direct distribution to a dedicated niche audience. Key releases included the 2022 album If a City Is Set Upon a Hill, featuring contributions from Alasdair Roberts on guitar and autoharp, blending dreamlike atmospheres with biblical imagery in tracks like "There Is No Zodiac."[25] In 2024, Tibet oversaw the remastered edition of the 1985 tape In Menstrual Night, originally on United Dairies, now reissued as a limited 12-inch picture disc and digital set with tracks "Sucking Up Souls" and "To Feed the Moon," enhancing sonic clarity while honoring early experimental roots.[26] These efforts underscored resilience against genre commercialization, favoring loyal esoteric listeners over broad appeal through self-managed production and distribution. Live performances reinforced this revival, with 2024 shows at London's Union Chapel on May 24 channeling a mix of classic and contemporary material in the venue's resonant acoustics.[27] A return engagement followed at the same venue on April 4, 2025, maintaining the band's tradition of intimate, ritualistic presentations without large-scale tours.[28] The ongoing "Current 93 Presents" series further extended influence, spotlighting collaborators like Dogs Blood Order and archival projects such as Harry Oldfield's Crystal, fostering a network of experimental artists aligned with Tibet's visionary ethos.[29] As of October 2025, no major tours were announced, reflecting a deliberate focus on selective, high-fidelity engagements and preparations for future recordings via labels like House of Mythology.[30]Musical style and evolution
Industrial and noise roots
Current 93's origins in the early 1980s industrial music scene were marked by a raw, experimental approach emphasizing dissonance and sonic disruption, heavily influenced by pioneers such as Throbbing Gristle and Whitehouse.[5] Throbbing Gristle's use of abrasive electronics and confrontational minimalism informed the group's initial palette, while Whitehouse's extreme power electronics contributed to the deployment of distorted, high-pitched vocals designed to evoke ritualistic unease and psychological intensity.[5] David Tibet, the project's founder, drew from these sources to craft recordings that prioritized unpolished aggression over melodic structure, reflecting the era's DIY ethos in London's underground tape networks.[5] Technical foundations relied on analog tape manipulation and looped recordings to generate chaotic textures, as evident in the 1984 debut album Nature Unveiled, which incorporated contributions from collaborators like Youth of Killing Joke and elements from Psychic TV's orbit.[31] Tracks featured overlaid loops of shrieking feedback, droning synthesizers, and fragmented noise bursts, creating immersive environments of auditory overload without reliance on conventional instrumentation.[32] This method extended to Dogs Blood Rising (1984), where manipulated tapes produced nightmarish drones and assorted found audio elements, underscoring a commitment to empirical sound experimentation over polished production.[32][33] These early efforts distinguished Current 93 within the industrial milieu by blending minimalism with hallucinatory intensity, laying groundwork for subgenres exploring noise as a vehicle for existential disorientation, though contemporaneous documentation remains sparse beyond tape-trading circuits and zine accounts.[5] The stark, unrefined quality of these releases—contrasting sharply with the acoustic refinement of later periods—highlighted a foundational emphasis on causal sonic disruption, where raw inputs directly yielded outputs of controlled anarchy.[34]Acoustic folk and neofolk development
Current 93's transition to acoustic folk elements began in the mid-1980s, evolving from dense noise collages toward sparse, guitar-driven arrangements with fingerpicked acoustics and layered, chant-like vocals. This pivot, evident by 1987's Swastikas for Noddy, incorporated traditional folk instrumentation alongside residual industrial samples, fostering a more introspective sonic palette suited to David Tibet's lyrical obsessions with decay and revelation.[24] The 1988 album Christ and the Pale Queens Mighty in Sorrow marked a pivotal consolidation, blending ensemble singing, Tibetan monastic chants, and minimal percussion to evoke ritualistic austerity, distinct from the project's prior emphasis on abrasive soundscapes. This causal shift stemmed from Tibet's collaborations, including with Death in June's Douglas Pearce, who contributed to early folk integrations, prioritizing melodic clarity over chaotic dissonance to amplify thematic depth.[5] In the broader neofolk landscape, Current 93 differentiated itself through a focus on personal eschatology—intimate visions of cosmic unraveling—rather than the martial rhythms and pagan revivalism characterizing contemporaries like Death in June. While peers often evoked historical or runic archetypes with uniform tempos and militaristic percussion, Current 93 favored irregular, hymn-like structures that mirrored apocalyptic fragmentation, as in the elongated, vocal-centric tracks of Thunder Perfect Mind (1992).[4] This approach yielded chant-infused pieces emphasizing existential dread over collective mythology, with acoustic guitars serving as skeletal frames for Tibet's incantatory delivery, eschewing the polished uniformity of neofolk's more revivalist strains.[35] The folkward evolution elicited mixed responses, with critics like Piero Scaruffi arguing it reduced the project's earlier doctrinal intensity to "acoustic pagan folk" lacking prior atmospheric potency, potentially diluting its edge for accessibility.[4] Yet, contemporaneous reviews noted enhanced structural coherence, as the stripped-back format allowed replayable motifs amid samples, evidenced by the album's enduring cult following despite initial perceptions of tentativeness.[36] This development causally reflected Tibet's maturation, channeling noise-era experimentation into folk's restraint for sustained thematic resonance, influencing subsequent neofolk's introspective variants.[37]Production techniques and sonic experimentation
David Tibet has maintained a hands-on role in Current 93's production throughout its history, often conceiving material through intuitive, visionary processes where lyrics and concepts emerge spontaneously, as described in a 2006 interview where he likened ideas "falling into" his mind during altered states like migraines.[10] Early recordings emphasized lo-fi aesthetics, incorporating raw electronic dissonance, distorted drones, and musique concrète elements, such as the warped spacetime effects and reverbs evoking infernal soundscapes on albums like Dogs Blood Rising (1985).[4] This approach favored analog tape fidelity and minimal processing to preserve organic imperfections, contributing to a timeless, unpolished appeal that contrasts with contemporary overproduced norms.[38] From the late 1980s, collaborations with composer Michael Cashmore introduced layered densities, with Cashmore handling the majority of musical arrangements until around 2006, integrating acoustic instruments like guitar, cello, viola, harp, piano, and harmonium to build neoclassical and folk-inflected textures.[39][4] Tibet directed these sessions flexibly, providing core melodies—often adapted by Cashmore on guitar—and inviting contributors like Marc Almond or Antony to interpret vocals freely without rigid instructions, resulting in multifaceted reinterpretations compiled across multiple tracks.[10] Mixing, frequently overseen by figures like Steve Stapleton, involved extensive iterations—up to 90 versions for a single album—to achieve spaciousness amid dense layering, prioritizing sonic clarity over bombast.[10] Sonic experimentation marked key projects, such as the 2011 Crystal release, where high-frequency electrical pulses were directed into crystals via electromagnetic generators and electrolyte solutions, capturing resultant crackling static, sine waves, and phase-shifted rhythms as unmixed field recordings or blends by producers like Ken Thomas.[40] This method exemplified Tibet's interest in unconventional sound generation, blending industrial roots with esoteric physics. Vocal delivery remained a constant experimental anchor, evolving from expressionist invocations to confident, pause-laden phrasing adapted to Tibet's natural range limitations, retaining raw emotional immediacy even as production shifted toward digital polishing in the 2000s.[10] While these techniques yielded immersive, thematic chaos aligning with apocalyptic motifs, dense mixes occasionally drew critiques for perceived incoherence, as in descriptions of skeletal lo-fi structures risking detachment from melody; proponents, including Tibet, defend such elements as deliberate reflections of existential disarray rather than flaws.[41][42] This balance of raw fidelity and intentional disorder underscores Current 93's aversion to sterile perfection, favoring empirical sonic truth derived from analog origins and collaborative alchemy.[31]Themes and influences
Apocalyptic and eschatological visions
David Tibet's lyrics in Current 93 often center on eschatological motifs of cosmic and civilizational downfall, invoking biblical imagery from the Book of Revelation alongside prophetic visions of antichrist figures ushering in final judgment. These themes manifest as imminent collapse, with recurring references to stars falling, seas turning to blood, and humanity's subjugation under tyrannical harbingers, as seen in early works like the 1984 album Nature Unveiled, which comprises two extended pieces explicitly addressing the Second Coming and the rise of the Antichrist.[8] Such depictions prioritize raw textual prophecy over narrative resolution, emphasizing irreversible decay rather than redemption. A pivotal example appears in "Hitler as Kalki (SDM)" from the 1992 album Thunder Perfect Mind, where Tibet fuses historical atrocity with Hindu eschatology by envisioning Adolf Hitler as an avatar of Kalki—the tenth incarnation of Vishnu destined to annihilate evil at the Kali Yuga's end—while portraying this figure sadistically observing Christ's crucifixion before slaying him.[43] [44] The track's lyrics blend empirical historical evil with apocalyptic prophecy, framing Hitler not as a glorified redeemer but as a demonic Kalki signaling universal destruction, a motif Tibet has clarified as a denunciation of Nazism through Antichrist symbolism.[44] [45] This integration of 20th-century tyranny into end-times lore underscores Tibet's pattern of grounding abstract eschatology in verifiable human cataclysms, avoiding purely mythical escapism. Tibet attributes these visions to personal empirical encounters with foreboding, including dreams of global apocalypse that directly shaped albums such as Black Ships Ate the Sky (2006), derived from a 2001 nightmare of sinking vessels and encroaching darkness symbolizing mortality and dissolution.[46] Formed amid London's early 1980s post-punk and industrial milieu, Current 93's shift to these themes reflects observed urban entropy and cultural unraveling, as Tibet has described in reflections on the era's ritualistic undercurrents informing his prophetic dread.[47] This causal linkage to lived portents—rather than detached ideology—lends the lyrics a visceral authenticity, though the unrelenting fatalism has elicited observations of its intensity bordering on nihilistic immersion.[48]Occult, religious, and mystical elements
David Tibet, the project's founder, has drawn extensively from Gnosticism, incorporating references to texts such as "The Thunder: Perfect Mind" in Current 93's lyrics to evoke dualistic cosmologies and divine feminine archetypes.[37] Early works also reflect influences from Tibetan Buddhism, which inspired Tibet's pseudonym—a nod to his childhood exposure to Asian spiritual traditions including Hinduism and Buddhism—manifesting in esoteric chants and tantric elements, as on the 1998 release Tantric rNying-ma Chant of Tibet.[49] These draw from authentic ritual sources rather than popularized interpretations, emphasizing raw mystical structures over syncretic dilutions.[23] A marked shift occurred in the late 1990s toward orthodox Christianity, with Tibet describing it as an "exotic" counterpoint to Eastern influences and aligning his worldview with Christian eschatology and mysticism.[49] The 1998 album Soft Black Stars serves as a pivotal marker, blending Gothic romanticism with explicit Christian symbolism in lyrics evoking redemption, divine judgment, and scriptural imagery, signaling Tibet's deepening commitment.[50] Subsequent recordings, including those post-2000, prioritize apocalyptic visions rooted in Biblical prophecy and Gnostic-inflected Christianity, with Tibet affirming his self-identification as a Christian.[51] This evolution extends to Tibet's auxiliary pursuits, such as studying Coptic to access primary Gnostic and early Christian manuscripts, informing lyrics with undiluted textual fidelity.[51] His imprints like Coptic Cat and poetry collections further map these themes, rejecting superficial occultism for engagements with original sources across Kabbalistic echoes and patristic writings, though critics have noted the resultant worldview's intensity borders on insularity.[52][46] Despite syncretic origins—merging Crowleyan occultism with scriptural orthodoxy—Tibet's post-1990s output privileges Christian dominance, grounded in personal textual immersion rather than eclectic appropriation.[53][54]Literary and cultural references
Current 93's lyrics extensively draw upon William Blake's visionary poetry, integrating phrases and prophetic imagery to evoke apocalyptic themes. For instance, the track "All the Stars Are Dead Now" from the 1992 album Thunder Perfect Mind presents a purported dream prophecy delivered to David Tibet by Blake's spirit, incorporating Blakean motifs of celestial collapse and divine judgment.[20] Similarly, "The Great, Bloody and Bruised Veil of the World" reinterprets Blake's "And Did Those Feet in Ancient Time," transforming its millennial questioning into a lament over obscured spiritual realities.[55] These allusions bridge Blake's radical mysticism with folk balladry, as Tibet overlays Blake's dense symbolism onto acoustic structures reminiscent of traditional English songs. Aleister Crowley's occult writings profoundly shape the project's nomenclature and content, with the band name deriving from Crowley's "93 Current," a Thelemic concept denoting streams of spiritual energy channeled through enlightened individuals.[20] The 1988 track "Crowleymass" samples Crowley's spoken recordings, juxtaposing his invocations with Tibet's chants to ritualize esoteric transmission.[56] Such integrations reflect Tibet's early immersion in Crowley's system, though later works critique its limits through Christian lenses, prioritizing textual fidelity over doctrinal adherence. Thomas Ligotti's horror fiction influences specific adaptations, notably "The Frolic" on 1996's All the Pretty Little Horses, which paraphrases Ligotti's short story of the same name to depict nature's indifferent terror: the immensity of grass and sky as sources of existential dread.[5] This direct borrowing underscores Current 93's method of embedding literary horror into neofolk narratives, amplifying Ligotti's antinatalist undertones without alteration. Cultural nods to English folklore appear in perverted renditions of traditional ballads, such as "Oh Coal Black Smith" from 1987's Swastikas for Noddy, which twists the Child Ballad "The Two Magicians" into a shape-shifting allegory of deception and apocalypse.[5] WWII history informs esoteric explorations, as in Thunder Perfect Mind's "Hitler as Kalki," dedicated to Tibet's father—a veteran of the conflict—and invoking Savitri Devi's interpretation of Hitler as an avatar of Hindu destruction, blending historical causality with mythic fatalism.[5] These references, often densely layered, demand repeated engagement; critics note the opacity can deter casual audiences yet rewards scrutiny by revealing causal links between ancient texts and modern dread, fostering a rereadable corpus that elevates folk forms through literary rigor.[57]Members and collaborators
David Tibet's central role
David Tibet, born David Michael Bunting on 5 March 1960 in Batu Gajah, Malaysia, to British parents, serves as the founder and sole constant member of Current 93 since its inception in 1982.[58][5] As the project's unchanging auteur, he has authored all lyrics, delivered principal vocals, and directed overarching concepts, evolving the ensemble from its industrial noise origins—rooted in his prior involvement with Psychic TV—toward acoustic neofolk expressions while maintaining thematic continuity in apocalyptic mysticism.[59][60] Tibet's biographical trajectory underscores this central dominance: relocating to the UK as a child, he immersed in occult studies and poetry before launching Current 93 amid the early 1980s post-punk underbelly, releasing the debut single LAShTAL in 1983.[23] Over 40 years, his empirical output exceeds 20 studio albums and numerous ancillary recordings, evidencing sustained productivity without reliance on fixed lineups, as collaborators rotate per project needs.[61] Personal upheavals, including recovery from 1980s heroin addiction amid London's industrial scene excesses, and a mid-1990s shift toward explicit Christian faith—manifest in lyrics invoking Patripassianist theology and eschatological dread—further delineate his visionary isolation, transforming raw noise enthusiasm into folk-infused prophetic art.[62] This self-directed resilience affirms Current 93's status as Tibet's singular expressive vehicle, unyielding to genre conventions or personnel flux.[5]Key recurring contributors
Michael Cashmore has served as the primary guitarist and composer for Current 93 since joining in 1990, contributing arrangements and music to numerous albums and enhancing the project's shift toward acoustic and melancholic soundscapes.[63][39] His longstanding involvement, spanning over three decades, has provided instrumental cohesion amid the group's rotating personnel, with compositions featured on key releases that underscore themes of solitude and introspection.[64] Steven Stapleton, founder of Nurse With Wound, has collaborated extensively with Current 93 for over two decades, appearing on releases through at least the early 2010s and co-producing tracks that incorporate experimental noise and textural depth.[65][66] These contributions, often blending industrial elements with folk motifs, have broadened the project's sonic palette while maintaining its esoteric core, though Stapleton's role diminished in later works.[67] Thomas Ligotti has supplied lyrics for select Current 93 recordings, including the 2000 album I Have a Special Plan for This World, where his prose—spoken by David Tibet—evokes cosmic horror and existential dread drawn from his literary oeuvre.[68] This limited but impactful input has infused specific tracks with Ligotti's signature weird fiction style, amplifying the group's apocalyptic lyricism without dominating the overall catalog.[69] While these figures have bolstered creative variety and continuity, interpersonal tensions have occasionally disrupted collaborations; for instance, early contributor Douglas Pearce of Death in June departed amid ideological clashes, referenced obliquely in Current 93 songs critiquing fascist aesthetics.[5] Such dynamics highlight the absence of a fixed lineup, positioning recurring inputs like those above as de facto stabilizers for the project's coherence.[45]Lineup changes and guest appearances
Current 93 has operated with a fluid, project-specific lineup since its inception in 1982, centered solely on David Tibet as the creative force and sole consistent presence. Initial formations drew from the industrial underground, incorporating figures like Jhonn Balance of Coil and Fritz Haaman of 23 Skidoo on early releases such as Nature Unveiled (1984), alongside frequent input from Steven Stapleton of Nurse with Wound, who contributed tape manipulations and production to numerous recordings through the 1980s and into the 2000s.[24][4] The project's evolution toward acoustic and folk-oriented sounds in the late 1980s and 1990s brought greater involvement from specialists like Michael Cashmore, who joined for live and studio work around 1987—evident in albums such as Swastikas for Noddy—and provided guitar arrangements and compositions on core releases like Thunder Perfect Mind (1992). Stapleton's role persisted across nearly all output until diminishing around 2010, while Cashmore's contributions tapered after 2006 amid relocations and shifting priorities. This stabilization amid broader flux enabled adaptations to the project's sonic demands without rigid hierarchies.[24][10] Guest appearances have been selectively deployed for vocal or interpretive enhancements, such as Nick Cave's contributions to tracks on All the Pretty Little Horses (2001) and later works like I Am the Last of All the Field That Fell (2014), or Marc Almond's delivery of "Idumæa" variants on Black Ships Ate the Sky (2006). These one-off engagements underscore a pragmatic assembly of talent aligned with thematic or textural goals, verifiable through per-release credits rather than enduring memberships.[70][5] Contemporary live configurations, including 2024 European tours, continue this ad-hoc approach with ensembles assembled for specific dates, prioritizing instrumental versatility over fixed personnel to accommodate Tibet's evolving compositions.[24][5]Discography
Studio albums
Current 93's studio albums, directed by David Tibet, transitioned from abrasive industrial noise in the mid-1980s to introspective acoustic folk by the 1990s, with releases often issued in limited vinyl and cassette formats before wider CD reissues. Primary labels included L.A.Y.L.A.H. Antirecords for early works and Tibet's own Durtro imprint from 1987 onward, succeeded by Coptic Cat after 2008.[71][72] The core studio discography, excluding live recordings, collaborations, and compilations, comprises the following full-length releases:| Title | Release Year | Label | Formats and Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nature Unveiled | 1984 | L.A.Y.L.A.H. Antirecords | Vinyl; remastered cassette edition 1992 |
| Dogs Blood Rising | 1984 | L.A.Y.L.A.H. Antirecords | Vinyl, cassette |
| In Menstrual Night | 1986 | Maldoror | Vinyl; reissued on United Dairies |
| Dawn | 1987 | Durtro | Vinyl, CD |
| Imperium | 1987 | L.A.Y.L.A.H. Antirecords | Vinyl |
| Swastikas for Noddy | 1988 | L.A.Y.L.A.H. Antirecords | Double vinyl |
| Thunder Perfect Mind | 1992 | Durtro | Double CD, vinyl; remastered 2018 |
| Of Ruine or Some Blazing Starre | 1994 | Durtro | CD, vinyl |
| All the Pretty Little Horses | 1996 | Durtro | Double CD; illustrated edition |
| Soft Black Stars | 1999 | Durtro | CD, vinyl |
| Sleep Has His House | 2000 | Durtro | CD, vinyl |
| Black Ships Eat the Sky | 2006 | Coptic Cat | Double CD, triple vinyl |
| Honeysuckle Aeons | 2011 | Coptic Cat | Double CD, vinyl |
| I Am the Last of All the Field That Fell | 2014 | Coptic Cat | Double vinyl, CD; UK/North American variants |
| The Light Is Leaving Us All | 2018 | Coptic Cat | Vinyl, CD; recorded in one take |
| If a City Is Set Upon a Hill | 2021 | Coptic Cat | Double vinyl, CD |