Ghost Forest Blade Fetish broke up in 1992, reformed in 1993 and toured the U.S., and then parted ways again. During the break, Sain began recording new songs on his 4-track with his then-girlfriend Wakefield, and recording his live performances. Sain recalled the time in a 1995 interview. "Stepping down from the rehearsal and performance rigors of [Blade Fetish and This Ascension], I went back to work in my studio. Then I heard Zoë sing...." Tess Records signed Trance to the Sun in 1993 and the band released
Ghost Forest, a collection of Sain's live and studio recordings, on cassette later that year. Additional musicians included Wakefield on vocals in “Cauldron Street” and "August Rain V.1", and guest contributions by Dave Stein on keyboards, and guitar by Kevin Serra of This Ascension on the track "August Rain V.1". The European branch of Tess Records requested a CD version of the
Ghost Forest. With the intent to raise the fidelity of the recording, a partially re-recorded version of the album was submitted for release on CD in 1994. Sain would eventually remaster the original cassette version for re-release on Below Sea Level Recordings in 2012. Glenn Petteys, who had also toured with
Faith & the Muse and Blade Fetish, performed live with the band in 1994 in support of the album.
"Bloom Flowers, Bloom!" In early 1995, Trance to the Sun released
"Bloom Flowers, Bloom!" with Sain recording or programming instruments and with Wakefield in a more established vocalist/lyricist role. Alternative Press noted that the album "incorporates elements of experimental, goth, ambient, and rock into an ethereal stew, emphasizing cyclical trance structures around which the various elements interweave. Zoë's vocals are often indiscernible, which can be a bit frustrating, but it's the aural quality of her voice that is more important, acting as another instrument and not just a vessel for lyrics, which here are dream-like in their flow and not bereft of meaning." To support
"Bloom Flowers, Bloom!", Sain and Wakefield toured the U.S. with the band
Lycia with additional musician Israel Medina performing bass guitar. During one of these shows,
Lycia vocalist
Mike Van Portfleet lost his voice, and Sain filled in for vocal duties. The band was very close with
Lycia and enjoyed their time on tour together. Sain: "We set up a show for [
Lycia ] to play with us in Santa Barbara. They invited us to play a show with them in Phoenix. Mike is so swell and helpful. I knew I wanted to tour with them and so did he. By the time our west coast shows rolled around, our respective record companies were booking us a joint national tour.... "Mike lost his voice toward the end so I did my best to sing for them in Atlanta. I felt I had done terribly but afterward, all these people came up to me saying, 'I've loved you since
Ionia.' I also wrote a bassline for their song
Nine Hours Later, which they invited me onstage to play at several shows." Also during this tour, Trance to the Sun played
C1, the first annual floating
Convergence festival, in Chicago, Illinois. The band also began appearing on artist compilation albums at this time. Despite frequently being considered as part of the gothic rock genre, Sain did not view the music as such, though he did credit its listeners with discovering many noteworthy bands: "Goth is an important doorway for lots of things that would not be accepted easily anywhere else. For example, who were the first people to embrace
the Sugarcubes? Goths. And now we have a megastar of Björk. Pixies 1988? Gothic audience, not fratboys. Einsturzende Neubaten walked in through the "gothic" door—Miranda Sex Garden—Cocteau Twins. It's no wonder nobody can agree on what "Gothic" means... depth and dissonance and polite confrontationalism are quite possibly the only denominators.... I just like to play interesting music.
It just so happens to be the 'goths' who are listening." "I like good goth music a lot and I do see a certain connection in our music to goth but I've never had any inspiration to be like somebody else or to go in a certain style. I have my own ideas and if they ever too closely resemble something that I've heard before, I usually discard them." In 2020, Sain remastered the album for re-release on Below Sea Level Recordings, including four additional tracks from the era—Live versions of "A Moon Short Stay Cure", "You So You" from Zoë Wakefield's first live performance, "Clown Small & Even", and "Crystalize & Slant" which first appeared on a German compilation.
Venomous Eve Venomous Eve, which was already being recorded prior to the release of
"Bloom Flowers, Bloom!", was released in late 1995. The album relied heavily on the Morpheus
synthesizer manufactured by
E-MU Systems, and credited its performance to Lucian S. Donato as a third member of the group. Sain commented on the experience of gaining a third member in a 1995 interview. "I do work the shit out of my electronic equipment but there's got to be live instruments and a lot of depth as well.... It's been a long, evolutionary process, but I think it's safe to say that we are now a threesome. We've taken on a keyboardist named Lucian, who is really quite a bizarre character. He fits in as though he was always there, it's strange."
Venomous Eve was the best-received Trance to the Sun album to date. Dave Segal of
Alternative Press wrote: "Trance cast off the crutches of conventional song structure and bask in a shimmering miasma of tweaked and freaked guitars, synths, violins and bass... These nine long songs move with knight-like stealth and elegance, wreathed in all manner of bizarre noises..." Albany, NY's Music Advocate wrote that "Venomous Eve is fog-shadowed walks through perfumed night gardens, and languorous waltzes in cold-orb lit tower ballrooms set to brooding gothic-shrouded atmospheres."
Venomous Eve took off on American college radio, achieving the rank of No. 1 most played album on San Francisco area radio station
KFJC in March 1996. On August 29, 1996, Wakefield left the band on the day before the band was to open for
Love Spirals Downwards in San Francisco, California. Trance to the Sun had been opening for
Cindytalk earlier in the year, and Sain asked
Gordon Sharp (
Cindytalk,
This Mortal Coil), who was visiting Sain at the time, to sing in her place. Robert Alonzo, who had just joined the live line-up on drums for the first time in the band's history, played only one earlier show with the group prior to Wakefield's departure. In 2021, Sain remastered the album with an expanded 16 page booklet featuring photos and history from Trance to the Sun's inception through the Venomous Eve era for re-release on Below Sea Level Recordings. == The Wagner Period (1997) ==