All posts by edwardo

March 2013 Newsletter

It’s the first day of Spring.  Predictably, it’s cloudy, treacherously cold and I make no apologies for staying in.  It’s the perfect day for wrenching off the headphones and composing a newsletter.  You could say the state of activity at Chez Dots has been almost frenetic of late.
For a start, there’s a brand new Dots album of all-new material slated for release in May by Metropolis Records, entitled “The Gethsemane Option”.  If all goes to plan, we’ll be promoting this with a North American tour in The Fall.
A second album of new material entitled “The Rainy Day That Never Comes” (also slowly prepared throughout last year) is also now recorded, mastered and waiting in the can – more about this one in the next newsletter.

Lastly, in this coming week three new CDR releases with a new design look will become available – also 100% new studio material.  For more information read on my friends…..

Continue reading March 2013 Newsletter

Peek-a-boo magazine- Edward Ka-Spel

Source: Peek-a-boo magazine

It sounds like a daily event, but The Legendary Pink Dots have just released their newest album Chemical Playschool 15 on the Italian Rustblade-label. There are no surprises, just an unique beauty. Why changing a winning team anyway? Three decades this British band are offering us psychedelica which is added with a touch of darkwave. Peek-A-Boo is very proud that they could interview this icon, with a big thanks to Rustblade for realizing this.

Dear Edward, let’s go back into time. You started out in 1980. That’s more than three decades making music, how would you describe them and what are the highlights?
It’s odd to place myself back in the world of 1980 when even sitting here typing on a computer bordered on the unthinkable. Here I sit, with a stack of hard drives on the table containing thousands of albums from the last five decades, married to Alena, who is Russian, mobile phone switched off…

None of this would have been possible in 1980. For a start Russia was the Soviet Union then. It’s been a great ride and I hope it continues to deliver such delights.

Highlights? Well, headlining the Filmore in San Francisco must count as the sense of history was overwhelming. Playing on a stage carved from volcanic lava in Mexico City was another, being scared to play the test pressing of our first vinyl album comes to mind.

33 years is a long time and I count myself lucky to have shot the shadow of a conventional existence through the heart all those years ago. I’ll never tire of this however much of a struggle it can be to survive sometimes (you know, there’s always a way through).

From highlights to lowlights is a small step. The last year were not easy. There was the departure from Martijn and I read a manifesto of you in where you said it was hard to get gigs. And still you’re not giving up, do you never get tired of it?
How can anyone grow tired of a life that constantly throws up fresh challenges? It is harder to find shows these days, mostly because of the recession. Even so, it means more time for recording and perhaps that’s an even greater joy. I was sad to see Niels and Marty leave, and happy to report that the friendship is still very much alive. But it meant a fresh start for the Legendary Pink Dots with Erik Drost rejoining, and there is a fresh energy about the band these days.

The Legendary Pink Dots always have lots of different members which is normal for a band that exists for 30 years. How do all these people got involved? Are they knocking on your door or do you search them yourselves?
In the early days we tended to go looking. Since the first albums came out the knocks were on our door. In fact the changes became much less since 1988, which was a long time ago now.

I’m afraid I’m quite wrong but I often tend to think that The Legendary Pink Dots is a music collective in where Edward and The Silverman are the leaders.
Not so far from the truth if you consider the history. There have been spells where that “leadership” was more spread through the group (Bob Pistoor and Ryan Moore also contributed a lot musically).

Quite soon in your existence you decided to move to Holland. Why was that?
I fell in love and followed my heart. Holland also looked like a promised land from the UK where Thatcher was exerting her evil influence. I’m back in London now and commute to The Netherlands every few weeks as the rest of the band is there, but it’s possible because of those much maligned budget airlines.

If I don’t count some classic industrial bands I must say that you sound very unbritish, I guess the reactions over there weren’t that cool.
I tend to disagree with that assessment. Still, I felt we were underappreciated in the UK in the beginning. Ironically this has now changed and London has become one of our best cities to play.

There are so many ways to describe your music, but who was influenced you?
The truly psychedelic souls…Pink Floyd should be mentioned, Can, David Allen, VDGG , Pierre Henry….All played a role.

Strange question perhaps, but anyway, do you listen to The Legendary Pink Dots yourself?
I have to as my wife Alena insists.

I really must ask this is as a fan. I listened to your music a lifetime (!) but in all honesty I don’t understand one word of your poetry as the music speaks for itself. Do you think it’s possible that everyone can interpret The Legendary Pink Dots in his way?
Absolutely. Music and words should be a totality – a sum of the parts. That’s why I can listen to an inspired band from Finland and love what I hear. I hardly speak a word of Finnish.

Your newest album Chemical Playschool 15 is released on Rustblade. How did you got involved with them?
They wrote to me just over a year ago. I liked their enthusiasm and passion.

I somewhere read that these Chemical Playschool-albums are improvised songs, is that true?
Partly, but Chemical Playschool 11,12 and 13 was one year in the making. Sometimes I claim unfinished pieces and apply the final brush strokes , a voice and ten the mix.

Edward, you also keep on making solo records. What’s the main difference in them and the material with The Legendary Pink Dots?
The solo music is maybe even more indulgent than Legendary Pink Dots, sometimes I like to dot all the I’s myself.

I want to finish with two questions I always ask. What’s your favorite record of all time and please state why.
Hard one, but I should say “In the Court of the Crimson King”. I heard it on the radio at a tender age and everything changed during those 9 minutes.

With whom wouldn’t you mind to be alone with in an elevator for 8 hours and what would you do then?
My wife Alena is the only person I would want to be alone in an elevator with 8 hours as she’s the one person who could calm me down.

A special message for the Peek-A-Boo readers could be?
Never write that idea off as just a dream.

Didier BECU
11/03/2013

 

January 2013 Newsletter

2013.  So who said we wouldn’t get there? Hands up -to the back of the class…..

I’m fresh from a break in the sun with batteries recharged and ready for an intense year at Chez Dots.

Several releases are already in the pipeline as recording was frequently fruitful in the last 12 months, but we’re also making early plans for a

little more live action in the coming year including a tour of USA and Canada in Autumn.

A HAPPY NEW YEAR to all of you….. Continue reading January 2013 Newsletter

October 2012 Newsletter

Edward KaSpel by leiermann77Just back from Moscow and we’re ready to unleash the first fruits of all our recording adventures over the last 9 months. It has been a creative and rewarding year and we’re extremely proud of the music about to be delivered to an unwary public.

On the ultra-limited edition of Chemical Playschool 15, I would ask anyone who wants it to send an email first. Our mail-order is small, very personal and there should be enough to go around… but we can only accept orders on a “first come-first serve” basis.

Address to use is: qaspel@gmail.com Continue reading October 2012 Newsletter

FROM THE DESK OF AMANDA PALMER: THE LEGENDARY PINK DOTS

Published on Magnetmagazine.com

Amanda Palmer has been a busy lady. It’s been four years since her last record, Who Killed Amanda Palmer, and in the interim she’s been dabbling in all sorts of projects: business (you can read about her huge Kickstarter success), music (channeling her musical roots for her new album, Theatre Is Evil) and fun (adapting Neutral Milk Hotel for a high-school production). Palmer will also be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all week. Read our brand new feature on her.

Continue reading FROM THE DESK OF AMANDA PALMER: THE LEGENDARY PINK DOTS

August 2012 Newsletter

Edward KaSpel by Randy Wentzel PhotographyThe Comfort Inn at Clacton-on-Sea is the unlikely location for the creation of this newsletter. It’s July and summer arrived late in the UK, but as it’ll probably be here for just a few days, perhaps it is wise to make the most of it…. indeed by writing a newsletter in a hotel room….

Seagulls woke us at 5 am this morning. I recorded them and will have my revenge by setting my host of plug-ins on them after slowing them down and turning them backwards.

Still, on to Pink Dot related matters…. Continue reading August 2012 Newsletter