Time Capsule: Cocteau Twins, Treasure
While Heaven or Las Vegas went on to become Cocteau Twins' most renowned album, it's their masterpiece Treasure that cleared the path to the Scottish band becoming one of the most influential groups of all time.

There are sometimes albums so magical, so transformative that when it comes time to write about them, as a music critic, I find it challenging to describe how immense it is. You don’t want to give away the magician’s secret, dissecting how it became the groundbreaking record that changed the course of the future of music and will surely inspire generations to come. Cocteau Twins’ Treasure is one of those.
My ’80s-obsessed parents, whose taste falls more in the category of A-ha and Duran Duran than the goth-adjacent, moody masterminds of the decade, didn’t show me Cocteau Twins. Instead, I found out about them in my early twenties through a colleague, and like many other music writers and musicians alike, discovering Treasure was like uncovering a trove of riches. Treasure is the type of album that’s made to absolute perfection, never to be replicated, with distinctive, ethereal vocals and ambient, atmospheric production. It’s that quality that is a blessing and a curse: it ruined every other album for me. No matter how much those who have been inspired by Treasure-era Cocteau Twins, from shoegaze greats Slowdive to modern pop marvels like Caroline Polachek, they don’t even scratch the surface of the brilliance of the group’s third album.
Treasure was made during a turning point for Cocteau Twins. The Scottish duo of vocalist Elizabeth Fraser and multi-instrumentalist Robin Guthrie had expanded, adding bassist Simon Raymonde to the mix, marking their first return to this configuration of the band since the departure of Will Heggie, who left following the release of their debut LP, Garlands. They played their first slew of shows in North America, having amassed a global following after their 1983 sophomore record, Head Over Heels. 4AD co-founder Ivo Watts-Russell wanted Brian Eno to produce Treasure, a move that felt fitting, given that Eno is the godfather of ambient, experimental rock. Eno declined the opportunity, deciding that the band didn’t need his input. His intuition was right. Not only did Cocteau Twins not need him, but much like him, they had become masters of their own domain, with rich sonic textures that pioneered dream pop.
Garlands was straightforward post-punk, with Fraser’s vocals not yet tapping into their signature, warbled style, leaving much to be desired. Head Over Heels gave glimpses of Cocteau Twins’ potential, as it saw Fraser beginning to manipulate her voice to sound like part of the instrumentation, adding texture to the guitar-focused tracks, but it’s in Treasure that she perfects this practice, proving herself to be one of the world’s most unmistakable vocalists.