All posts by Camille

All Flags Are False / A Troubled Moment

EDWARD KA-SPEL

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Release date and track list

November 20, 2022
US 7″ WCR-017 on Witch Cat Records

Feb 3, 2023
US 7″ WCR-017 on Witch Cat Records

Side A
All Flags Are False

Side B
A Troubled Moment


Credits
  • Edward Ka-Spel

Notes

A special release to coincide with the Edward Ka-Spel solo show.  Available at The Mercury Cafe on the night of that show. It is a 7 inch Lathe Cut record. Limited to 10 Hand numbered copies.

*For all the collectors out there – there will be another pressing of these with slight differences next year. Sorry for such a small number of copies, but it turned into a time issue for us. I’m grateful to Adam at meep records for being able to squeeze these in.

All Flags Are False is from The Concrete Diaries.

2nd limited edition of 50:
Originally released as a companion piece for the Edward Ka-Spel solo show that took place in Denver, CO on 11-20-22. Due to time constraints only 10 copies were made, and sold out immediately. For all my collector friends out there, here is the 2nd edition.
*please note – artwork will be slightly different on the 2nd edition*

This lathe cut record will only be available to purchase between Feb 3rd and Feb 28th. While the 2nd edition is limited to 50 copies, I will only make the amount that have sold in this time frame. So if only 12 are purchased only 12 will be made. The records will ship out between Mid March and early April.

The first 12 records made will be clear blue, and the remainder will be split up between the colors white, black, and clear. Records colors will be sent out randomly.

Side A: All Flags Are False – From the Album “The Concrete Diaries” which was released digitally in 2022 and will see a full vinyl release (fingers crossed) later this year
Side B: A Troubled Moment – A sound collage that was recorded during the 2022 North American Legendary Pink Dots tour. Exclusive to this lathe cut.

Scaremeister- Sunday live chat with The Legendary Pink Dots and Mark Spybey

Sunday Live Chat Tour Finale special with Legendary Pink DotS and Mark Spybey DVOA

Join us today from the last show of the Legendary Pink Dots Tours 2022 as they setup for a special on off night of performances in Denver. New LPD’S member Randall will host with Mark Spybey and give up a recap on the tour with thoughts from everybody. Mark Spybey will be performing DVOA set and will be there to co host and we’ll see what happens. Great poster from Simon Paul !

source: Scaremeister

Away

DUSTBOMBERS (WITH ERIK DROST)

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Cover ImageRelease date and tracklist

April 8, 2022
NL MP3 self-released by Dustbombers

  1. Away
  2. This is not my Dystopian Future
  3. All the Things

 


Credits

All songs by Dustbombers

  • Guitar: Erik Drost
  • Bass, programming, vocals: Joost Reijnders

Produced, mixed by Dustbombers
Mastering by Alan Douches (West West Side Music)

 

Sunday Live Chat- November 20 2022

Join cEvin key this Sunday from the last show of The Legendary Pink Dots Tour 2022 as they setup for a special on off night of performances in Denver. New LPDS member Randall will host with Mark Spybey and give up a recap on the tour with thoughts from everybody. Mark Spybey will be performing DVOA set and will be there to co host and we’ll see what happens.

 

Bandcamp Friday- November 2022

It’s Bandcamp Friday and a quieter one for The Dots as we explore the great continent of North America. Even so, we are announcing the deluxe 3 x cd edition of ‘The Maria Dimension’. The intention is to bring a bunch of them back to Europe with us.
As for other new titles released for the tour, we’re holding back for now but stay tuned! Love’n’peace -EK

Also, there is a very limited edition of The Museum Of Human Happiness Glow in the Dark 2LP.

(Also available on Metropolis Records.)

Dark electronic prophets Legendary Pink Dots will enchant Orlando on Thursday

By Nicolette Shurba on Wed, Nov 2, 2022 at 1:00 am

Photo by Joep Hendrikx

Frontman and lyricist Edward Ka-Spel, of the long-standing post-punk, avant-garde and spell-binding music experience the Legendary Pink Dots, has no intention of slowing down lest life catch up with him.

For the band’s recent online “Hallowe’en Special,” Ka-Spel chronicled a close encounter with the fragility of life’s interconnectedness — a real and recent story of jaywalking as a vehicle dangerously shared the same lane — his quiet, ethereal voice hovering over lugubrious music with an impassioned reflection: “To pause is to realize how big the picture really is, and be overwhelmed.”

Indeed, there’s been no pause for Ka-Spel in the 41 years since the creation of the Pink Dots. And despite the world coming to a devastating halt in the spring of 2020, Ka-Spel has been as prolific as ever, releasing four solo albums in the first four months of this year, as well as the latest Pink Dots album, The Museum of Human Happiness on Metropolis Records.

Writing and recording The Museum of Human Happiness during the quarantine period of the pandemic, Ka-Spel was afforded the opportunity to obsess over sound and quality.

“I’m a very sort of finicky person when it comes to sound quality, and I’m very lucky I’m in a band full of professional sound engineers,” Ka-Spel says. “Not myself, but Erik [Drost], the guitar player, and Randall [Frazier], who is as well. They know all about getting the best sound out of anything, so [of] course that really helps.”

Separated physically from each other, the band members instead shared recordings of their individual parts through cyberspace. “We had the luxury of time, and it’s always good to have that time to be able to dot all the i’s and cross all the t’s,” says Ka-Spel.
Musing over the acceptance of human mortality, the cycle of artistic output, the horrors of a global pandemic and the crushing Russia-Ukraine war, Ka-Spel put pen to paper to process the world around him.

“It makes you want to scream, and the way I tend to scream is through what I write,” says Ka-Spel.

In an ever-more uncertain reality, Ka-Spel is sure of one thing, and that’s enough to keep him going: “This is what I do. It feels like a calling, and you have to answer that calling.”

With the recent retirement of longtime collaborator, creative foil and Pink Dots mainstay Phil Knight (aka the Silverman), Ka-Spel is the last standing founding member of the Pink Dots. The departure of Knight from the band doesn’t diminish the sense of family Ka-Spel feels with his current touring lineup, however.

Randall Frazier (also of openers Orbit Service), stepped in for Silverman and has been regularly touring with the Pink Dots for the last 25 years. Ka-Spel describes the band’s current lineup as “different variations of the same family every night.”

Orlandoans are in for a post-Halloween treat with the Dots coming to town on Thursday. It’s their first return to Florida in many years, and they’re bringing along rare solo LPs and other mouth-watering merch. Ka-Spel himself makes a habit of mingling with the crowd after the show. And as surreal as it is for audience to see the magus-like Ka-Spel wandering quietly amongst them, it’s in some ways just as odd for Ka-Spel these days.

During the pandemic, Ka-Spel wondered if this were the end of the longest and most enduring careers in alternative and post-punk music. “I won’t deny there were times when I thought, ‘That’s it,’” says Ka-Spel. “It felt really like now it’s as if life stops.”
Ka-Spel’s albums are not the only thing he brings an intensity to; his stage performance is a transcendental experience, up there with mystical worthies like Syd Barrett and David Tibet.

“It’s a very, very intense time. You want to go to the edge, and you want to at some point sort of step over that edge, so you feel like you are in a kind of … I call it the zone,” shares Ka-Spel.

“If I don’t reach that zone then that show has not worked. But it rarely happens that I don’t reach that zone because I make damn sure I do everything to get there.”
Ready to deliver and unable to stop, Ka-Spel wears his gratitude on the sleeve of his cloak.

“It is the fragility of life and the blessing of being able to do what I do,” says Ka-Spel. “I feel like an incredibly lucky person to be able to do this indeed, over 40 years down the line from when I began.”

Source: Orlando Weekly