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Coil - The Ape of Naples CD (album) cover

THE APE OF NAPLES

Coil

 

Progressive Electronic

3.74 | 28 ratings

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Dobermensch
Prog Reviewer
3 stars I've always regarded this hugely appreciated album within Coil circles as being overrated . It's excellent in parts but for the majority is a big slice of annihilation and negativity.

A thoroughly miserable tune opens 'The Ape of Naples'. 'Fire of the Mind' is quite uninvolving, but strangely reminds me of an electronic counterpart to early 70's UK folk band 'Spirogyra' with it's whining vocals and ill humoured subject matter.

'The Last Amethyst Deceiver' opens with a super double bass sound and a cool backing track of whining electronics and xylophone which introduces a seriously upset John Balance. Lines are repeated in a monotone manner that were never used before by Coil and at times make me think that he's actually ran out of ideas for lyrics.

A nice fake accordion with weird swirling electric sounds introduce 'Tattooed Man'. To tell you the truth I can well do without the homo-erotic lyrics thank you very much.

'Triple Sun' begins in the style of their much lauded but rejected Clive Barker 'Hellraiser' soundtrack (which is a story in itself!). Being purely electronic with pulses, throbbing bass and a threatening air of menace. That is, until John Balance starts singing - where he constantly repeats the line 'I swallowed the one you buried' - it's enough to drive you mental.

One of two 'five' star recordings emerges next with 'It's in my Blood'. Big horns blast, deep and VERY filthy drum programming pave the way for a truly crazy vocal performance of shrieks and shrills. Sweeping 'Kryzystof Penderecki' strings intrude at various points and they really send shivers down the spine in a proper horror movie kind of way.

Without a doubt, the highlight on 'The Ape of naples' is 'Heaven's Blade'. A throbbing mass of irregular electronic bass thumps almost in the style of D.A.F. This lays a foundation of tense and uneasy listening. Squeaky synthetic sounds and loads of vocal deconstructions batter around your brain until you feel almost comatose. It sounds sick - almost like watching a relative die attached to a drip. Sharp, clean, disinfected and truly grotesque.

An almost Christian choirboy approach is used vocally in "Cold Cell". Once again though, it's very downbeat with grim lyrics such as 'Save us from the Death Penalty... Amen...'

An unusual version of 1991's brilliant 'Teenage Lightning' is next up. It's nice enough and almost acapella in approach. Unfortunately it doesn't carry anywhere near the same dynamism and punch it did in 'Love's Secret Domain' from '91. It's probably not supposed to but that doesn't make it any better.

'Amber Rain' continues this run of miserable electronic vibes with a vocal approach that sounds like a 'knackered speak your weight machine'

'Going Up' sound infeasibly camp - which is a facet Coil always avoided on almost all recordings. Based on the 70's UK Sit-Com 'Are You Being Served' it bears no semblance of humour - just like the series itself which was utter rubbish and always will be. An instantly forgettable piece of twaddle which I find a particularly disappointing way for Coil to bow out.

Other than the two 'meisterwerks' comprising - 'Heaven's Blade' and 'It's in My Blood' which sound like they were recorded in the deepest recesses of hell this is an entirely forgettable album. However, due to these two exceptional tracks it scrapes a "three".

Dobermensch | 3/5 |

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