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This Mortal Coil
41,225 Followers
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Merch (ad)

Men's Women's Boy Girl Summer Tops Th...
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Men's Women's Boy Girl Summer Tops Th...
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Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
$13.95

Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
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Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
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Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
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Off This Mortal Coil Humorous William...
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Let me shuffle of this mortal coil da...
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Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
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Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
$16.95
About This Mortal Coil
This Mortal Coil is a project of Ivo Watts-Russell, president of the British 4AD record label, begun in 1983. Because it features members of other recording groups, This Mortal Coil (TMC) is an example of a supergroup. The records consist mostly of dark and moody interpretative cover versions of a wide variety of artists ranging from Big Star and Talking Heads to The Apartments and Tim Buckley.
A number of tracks from the first TMC album, It'll End In Tears, feature vocals by Elizabeth Fraser of the Scottish group Cocteau Twins, who also released music on 4AD.
The recording was also used by David Lynch for the film Lost Highway (1997), first as very quiet incidental music and then as an accompaniment to the film's climactic love scene. The track is, however, not included on the soundtrack album for the movie. In 1998 Watts-Russell put together another record very much in the style and format of TMC, and using many of the same musicians, such as John Fryer and Louise Rutkowski. The band's name had become The Hope Blister and the album's title, ...smile's OK.
The group takes its name from Shakespeare. In particular Hamlet's soliloquy To be, or not to be, where it refers to dying; "coil" is used in its archaic sense of "disturbance, trouble":
"What dreams may come, when we have shuffled off this mortal coil, must give us pause."
Hamlet, Act III, Scene 1, line 67
A number of tracks from the first TMC album, It'll End In Tears, feature vocals by Elizabeth Fraser of the Scottish group Cocteau Twins, who also released music on 4AD.
The recording was also used by David Lynch for the film Lost Highway (1997), first as very quiet incidental music and then as an accompaniment to the film's climactic love scene. The track is, however, not included on the soundtrack album for the movie. In 1998 Watts-Russell put together another record very much in the style and format of TMC, and using many of the same musicians, such as John Fryer and Louise Rutkowski. The band's name had become The Hope Blister and the album's title, ...smile's OK.
The group takes its name from Shakespeare. In particular Hamlet's soliloquy To be, or not to be, where it refers to dying; "coil" is used in its archaic sense of "disturbance, trouble":
"What dreams may come, when we have shuffled off this mortal coil, must give us pause."
Hamlet, Act III, Scene 1, line 67
Show More
No upcoming shows
Send a request to This Mortal Coil to play in your city
Request a Show
Similar Artists On Tour
New Order
1M Followers
Follow
Slowdive
298K Followers
Follow
Pixies
2M Followers
Follow
Morrissey
628K Followers
Follow
Merch (ad)

Men's Women's Boy Girl Summer Tops Th...
$19.25

Men's Women's Boy Girl Summer Tops Th...
$19.25

Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
$13.95

Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
$13.95

Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
$13.95

Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
$13.95

Off This Mortal Coil Humorous William...
$14.99

Let me shuffle of this mortal coil da...
$18.99

Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
$16.95

Skull and Death Shuffle off this mort...
$16.95
About This Mortal Coil
This Mortal Coil is a project of Ivo Watts-Russell, president of the British 4AD record label, begun in 1983. Because it features members of other recording groups, This Mortal Coil (TMC) is an example of a supergroup. The records consist mostly of dark and moody interpretative cover versions of a wide variety of artists ranging from Big Star and Talking Heads to The Apartments and Tim Buckley.
A number of tracks from the first TMC album, It'll End In Tears, feature vocals by Elizabeth Fraser of the Scottish group Cocteau Twins, who also released music on 4AD.
The recording was also used by David Lynch for the film Lost Highway (1997), first as very quiet incidental music and then as an accompaniment to the film's climactic love scene. The track is, however, not included on the soundtrack album for the movie. In 1998 Watts-Russell put together another record very much in the style and format of TMC, and using many of the same musicians, such as John Fryer and Louise Rutkowski. The band's name had become The Hope Blister and the album's title, ...smile's OK.
The group takes its name from Shakespeare. In particular Hamlet's soliloquy To be, or not to be, where it refers to dying; "coil" is used in its archaic sense of "disturbance, trouble":
"What dreams may come, when we have shuffled off this mortal coil, must give us pause."
Hamlet, Act III, Scene 1, line 67
A number of tracks from the first TMC album, It'll End In Tears, feature vocals by Elizabeth Fraser of the Scottish group Cocteau Twins, who also released music on 4AD.
The recording was also used by David Lynch for the film Lost Highway (1997), first as very quiet incidental music and then as an accompaniment to the film's climactic love scene. The track is, however, not included on the soundtrack album for the movie. In 1998 Watts-Russell put together another record very much in the style and format of TMC, and using many of the same musicians, such as John Fryer and Louise Rutkowski. The band's name had become The Hope Blister and the album's title, ...smile's OK.
The group takes its name from Shakespeare. In particular Hamlet's soliloquy To be, or not to be, where it refers to dying; "coil" is used in its archaic sense of "disturbance, trouble":
"What dreams may come, when we have shuffled off this mortal coil, must give us pause."
Hamlet, Act III, Scene 1, line 67
Show More
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