All posts by edwardo

Midlands Metalheads Radio- Edward Ka-Spel

The Legendary Pink Dots talk about their forthcoming UK shows

by John E Smoke

Anglo-Dutch experimental rock band The Legendary Pink Dots are gracing the UK with two live dates in April 2014. This here DJ/reviewer was particularly taken with their last studio album ‘The Gethsemane Option’ as were much of the press who showered it with praise.  John E Smoke set out on a mission to enter the wild and fruitful garden of The Legendary Pink Dots to find out a little more. Edward Ka-Spel awaited….

Thank you for the opportunity for a bit of a natter with us at Rivetheads/Dark 3rd Radio. How are the Pink Dots today? Feeling Legendary?

Mythological more like it. A relic from some bygone age when power-mad surgeons ripped out children’s tonsils caring little about the consequences. You got it, I’m recovering from tonsillitis even though said tonsils have been missing for decades.

Legendary Pink Dots formed back in 1980. Your career is quite frankly awe inspiring and perhaps bewildering in scope and scale. As hard as it is to imagine, for someone who has never heard the Legendary Pink Dots, would you suggest they start with you most recent album or would you point them elsewhere in your back catalogue?

Tough one. Latest album is as good a place as any as that’s how we sound right now…and the Dots remains an evolving entity.

lpdThe title ‘The Gethsemane Option’ and the songs within bring to mind skewed biblical themes, also perhaps perceptible in the album artwork. Would you care to enlighten us to the themes of the album? And please tell us about the concept behind the artwork.

Artwork conceived by an artist friend (Vera) in Russia who listened intently to the music and drew her own conclusions.  Personally I find explaining the deeper meaning of an album akin to pulling the wings off a butterfly. Better to form your own interpretation.

Your music over the years has spanned many styles and themes including psychedelic rock, industrial, synth-pop, avant-garde and so on. It must be gratifying to be able to plunder such a range of sounds under the umbrella of one band and perhaps liberating too?

It’s liberating. A lot of wild wonderful music has been made over the centuries…I guess my starting point was psychedelic music which I hope we are able to expand upon.

When it comes to recording a new album, do you have a particular direction in mind, or perhaps aware subconsciously of a direction it might take?

It’s always a subconscious thing, but we tend to record fast and it means a certain consistency as well as an inner sense to the whole creation.

lbd2

You have two UK dates coming up in April. Legendary Pink Dots do not appear to be shy of touring but we don’t see you much in the UK, despite you having formed here. Is it the food or the weather?

It’s the weather.

I’ve never had the pleasure of seeing you live, describe a typical LPD show, if there is such a thing. What can your audiences expect of your two UK dates?

Depends on the mood we’re in.  I’d just be careful if it looks like we’re in a friendly mood.

Perhaps unusually I came to learn of the Legendary Pink Dots through your collaborations with cEvin Key under The Tear Garden banner. Do you class this project as still being active? Can we expect any new studio material from The Tear Garden?

Very active…recordings planned for later this year.

What is next for The Legendary Pink Dots when you leave our grey and murky shores?

A few more Euro shows plus a couple of obscure vinyl releases concerning the 10 beings who rule The World.

Thank you muchly for your time. Is there anything else you’d like to share with our readers?

A pleasure. Considering the illness I’m emerging from, best I share as little as possible right now.

http://www.midlandsmetalheads.com/the-legendary-pink-dots-talk-about-forthcoming-uk-shows/

 

Apparition- review by Kitty Sneezes

Edward Ka-Spel‘s brilliance with The Legendary Pink Dots is to introduce us to isolated characters and then immerse us in their world-view through expansive and mysterious soundscapes. He begins with the most restricted, infinitesimal point of consciousness and then slowly expands it outward towards a state of ‘cosmic consciousness’ (to use the phrase of 1960s psychonauts). Musically, he often follows this template of expansion, with simple melody lines repeating and layering in increased complexity of texture. Much of the LPD’s music is an undertaking to help the listener (and perhaps composer) escape his/her own head. Lyrical phrases, musical motifs, album titles and themes recur across decades, but tonal shifts between albums are slow and subtle.  Hopefully, The Legendary Dots Project, like the Residents andSparks projects before, will provide the keen reader and listener with a giddy entry-point into the Legendary Pink Dots’ musical world. Fulfil the prophecy!

 

Adam:  This is a strange and engaging album. It was finished just as the Dots’ original line-up disintegrated and this is reflected in the music, which sometimes sounds as though it’s barely holding itself together. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing though, since some of the Dots’ early albums have been marred by lack of tonal variation, whereas Apparition is all over the musical junkyard. It starts with what sounds like marbles and coins being dropped down a drain, intercepted by the echoing of conversation, perhaps from an abandoned arcade or bingo hall (there is the garish bleeping of what I imagine to be a slot machine, but has the potential to be a ZX Spectrum, with the console released in 1982, the year of the album’s production). Then a drum machine kicks in alongside the squelch of a synthesizer. The music bristles like an ant colony. It sounds weirdly modern too, almost like an album track by Lady Gaga or Ke$ha, if you ignore Ka-Spel’s cryptic lyrics, that are obscured in the mix here. The whole thing feels busy and jittery and a little frightening. The Dots’ Bandcamp page testifies that during the recordings, the band’s headquarters were haunted – an experience that involved “a ouija session, a black dog and out of body experiences”. As ever, the Dots tend to undercut the sinister atmospherics with droll humour. That’s not to say that some of the material isn’t genuinely upsetting, though. ‘The Blessing’ is one of the most troubling songs of the Dots early 80s output, with lyrics from the point-of-view of some sinister presence, lulling an anonymous victim into submitting to an act of sexual predator wrapped up in the guise of spiritual healing. It may simply be that the song feels uncomfortable close to the reality of the Catholic Church sex abuse cases covered in the news in recent years, but it’s not an easy listen, nor is it meant to be. ‘I’m in the Drill’ is ace and rocks a mean bassline. Patrick Wright’s violin does a lot of the work here and lends proceedings a distinctly Eastern European ambience. It’s a song you can immediately imagine dancing to, which is unusual for the Dots. It will be interest moving onto to an album like Asylum (1985) which features tracks which are almost sing-alongs, such is the strength of their melodies.

On the Dots’ official Bandcamp page, the 2013 remaster of Apparition is divided into two parts. The second part of the album starts with what sounds like nothing less than a cheesy 80s gameshow hosted by Dracula, or some other coiffured ghoul. The song is ‘Powder Crowd’ and it’s an absolute blast! It’s also the first point on the album in which it sounds like the band are having fun playing together as a band. The seriousness of the album doesn’t necessarily mitigate its quality – it’s certainly a decent album! – but the detour into silliness provides a nice breathing space before we are subjected to what is surely the sound of the mice from Bagpuss being massacred whilst still alive! The shrill vocals of ‘Alive!’ are entertaining and even disturbing, but they do make Ka-Spel’s consistently interesting lyrics almost completely incomprehensible. Without the Internet on hand, I don’t think I would have been able to work out even a third of the lyrics on Apparition and that does feel like a loss. At one point I couldn’t tell if Ka-Spel was singing about a “clockwork tangerine” or instructing the listener to “light your popcorn carefully”. Things get funkier for ‘Believe!” with Ka-Spel imploring some unseen other to “believe my promises”. He goes into properly manic massiah mode for ‘The Plague’, cackling and preaching and having all sorts of fun. It’s the kind of vocal performance you sometimes get out of the Singing Resident / Randy of The Residents and is it an electrifying, albeit somewhat campy, presence here. Proceedings finish in a low-key vein with ‘Premonition 3′, drifting off like the end of an incantation.
Generally, Apparition is an album that befits its title, there-and-gone in a moment, but leaving a definite impression. I can’t say that it’s an essential album composed of classic tracks, but there’s something intriguing to it, as though there were some hidden mystery beneath all its murk and strangeness. I believe the stories of a haunting during production are true and that if you play the album 8 times in a row then you will be cursed with the high pitched mouse voice from ‘Alive!’ for all eternity.

Tom:   It is remarkable to consider just how much music we have assessed and absorbed so far and yet we still remain just a year into the LPD oeuvre! 111 songs under the LPD moniker on my iTunes and we’re still only up to 1982. The year of my birth saw yet another release: the refreshingly retread-and-old-track-free Apparition.

I played this album for the first time two weeks ago on Tuesday, as I gearing up for a long day ahead in London – attending a standardisation meeting regarding coursework for one of the A Level courses I teach. The meeting started at 10am in Portland Place, near the BBC’s Broadcasting House so this required me to somehow haul myself aboard a train from Newcastle Central Station that departed at a horrendous 5:56am. For the majority of the journey I tried to catch up on sleep; in the usual half-waking state, I played Mike Westbrook’s Metropolis, Andy MacKay’s Rock Follies soundtrack and Eno & Fripp’s hypnotic No Pussyfooting on the iPod. While I probably only got a fraction of actual sleep, this was a restful way of spending time in a gentle doze. With thirty minutes or so to go until King’s Cross I put this album on…

Emerging from its opening games arcade sounds, ‘God Speed’ is a direct, beguiling piece of synth psychedelia: an accessible pop tune, all syncopation and references to Hellzapoppin’ and US idiom like “Give ‘em Hell!” It’s perhaps an indirect Harry Truman allusion, but who can say for sure? ‘Pay to be Alone’ evokes February 2014 Blighty with its words about retreat and staying in from the cold. ‘Spontaneous Combustion’ sounds like gliding over the Lake District in a battered space ship. ‘The Blessing’ is cavernous and restrained. ‘I’m in the Drill’ has tremendously spry use of stringed instruments and subtle use of effects on EKS’ vocals. While there follows a lull – ‘Alive’ has an archetypal wistful LPD tune but somewhat grating chipmunk vocals – the album has a strong sense of dynamics. ‘The Plague’ could be described as pointillist skiffle – all this skittering, chaotic song needs is that excellent instrument, the washboard!

Apparition’s brisk freshness was the ideal accompaniment as I became to near London and the day ahead. There isn’t much of the LPD trope of backwards-played samples. None of these songs appear on earlier releases, so this was an intriguing yet oddly comforting listen. The song craft is similar – ‘Powder Crowd’ sounds familiar – but we get thirty minutes of music that engaged me, and didn’t seem as wilfully awkward as a few previous releases.

Is there any other band who would make mention of a ‘clockwork tangerine’? What insect references are to Robyn Hitchcock, punning music and film citations are to Edward Ka-Spel.

There is also a momentous occasion on the horizon! The Legendary Pink Dots are playing in Newcastle upon Tyne at the Cluny on Friday 11th April; a mere fifteen minutes’ walk from my flat. Unsurprisingly enough, I have bought tickets – and a friend very much into German electronic music is coming to see them too. Get in!

Matt: One thing I do find odd about some of the early Dots stuff, is how some of them have been reissued in side-suites — where each side of the original cassette is treated as one long medley of songs — rather than as individual songs.  I tend to wish that wasn’t the case, but I think that’s just my desire to mentally file things more easily.  Even if the songs flow into each other (as these all do), I still like to know, I guess, the “official” time something becomes something else.  Does this matter even remotely in the long run?  No, of course not.  But I do like to vent sometimes.

I have to admit, the murky vocals is a little bit of a turn-off for me.  I tend to prefer the vocals a bit more front and center.  I do wonder if some of the murkiness of these early cassette-only releases is a play on the medium, though — considering that normal cassettes can get kind of that way through overplay, age and if you’re naughty, generation loss.  That said, the remaster cuts through the murk somewhat — when I initially put this record on for the first time, I went with the version of the two side-suites onTraumstadt 1 — but then upon finding out that it had been remastered from the official Bandcamp site, I bought it there, and, well, it cleans up real nice.  This is definitely the version to check out.  It’s still interesting to hear the murk is crystal clear digital definition, though — it takes me back to my youth when I was mainly listening to tapes.

This album seems to me like it’d be a bit of a grower, too.  Upon my early listens, only a few tracks really stick out, “Powder Crowd” especially, but also “God Speed” and “I’m In The Drill”.  I love the violin on “I’m In The Drill”, and the organ on “Powder Crowd” hits the sweet spot in my brain for this sort of thing.  I also quite like the pop-sounding guitar riff on “Believe!”, combined with the strange, rubbery percussion sounds.  That said, though, the more I listen, the more I seem to enjoy this one.  I might have to check in with this review later, and see how future me feels about what present me has written here.

source: http://kittysneezes.com/?p=7541

Who’s Who

Current line-up

Edward Ka-Spel

Edward Ka-Spel- Founding member

1980-present
a.k.a.- D’Archangel, The Prophet Qa-Sepel, Che Banana

main vocals, lyrics, keyboards, synthesizers, broken things, devices, gadgets, interference, the BBC World Service and premonitions

photo: Randy Wentzel

 

 

 

Phil Knight

Phil Knight – Founding member

1980-present
a.k.a.- Philharmonix, The Silverman

keyboards, synthesizers, soundscapes, electronic devices, gadgets, technology, bicycle wheels, exotic sounds

photo: Randy Wentzel

 

 

Eric_Drost

Erik Drost

2003-2006, 2010-present

Guitar- acoustic, electric, bass and Hawaiian

Erik’s other musical enterprises are:
1997-present (dormant): Tändsticksfabrik
1999-2001: Girlfriends (the band that actually got him into the Pink Dots. The Girlfriends record “Geert” was released with Beta-Lactam Ring Records)
2010-present: Dustbombers (his current side project, website at: thedustbombers.nl)
2005-present: recording studio with Petra Randewijk

photo: Randy Wentzel

Raymond Steeg

1991-1994, 2000-present

Mixing and engineering mastah, onstage processing, sonic solutions, problem solver extraordinaire.

During his hiatus from the Dots in the 90’s, Raymond worked with Hawkwind. He has also worked with Porcupine Tree, Pretty Things, Arthur Brown, David Gilmoure and many others.

Website

photo: Randy Wentzel


Former Members

 

Martijn de Kleer Martijn de Kleer

1991-1996, 2000-2002, 2006-2009

Guitar- acoustic and electric,Violin, Banjo, Drums, Bass, Fuzz Bass, Tympani, Exotic Percussion

Martijn filled in for Bob Pistoor when he passed away.  He also invited Ryan Moore to Holland to record “Shadow Weaver”.

https://myspace.com/martijndekleer
http://www.klankreiziger.nl/
http://www.beansprouts.nl/

photo: Bill Ellison

 

Niels Van Hoorn

1989-2009
a.k.a.- Niels van Hoornblower

Saxophones, Flute, Bass Flute, Bass Clarinet, Woodwinds, Steiner-Parker

Niels is the one who wore loud, eccentric suits and shot light beams from his sax while walking the crowd, a trademark of sorts.  He was also their tour driver.

nielsvanhoorn.com
http://nielsvanhoorn.bandcamp.com/

 

 

Edwin von Trippenhof

1997-2001

a.k.a.- Atwin, Edwin Van Wanrooij, Edwin von Trippenhof, Van Wanrooi

Guitar, Bass

 

 

Frank VerschuurenFrank Verschuuren

1996-2000

Sound Engineer

Originally from Holland, Frank currently lives and works as a freelance and employed pro audio tech in Los Angeles.

 

Patrick Q WrightPatrick Q. Wright

1982-1989, 1992 (guest on Malachai)
a.k.a.- Patrick Q. Paganini

violins, viola, mandolin, keyboards (esp. Asylum), piano (The Lovers), lyrics, vocals, drum programming

He sang on The Hill and This Could be the End from the album Asylum.  Patrick has occasionally made special guest appearances with the Dots at their gigs over the years, most recently in Tel Aviv, June 2013.  This performance can be seen on their DVD The More it Changes.

http://patrickq.bandcamp.com/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICoWDUpgoQI&feature=youtu.be

 

Vincent Hoedt

1992 (Shadow Weaver)

Sound Engineer

Also: Mentor to Raymond Steeg

 

Bob Pistoor

1989-1991
a.k.a.- Father Pastorius

Guitar, Sitaar, Bass

Sadly, he passed away in 1992 from cancer.

 

Hans Meyer

1986-1991

Sound Processing, Saxophone

Hans introduced the band to Niels Van Hoorn.

 

Jason Salmon

1986-1988, 1991
a.k.a.- Percii Pylchardd

Bass Guitar, Percussion

 

 

 

Graham Whitehead

1986-1988
a.k.a- Adantacathar, I

Piano, Synthesizers

 

 

 

Barry Gray

1982-1988
a.k.a.- Stret Majest, Stret Majest Alarme

Guitars (acoustic and electric), composing and drum programming

http://tapajawa.bandcamp.com/

 

Julia Niblock Waller

1985 (Asylum)
a.k.a.- Poison Barbarella

Bass, Keyboards, vocals

http://www.attrition.co.uk/

 

Roland Calloway

1981-1984
a.k.a- Rolls Anotherone, Pruumpte Juste

Bass Guitar, keyboards, Suste Glox

 

Pat Bermingham 1983-1984

Engineer

 

Patrick White

1981 – 1984
a.k.a.- Armin Blisss, Pazklah Zzappp

Live sound engineer, occasional percussion and guitar

Also: original person in charge of Edward’s “cracks”, Married to April Iliffe White

 

April Iliffe- Founding Member

1980-1984
a.k.a.- Aradia, May B. Irma Mazed, Sybil Strange-Cargo

now April White, married to Patrick White

Keyboardist, occasional vocals

one of the 3 founding members of the Legendary Pink Dots

http://aprilwhite1.bandcamp.com/

 

Keith Thompson

1982-1983

Drums, Percussion, Vocals

 

Sally Graves

1982-1983

Flute, Vocals, Poetry

Also: band logistics, flatmate of Edward Ka-Spel’s

 

Michael Marshall

1982
a.k.a. M 019, Mick Marshall

Guitar

Michael is currently in a band called HT-Fib with Patrick White.

http://www.reverbnation.com/htfib

 

Tony Johnson

1981-1982
a.k.a.- Rik Chevrolet

Guitars


Guests, collaborators and other involved people

 

Peter Van Vliet

2015

Sound mastering for Pages of Aquarius

He is the singer of the band Use of Ashes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0RrNwz1ZumM

 

Anita Hammer

2014

Cover art for Chemical Playschool 16 & 18, Taos Hum and various other releases.

 

Philippe Petit

2014

electronics; collaborator with Edward Ka-Spel on Are You Receiving Us, Planet Earth?!

a self-described musical travel-agent.

website 

 

Randall Frazier

2013-

collaborator (A Star Too Far)

He toured with LPD in late 2013 (US) and early 2014 (Europe) as Orbit Service. A collaboration with The Dots during their European tour, A Star Too Far, will soon yield a full length CD. He does production and booking at The Walnut Room in Denver CO, as well as mixing, mastering and production work from his studio, helmet room recordings.

http://orbitservice.bandcamp.com/

 

Wesley Young

2013

samples and synthesis, cover art

A visual artist and also the founder and proprietor of a collective abstract underground sound project known as Behavior. He collaborated with Edward Ka-Spel and Jesse Peper on the album Deciduous Flux

website 

 

Mark Spybey

2011

drums, organ (farfisa) on side A; piano on side B on a 7″ record The Bowles Given

He also collaborated with Niels van Hoorn on the 2002 release called De Klaverland Klompen Voetbal Club.

Mark Spybey is currently working under the monikers of Dead Voices on Air and Propeller. Mark is a former member of the influential British band Zoviet France and the much-talked about industrial act Download (along with cEvin Key of Skinny Puppy). He had also collaborated with many seminal artists and bands such as Jarboe, Can, Not Breathing, James Plotkin and Pigface. He also collaborated with Mick Harris and Ambre on the Threesome series.

website

 

Un Festin Sagital

2008

Band from Santiago, Chile.  They improvised and performed together with Edward and Phil, who went to Chile at the end of their 2008 US tour.  The eventual result was A Ripple On The Richter Scale.

Bandcamp site

 

Martin Heuser

2008

classical pianist on Ulkomaalaiset 1 and 2

website

 

Alena Boykova

2006-

keyboards (A Silver Thread on Your Children Placate You…), photography for album covers.

She has collaborated with Edward on projects including Red Sky at Night and Ulkomaalaiset 1 and 2. She has also appeared on some of Edward Ka-Spel’s solo albums.

 

Jesse Peper

2006 –

Samples, Dischordian Howlings, Glitches, Synthesis, cover art

Visual artist and collaborator with Edward Ka-Spel and Wesley Young on the album Deciduous Flux.  His art has graced the covers of many Beta Lactam Ring releases by Edward Ka-Spel, The Silverman, and The Legendary Pink Dots’ album The French Collection.


website
interview

 

Astrid

2006

percussion (Don’t Get Me Wrong on Your Children Placate You…), album cover art

 

Christoph Heeman

1989-2005

Collaborated with Edward and Phil, along with Andreas Martin and Elke Skelter, on the project Mimir.  Also the founding member of H.N.A.S.

website

 

Andreas Martin

1989-2005

Collaborated with Edward and Phil, along with Christoph Heeman and Elke Skelter, on the project Mimir.  Member of HNAS from Melchior through the end, permanent member of Mimir, and infrequent member of Mirror. Older brother of Christoph Heemann.

info

 

Nicoletta Stephanz

1998- 2003 (appx.)

theremin

She occasionally joined the LPDs for live performances.  She can be seen on The Eye Volume 834 DVD, and heard on The Greenhouse Effect and An Unlikely Event.  She has also performed solo under the name Coven of One.

 

Nienke

1997

voice (Sterre on Hallway of the Gods)

 

Calyxx

1997

little voice (The Saucers are Coming on Hallway of the Gods)

Edward and Elke’s son

 

Elke Puecker

late 80’s- mid 90’s

a.k.a.- Lady Loop, Elke Skelter, El Kabong

keyboards, electronics, album and tape covers for several LPD and EKS solo releases

Ex-wife of Edward Ka-Spel.  She appeared on several Edward Ka-Spel solo releases and collaborated with him on projects including DNA le Draw D-Kee and Mimir.

 

Steven Stapleton

1992

a.k.a. Babs Santini

exotic devices and production (Malachai- Shadow Weaver Pt. 2)

Steve Stapleton also did the album covers for Malachai- Shadow Weaver Pt. 2, the 2 CD set of Chemical Playschool Volumes 3 & 4, and Tear Garden’s To Be an Angel Blind, the Crippled Soul Divide.

http://www.babssantini.com/

 

Marie

1991

(Maria Dimension)

 

Marylou Busch

1988

a.k.a. Lady Sunshine

guest vocals (The Lovers, Any Day Now)

Marylou worked for VPRO radio in Holland and was a key figure in getting the band gigs in Holland and Europe.

 

Tony Copier

1988

hired drummer (Any Day Now)

 

cEvin Key

1986-

collaborator (The Tear Garden), drums (9 Lives to Wonder- cd), film maker (9 Lives to Wonder- dvd)

Originally a Dots fan and pen pal with Edward, he served as the sound engineer for Edward’s first three solo shows in Vancouver back in 1986.  While Edward was there, they worked together and recorded what became the first Tear Garden EP, The Center Bullet. Subsequent recordings by The Tear Garden included other members of Skinny Puppy and The LPDs.

Amongst many other things, Key was the founding member of Skinny Puppy and Download.  He currently operates Subconscious Communications, “a California-based record label, musician collective, remix team, 32-track digital studio and analogue synthesizer collection”.

http://www.subconsciousrecords.com/

 

Hero Wouters

1985

tapes, effects and keyboards on Edward Ka-Spel’s solo performance(s) including an appearance at The Paradiso, Tegentonen Festival in Amsterdam (Angelus Obscuros)
website

 

Bianca Wouters

1985

lady voice on Edward Ka-Spel’s solo performance(s) including an appearance at The Paradiso, Tegentonen Festival in Amsterdam (Angelus Obscuros)

 

Lily Ak

1984

Guest vocal (The Tower)

 

Ignit Bekken

1984

Guest (Faces in the Fire)

Ignit worked with Mary Lou at Spleen radio show, co-owner of Ding Dong records

 

Mark “Thrasher”

1980

drummer for one appearance

Edward Ka-Spel music special

CHUO.FM’s From One Extreme to Another presents:

The Edward Ka-Spel music special in three parts, hosted by Gilbert Lachance

Edward Ka-Spel

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday nights starting at midnight (EST)
February 10th, 17th and 24th 2014

live streaming- www.chuo.fm. Podcast available Tuesday
photo above by morgan9283