Tripti Joshi (Editor)

John Balance

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Origin
  
Mansfield, England

Occupation(s)
  
Musician, poet


Name
  
John Balance

Role
  
Musician

John Balance johnbalance Mishka NYC

Birth name
  
Geoffrey Laurence Burton

Also known as
  
John Balance, Jhonn Balance, Jhon Balance

Born
  
16 February 1962 (
1962-02-16
)

Instruments
  
Vocals, synthesizer, keyboards, guitar, bass guitar, chapman stick, organ, violin

Died
  
November 13, 2004, London, United Kingdom

Music groups
  
Coil (1983 – 2004), Psychic TV (2004), Current 93 (1982 – 1996), Zos Kia, 23 Skidoo, The Nodding Folk

Albums
  
Time Machines, Horse Rotorvator, Scatology, ANS, England's Hidden Reverse

Rosa Mundi - Snowman (feat. John Balance of Coil)


John Balance (first name also spelled Jhon and Jhonn); a pseudonym for Geoffrey Laurence Burton, later Geoff(rey) or Geff Rushton (his stepfather's last name) (16 February 1962 – 13 November 2004), was an English musician, poet and a co-founder of the experimental music group Coil, in collaboration with his partner Peter 'Sleazy' Christopherson. He was responsible for vocals, lyrics, chants, synthetics and various esoteric sound-making instruments and devices. Outside of Coil he collaborated with Nurse with Wound, Death in June, Psychic TV, Current 93, Chris & Cosey, Thighpaulsandra and produced several Nine Inch Nails remixes. His early work and wide-ranging collaborations made him one of the most influential figures in the industrial, experimental minimalist and neofolk music scenes.

Contents

John Balance The First Five Minutes After Death RIP John Balance 16

Murderwerkers - Blue Funk (Scars For E)


Discography

John Balance Kleiner Tod JOHN BALANCE COIL Ein Nachruf

Balance first recorded using the alias "Merderwerkers". The Merderwerkers track, "Blue Funk (Scars for E)", was included on the Sterile Records cassette compilation Standard Response. Balance also published an underground zine, Stabmental, and released a track, "A Thin Veil of Blood", also using the nom du guerre Stabmental. "A Thin Veil of Blood" was included on the cassette compilation Deleted Funtime – Various Tunes for Various Loons. Balance then joined up with Peter Christopherson and Boyd Rice to record Nightmare Culture under the moniker "The Sickness of Snakes". Balance subsequently joined Psychic TV and performed alongside Christopherson; however in 1984, Balance and Christopherson left the group to develop Coil. A short collaboration with Zos Kia produced the split tape Transparent. Credit for the album was shared, and marked Coil's first release. The original Coil / Zos Kia tape, Transparent, was released as a "His-Storical" CD reissue in 1997.

John Balance Coil John Balance Interview 1985 YouTube

During Coil's 23-year career, Balance collaborated with a number of his peers, including Jim Thirlwell/Clint Ruin (Foetus), Marc Almond, Thighpaulsandra, NON, Current 93, and CoH; appearing on many of these artists' albums.

With Psychic TV

John Balance John Balance

  • Dreams Less Sweet
  • Just Drifting
  • Berlin Atonal Vol. 2
  • N.Y. Scum
  • Thee City ov Tokyo/Thee City ov New York
  • Mein-Goett-In-Gen
  • Other groups

  • Merderwerkers: "Blue Funk (Scars for E)" on Sterile Records compilation Standard Response. (1979)
  • Stabmental: "A Thin Veil of Blood" on compilation Deleted Funtime - Various Tunes for Various Loons. (1980)
  • Sickness of Snakes: Nightmare Culture (1985)
  • Rosa Mundi: "The Snow Man" on compilations The Final Solstice, The Final Solstice II and split album Grief. (1999)
  • Death

    Balance died on 13 November 2004, after falling from a two-storey balcony at his home. Peter Christopherson announced Balance's death on the Threshold House website, and provided details surrounding the accident. Balance's memorial service was held near Bristol on 23 November, and was attended by approximately 100 people. November 2014 saw the publication of a retrospective volume of his art called "Bright Lights and Cats with no Mouths" by Edition Timeless.

    References

    John Balance Wikipedia