The New Backwards
The New Backwards is a studio album by the English experimental music group Coil, released on 18 April 2008 through Threshold House.[1] The album consists of nine tracks that rework material from the band's unreleased 1990s demo Backwards, originally recorded as a potential release for Trent Reznor's Nothing Records label.[2] Drawing from electronic, industrial, and ambient genres, it blends chaotic rhythms, chanting vocals, and exotica influences, marking one of Coil's final major projects following the death of co-founder John Balance in 2004.[1][3] The recordings originated in 1996 at Swanyard Studios in London and Nothing Studios in New Orleans, with initial production by Coil members Peter Christopherson, John Balance (credited as Jhonn Balance), and Drew McDowall, alongside collaborator Danny Hyde.[3] These sessions produced a demo that circulated informally online but remained officially unreleased for over a decade due to label issues and the band's evolving priorities.[2] In 2007, Christopherson and Hyde remixed the material in Bangkok, transforming the raw demos into a cohesive album that posthumously honors Balance's contributions through his preserved vocals and performances.[3] The tracklist includes standout pieces such as "Careful What You Wish For," "AYOR," and "Nature Is a Language," each running between five and nine minutes and emphasizing the group's signature experimental edge.[1] Initially issued as a bonus disc in a limited four-LP box set accompanying Coil's The Ape of Naples reissue, The New Backwards later received standalone CD and digital releases, with vinyl editions following in 2016 via Important Records and an extended edition in 2022 from Infinite Fog Productions that adds bonus tracks from the original sessions, with a further reissue announced for November 2025 by Kontakt Audio.[2][3][4] Conceived as early as 1993 as a follow-up to Coil's Love's Secret Domain, the project represents a bridge between the band's 1990s industrial explorations and their later ambient works, solidifying its place in Coil's discography as a testament to their innovative sound design and resilience amid personal tragedy.[3]Background and Development
Origins of the Backwards Demo
The Backwards demo originated in 1993 at Swanyard Studios in London, where Coil created initial material specifically for Torso Records as a potential follow-up to their 1991 album Love's Secret Domain.[5] The project began with tracks like the title song "Backwards," which was initially composed in 1992 in collaboration with producer Tim Simenon, with vocals added the following year.[5] These early demos featured a rhythmic, experimental style influenced by the band's evolving interest in dance-oriented electronica, though they remained raw and unfinished at this stage.[6] Further development occurred during mid-1990s sessions, culminating in 1996 at Nothing Studios in New Orleans, where the material was refined for a prospective deal with Nothing Records and its distributor Interscope.[5][7] The band aimed to produce a full album under this arrangement, incorporating additional tracks and adjustments to suit the label's industrial and electronic aesthetic, but contractual negotiations stalled due to disputes over exclusivity for video production work and interference from label executives described as "grey men."[5] As Danny Hyde, Coil's engineer and collaborator, later explained, "Backwards at the time was not released because of the Americans essentially."[5] The demo ultimately remained unreleased owing to these label changes, compounded by creative shifts in Coil's direction following Thighpaulsandra's departure from the band in 2001, after which John Balance deemed the material "too dancey" for their post-millennial output.[5] By 2004, the project's misalignment with the band's darker, more ambient explorations had further diminished its priority.[5] Its first public airing came on June 18, 2001, during a special broadcast on Dutch Radio 4's Supplement program, where selections like "AYOR" and "A Cold Cell" revealed the demo's raw, experimental essence—marked by pulsating rhythms and unpolished textures that contrasted with Coil's later refinements.[8][5] This exposure highlighted the material's foundational role, even as it was later reworked into The New Backwards.[2]Reworking Process
In 2007, Peter Christopherson conceived The New Backwards as a project to revisit and rework tracks from Coil's 1990s Backwards sessions that had been set aside following label disputes and the band's shift toward more ambient explorations in albums like the Musick to Play in the Dark series. These materials, originally recorded between 1993 and 1996, represented unfinished experiments from the band's industrial phase but were set aside due to creative mismatches.[2][9] Christopherson collaborated with longtime Coil associate Danny Hyde to rearrange and refine the tracks, drawing on the original session tapes to transform them into a cohesive suite. The reworking emphasized structural refinements while preserving the core rhythmic and textural foundations of the source material, blending the era's industrial edges with more polished experimental contours. This process occurred in Bangkok, Thailand, where Christopherson had relocated, and marked a key effort in his post-Coil endeavors following John Balance's death in 2004.[2][5] The reworked tracks were finalized under Christopherson's Threshold House label, which he had repurposed for solo and posthumous Coil releases, bridging the band's 1990s industrial sound with the atmospheric aesthetics of later works like The Ape of Naples. This integration paved the way for the album's 2008 debut, initially as a vinyl bonus disc accompanying The Ape of Naples and later as a standalone CD edition. The original 1993 Backwards demo served as the primary source but was substantially altered during this revival.[2]Production
Key Personnel
Peter "Sleazy" Christopherson was the primary visionary for The New Backwards, overseeing production, arrangement, and conceptualization after the death of his Coil co-founder John Balance in 2004.[5] As Coil's surviving founder, Christopherson revisited and substantially reworked archival material from the band's mid-1990s sessions to create the album, ensuring its release under the Coil name while honoring Balance's earlier contributions through preserved vocal and bass elements.[2] Danny Hyde served as co-producer, specializing in electronic manipulation and sound design during the 2007 remixing sessions.[5] A longtime collaborator with Coil since the early 1990s, Hyde's technical expertise in programming and sonic restructuring complemented Christopherson's creative direction, transforming raw demo tracks into the album's cohesive, experimental soundscapes.[10] Unlike many Coil projects, The New Backwards did not involve other longstanding members such as John Balance (deceased) or Thighpaulsandra, positioning it distinctly as a Christopherson-Hyde endeavor conducted under the Coil banner.[1] The duo maintained full control over the final mix, with no significant guest contributions beyond the original session recordings, emphasizing their intimate partnership in realizing the album's vision.[5]Recording Locations and Techniques
The final recording and mixing sessions for The New Backwards took place in Bangkok, Thailand, in 2007, led by Peter Christopherson and Danny Hyde. These sessions reworked material originally captured in the mid-1990s, transforming stray tracks from earlier Coil experiments into a cohesive album characterized by rhythmic intensity and electronic experimentation.[11] The original Backwards demo material stemmed from sessions at Swanyard Studios in London and Nothing Studios in New Orleans during 1996, where Coil—comprising Peter Christopherson, Jhonn Balance, and Drew McDowall—collaborated with Danny Hyde using analog equipment including Fairlight samplers, Akai samplers, and synthesizers like the Korg Polysix. These early recordings emphasized manual techniques such as drop-ins on tape and Eventide effects for dub-style processing, resulting in raw, unedited tracks heavy on sampling and improvisation.[2][5] In contrast, the 2007 Bangkok rework incorporated mid-2000s digital methods to digitize and manipulate the analog tapes from the 1990s sessions. This process involved backwards sampling—a signature Coil approach evident in track titles and structures—along with looping and glitch effects to generate chaotic, dance-oriented rhythms that diverged significantly from the originals' more ambient leanings. The integration of these unreleased elements presented challenges, including synchronization difficulties arising from the age of the source material and shifts in production paradigms between analog and digital eras.[5]Release History
2008 Initial Release
The New Backwards was initially released on April 18, 2008, through Threshold House, the independent label established by Peter Christopherson.[2][12] This release marked Christopherson's continuation of the Coil project following the death of his longtime collaborator John Balance in 2004, presenting the album as a Coil work to honor the duo's legacy.[2] The album launched in multiple formats to cater to collectors and audiophiles. It was issued as a compact disc (CD) under catalog number THBKK4, pressed in Thailand, alongside digital downloads available in high-fidelity FLAC, as well as AAC and MP3 formats, exclusively through the Threshold House website.[2][12] Additionally, a limited 12-inch vinyl edition served as a bonus disc in Important Records' four-LP box set reissue of Coil's The Ape of Naples, which debuted in February 2008, with remaining copies later distributed via Threshold House.[2][12] Marketing efforts targeted experimental and industrial music enthusiasts through niche channels, including promotional MP3 samples of tracks like "Careful What You Wish For" and "Copacaballa" shared via the Threshold House webstore.[2] Initial availability focused on direct mail-order sales from the label's online shop and a handful of specialized retailers, emphasizing the album's high-fidelity audio options to appeal to dedicated fans.[2] Sales were modest, reflecting the project's cult status within underground electronic music circles.[2]Later Reissues and Expanded Edition
In 2016, Important Records issued the first standalone vinyl edition of The New Backwards as a limited LP reissue, aimed at expanding accessibility in the US market following the original CD release.[13] On March 30, 2022, Infinite Fog Productions released the Expanded Edition, which added nine bonus tracks from unreleased sessions recorded between 1993 and 1996, extending the total runtime to over two hours across formats including a deluxe triple-gatefold 3LP, digipak CD, and digital download.[10] This edition featured material originally recorded between 1993 and 1996, remixed and polished by Peter Christopherson and Danny Hyde, with mastering by Jessica Thompson to enhance sonic depth.[10] A remastered version of the core album appeared in 2022, optimized for digital streaming platforms such as Apple Music.[14] In 2023, Kontakt Audio (distributed by Light in the Attic Records) handled a US reissue in black and clear vinyl LP formats, alongside a 2CD set incorporating extended content from the prior expanded release, further broadening physical availability in North America.[15]Track Listing
CD and Digital Edition
The CD and digital edition of The New Backwards features a standard nine-track sequence that captures the album's core essence, drawing from reworked material originating in the 1990s sessions.[1] This format was optimized for continuous playback on digital devices and CDs, presenting the full runtime without the abridgments found in other pressings.[10] The track listing is as follows:| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Careful What You Wish For" | 9:06 |
| 2 | "AYOR" | 7:40 |
| 3 | "Nature Is a Language" | 8:00 |
| 4 | "Fire of the Green Dragon" | 7:54 |
| 5 | "Algerian Basses" | 5:02 |
| 6 | "Copacaballa" | 6:50 |
| 7 | "Paint Me as a Dead Soul" | 6:31 |
| 8 | "Backwards" | 5:22 |
| 9 | "Princess Margaret's Man in the D'Jamalfna" | 8:49 |
Vinyl Edition
The vinyl edition of The New Backwards features a condensed six-track configuration tailored for the 12-inch LP format, emphasizing longer rhythmic pieces from the original sessions. Initially released in 2008 as part of a limited-edition box set with the The Ape of Naples reissue on Threshold House, it was pressed on 180-gram black vinyl and limited to 1200 copies for enhanced audiophile quality.[16] The track listing for the 2008 pressing is as follows:| Side | Track | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | Careful What You Wish For | 9:11 |
| A | 2 | Nature Is a Language | 8:04 |
| A | 3 | Algerian Basses | 5:04 |
| B | 1 | Copacabbala | 6:52 |
| B | 2 | Paint Me As a Dead Soul | 6:31 |
| B | 3 | Princess Margaret's Man In The D'Jamalfna | 8:49 |
Extended Edition Bonus Tracks
The 2022 Expanded Edition of The New Backwards incorporates nine bonus tracks derived from unreleased sessions spanning 1993 to 1996, featuring instrumentals and live variants that illuminate the unpolished evolution of the album's compositions. These additions appear exclusively in the 3LP and 2CD configurations issued by Infinite Fog Productions, enhancing the release with material originally recorded at Swanyard Studios in London and Nothing Studios in New Orleans, and later remixed by Peter Christopherson and Danny Hyde.[10][9] The bonus content collectively contributes 1:04:43 to the overall runtime, emphasizing Coil's improvisational and atmospheric experimentation during this era.[19] The bonus tracks are as follows:- "AYOR Live Pornmod (It's In My Blood) - Live Geoff" (4:53)
- "Ambient Basses Hijack Mix 1" (6:14)
- "Wur Click Wur Ruff 1994" (7:14)
- "Backwards Dist Vox" (6:47)
- "Drone Geff Master" (7:04)
- "Carny Master" (7:07)
- "Drone Skellies" (7:06)
- "Choir Droney Skellies" (7:03)
- "Backwards Live Wip-Fixed Softer Backwards" (8:15)
The Backwards Demo
History and Significance
The Backwards demo originated in 1992, with initial work on the title track alongside Tim Simenon, and further development in 1993 at Coil's Swanyard Studios in London, where the band recorded material intended as a follow-up to their 1991 album Love's Secret Domain, with material submitted to Torso Records for potential release.[20][5] This early version featured contributions from guests including William Burroughs, Terence McKenna, Tim Simenon, and Marc Almond, incorporating elements like theremins, bodhráns, and a Mellotron once owned by John Lennon, and was described in Coil's Threshold House newsletter as "vintage Coil with churning noise constructions" that were stripped down and rebuilt for raw power.[20] The project evolved through the mid-1990s amid Coil's label difficulties, including complications with Interscope and Nothing Records, leading to further sessions and a final mix completed in 1996 at Trent Reznor's Nothing Studios in New Orleans as part of a planned five-album deal with Nothing Records.[5][21] These troubles, exacerbated by contractual disputes and financial strains, prevented an official release at the time, leaving the material in limbo despite Coil's intentions to issue it through Nothing's imprint.[5] Demos from the project received their only official public airing on June 18, 2001, during a Dutch public radio broadcast on Radio 4, where segments were intermixed with a two-hour interview conducted by Arno Peeters to promote an upcoming Coil performance in the Netherlands.[21][22] This rare exposure ignited sustained interest among fans in Coil's unreleased catalog, highlighting the band's elusive output during a period of transition. Originally unreleased due to label issues, the Backwards demo was officially issued in 2015 by Cold Spring Records as a 12-track CD and double LP, compiled from the original session files preserved by collaborator Danny Hyde, marking the first authorized release of the material.[23][24] A 10-year anniversary double LP reissue followed in October 2025.[25] As a key chapter in Coil's discography, the Backwards demo encapsulates their chaotic industrial phase of the early to mid-1990s, bridging the rhythmic intensity of Love's Secret Domain with the darker ambient explorations of later works like Musick to Play in the Dark, before the group's stylistic shift toward more ethereal soundscapes.[5][6] It holds a significant place in Coil's lore, frequently referenced in archival discussions and enthusiast analyses as emblematic of their experimental ethos amid personal and professional upheavals.[5][2]Track Listing
The Backwards demo, as officially released in 2015 by Cold Spring Records (CSR203CD), consists of 12 tracks from the original 1990s sessions, featuring raw and unpolished versions of material that would later be reworked for The New Backwards. Earlier iterations, such as the 1993 Torso submission and 2001 radio broadcast, featured eight tracks, but the full release incorporates additional pieces from the Nothing Studios sessions. These versions differ significantly from the final album tracks in structure and production, showcasing early experimentation.[23][24][2] The track listing is as follows:| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Intro | 0:52 |
| 2 | Backwards | 6:48 |
| 3 | Amber Rain | 5:45 |
| 4 | Fire of the Green Dragon | 4:43 |
| 5 | Be Careful What You Wish For | 3:49 |
| 6 | Nature Is a Language | 6:07 |
| 7 | The Test | 2:51 |
| 8 | Copacaballa | 7:32 |
| 9 | Paint Me as a Dead Soul | 5:48 |
| 10 | AYOR (It's in My Blood) | 4:35 |
| 11 | A Cold Cell | 6:20 |
| 12 | Fire of the Mind | 5:49 |