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Live at the Metro (All Music Guide)

Recorded live at The Metro in Chicago, on November 11, 1998, this album captures The Legendary Pink Dots in very fine form, if not in very good sound. The set list features a nice cross-section of the band’s ‘90s output, with songs taken from the albums Hallway of the Gods, Crushed Velvet Apocalypse, and The Maria Dimension, among others, plus a song (“Pain Bubbles”) that would end up on their next studio album, the superb A Perfect Mystery. The line-up for this tour consisted of Edward Ka-Spel, Phil Knight, Edwin van Trippenhof, Ryan Moore, and Neils van Hoornblower. Highlights abound, such as Van Trippenhof’s raging guitar solo in “Grain Kings ’98,” but the real treat is the 10-minute “Saucers Over Chicago,” a version of “The Saucers Are Coming” adapted for the occasion, a reverse-take of sorts on Welles’ War of the Worlds. “Andromeda” also gets a powerful treatment, bringing the album to a close on a bombastic note. In terms of material performed and performance quality, Live at the Metro beats Farewell, Milky Way, released a year later though recorded four years earlier. However, sound quality-wise, the situation is inverted, as Live at the Metro sounds rather hollow, with too much echo. Despite this shortcoming, it makes for a very fine live document that fans will appreciate. But newcomers are better off trying some of the group’s highest-rated studio efforts before dipping their ears into this release.

by François Couture
(The date of this review is unknown)

 

News Archive 1998-1999

This is a compilation of news articles and announcements from  1998 and 1999, taken from Brainwashed.com.  Most if not all of the links are obsolete. This is for archival purposes only.

 

ONLINE UPDATE – 21st November, 1998

TOUR NEWS…

Changes to LPD Show in Mexico: Originally this tour-closing event was supposed to be full enchilada (pardon me, I couldn’t resist) of LPD, Twilight Circus, Edward Ka-Spel that’s been touring the US and Canada this fall, but an unexpected currency devaluation made the purchase of so many plane tickets impossible. Fortunately for Mexican LPD fans Edward will still put in an appearance on Saturday December 5th. Here are the details:

EVENT:                  EDWARD KA SPEL

HUMAN DRAMA

EL CLAN (Mexico)

VENUE:                  PARQUE ECOLOGICO 18 DE MARZO

ADDRESS:                AV.5 DE MAYO s/n -ATZCAPOTZALCO

ENTRE TEZOZOMOC Y AUILES SERDAN

METRO REFINERIA

DOORS:                  7:00 PM

SHOWTIME:               8:00 PM

TICKETS:                PRESALE $ 130.00 PESOS

LIBRERIAS GANDHI & ROCKSHOP

BOX OFFICE $ 150.00 PESOS

NIGHT OF THE EVENT

INFORMATION:            ++ 52 5 782 3906 (Mexico D.F.)

arteria@compuserve.com

Here’s the rest of the North American tour dates:

Sat Nov. 21 Ventura, CA – Ventura Theatre (all ages)

Sun Nov. 22 San Francisco, CA – Fillmore/Maritime Hall (all ages)

Mon Nov. 23 Las Vegas, NV – Huntridge Theatre, (unconfirmed)

or Palo Alto, CA – The Edge, (unconfirmed)

Tue Nov. 24 Portland, OR – La Luna (all ages)

Wed Nov. 25 Seattle, WA – Showbox (21+)

Thu Nov. 26 Vancouver, BC – Starfish Room (19+)

Sat Nov. 28 Mexico City, DF – Salon Mexico (unconfirmed)

 

End of January: LPDs in Greece – Athens & Thessaloniki

Feb/March: London, UK, Paris, Germany, Scandinavia, Poland, Czec Republic

NEW RELEASE NEWS:
Silvermandalas and The Blue Room are finally available through Soleilmoon.

OLDER NEWS

  • SPV Poland has re-emerged and paid royalties. To the unknowns who contacted Poland , we salute you!!!!
Anyhow, I do get a sense that SPV ARE trying now- so we indeed will go on. At least they had the decency to say sorry (try getting a “sorry” out of PIAS and you’ll understand how much it means to us).
  • Meanwhile “Nemesis” seems set for European release on KODEX in Germany.
  • We’re looking for someone to licence in Greece, Russia, Japan, Israel and Australia. If anyone knows anyone ….then pass it on .
  • First Tear Garden Tour (with Download) planned for Summer, ’99
  • New solo album by EKS (“The Blue Room”) + Phil (“Silver Mandela”) finished, and due in October. “Blue Room” will also be on vinyl with a bonus side.
  • “Lullabies” pic disc box set is the start of getting the albums available on vinyl again. We want to go on with the likes of “9 Lives,…” + “From Here,…” which never appeared in vinyl format.
  • PIAS contract ends in ’99, so Soleilmoon will take over + make everything at least twice as affordable.
  • TENTATIVE plan for an EKS solo tour of South America (Chile, Brazil, Argentina, Columbia). “I’ll believe it when I step off the plane.” – EKS
  • LPD should go to Greece in January + there will be plans for shows in North of Norway, White Russia, Baltic States, as well as the usual places. Advanced plans for a show in London (early ’99).
  • Mimir 3 approaches completion.
  • First OFFICIAL live CD (a double) approaches completion (due out on World Serpent in ’99).

WE’re really trying to build up a directory of sympathetic shops, mail-order services, clubs and labels, radio stations and fanzines to try and overcome this distribution vacuum. Consequently we’d really like people to send information about what is decent in their own parts. In turn, we’ll make this information freely available to bands we know + like, or who write to us – encouraging them to circulate it as well. Maybe the idea is Utopian, but energry usually produces results and it’s time for a pre-millennial underground explosion!

For even more detailed news, check out Dirk Ruster’s LPD Newsticker at home.rhein-zeitung.de/~druster/news.htm

 


ONLINE UPDATE – 26th August, 1999

FALL INTO THE DOTS

The autumn is coming and the LPDs are planning to hit Europe again for a few dates. Also imminent are a few new releases. DNA Le DRAW D-KEE CD, also expect a New Twilight Circus in October plus a new Edward Ka-Spel solo album (“Red Letters” ) before the end of year (it´s finished; cover being worked on).

CONFIRMED DATES

Oct  2 DARMSTADT…Oetinger Villa

Oct  3 FREIBURG….Atlantic Cafe

Oct 15 POTSDAM ….Waschhaus

Oct 16 COPENHAGEN..Stengade 13

Oct 18 GOTEBORG….Pusterviksbaren

Oct 19 OSLO……..John Dee

Oct 20 STOCKHOLM…Fritz Larner

Nov  6 AMERSFOORT..De Kelder

We hope to go on to FINLAND,RUSSIA and POLAND from Stockholm but await more news.Help is always appreciated,and thanks to those who have been sending tips.

DATE SOUGHT
We´re desperately looking for a show in Germany (anywhere), Belgium (anywhere) or Eastern France (Nancy/metz) for Friday October 1. If anybody has any serious leads, please contact kaspel@euronet.nl.

VISUAL STIMULATION  
Fellow Dotter, and cover artist for one of them Triple Moon Tribute tapes, Jared Butler now has available his short film, Underneath ready to send out to folks and friends. The LPDs granted him permission to use some of their songs in his low budget hi-fi filming effort. Filmed in Sweden and San Francisco, it’ll be a neat thing to have once our friend has made the big time! It is on an NTSC-only stereo VHS tape. Sorry, no European machine compatible copies…

MIMIR NEWS…
Mimir did not play the Nevers festival in July this month as planned nor did they do the VPRO radio show. Andreas Heemann sprained his arm and they were unable to perform. Mimir 3 and a possible Mimir 4 are nearing completion and should be due soon.

WEBSITE NEWS…
The Live Connections web page has finally been automated for those looking to trade LPD live cassettes with other LPD friends around the world. Go check it out!

OLDER ISSUES…
  Help sought for Scandinavia and Baltic States: LPD are looking to book a string of dates in October/November and are looking for any leads in Sweden, Norway and Finland. If you have any ideas of clubs in Malmo, Stockholm, Jonkoping, Norrkoping, Sundsvall, Uppsala, Umea or Tornio, please email kaspel@euronet.nl.

RELEASE NEWS  Just out are the following….

  • DNA LE DRAW D-KEE – Reissue on CD of very obscure vinyl release project of Edward Ka-Spel, Elke P., Ryan Moore.
  • Sing While You May – Russian compilation CD in Cyrillic fonts. 2 new tracks, one new version of Supper at J’s, domestic USA price from Soleilmoon…
  • LEGENDARY PINK DOTS Live at the metro (35 DFL/20 $ US/ 17 goddamn Euros).
First full-length live CD from the Dots. A good audience recording of our show in Chicago last November (thanks to Nick who provided the CDRs for us). Original plan was to issue multi-tracked recording from Poznan a couple of years ago…but the fire and spirit of this performance in Chicago simply came across much stronger even if it isn’t quite so hi-fi. Parts of the Poznan show (3 tracks) will eventually emerge …possibly as a mini-CD.
This “Live at Metro” CD is a Polish import, features many photographs and includes CD-rom material of a rather silly interview.
  • EDWARD KA-SPEL/ Share the Day\Dream Stealer (15 DFL/8 $ US)
2 new tracks on a 7″ vinyl single released by long term LPD friend jon Whitney of the excellent Brainwashed website (www.brainwashed.com).
  • MIMIR/Mimiryad LP (40 DFL/25 US $)
Hyper limited vinyl only, drastically re-worked from original CD.
  • For completists, the old cassette compilation,”Voices in a Dark Room” has been reissued as a CDR by Staalplaat. LPDs, contribution is “MIRROR MESSIAH” recorded live in Cologne in 1983 (the first ever official live show). To be fair, it’s a patchy release… though the pieces from Mekanik Kommando (now known as The Use of Ashes) and Kapotte Musik made these ears dance a little. It’s available directly from us or Staalplaat.
  • Also available is the industrial compilation “Triton”, which features “Sterre” from the “Hallway of the Gods” CD. The only remarkable feature of this release is the ugliness of the cover.

Imminent…

  • Second full length live double CD will be issued by World Serpent in the Summer (“Farewell Milky Way” is the title).
  • New TEAR GARDEN CD planned for release in Autumn.
  • SOLEILMOON reissue of PIAS catalogue slated for the start of 2000.

There is more,but these fingers ache….

VARIOUS RANDOM OLDER NEWS TOPICS…

  • Did you know the correct title of the album should be: “To Be An Angel Blind, The CRIPPLE Soul Divide” and that Edward wanted “The Last Man to Fly” to end with “Last Post” and not include “3-D Technicolour”?
  • The Mimir gig in Nevers France is part of a festival that also includes Autechre, but I really can’t get any further info on it so far. In addition, they should be doing a radio session for VPRO in Holland. And last I heard Babs Santini has finished the cover for the third Mimir album. Oh, one more thing, neither Christoph nor Edward has ever heard of a Greek edition of the first Mimir album as listed in the Dots-o-graphy.
  • No new album for the Dots for a while still, but the live CD is here and Russian CD is coming soon, Edward reports. The US edition of “Tanith and the Lion Tree” has been cancelled as the SPV in Poland have made good on themselves. By the “Phoney War” and “Old Man Trouble” were actually bonus tracks on this album (which was supposed to come out on LP originally) and Ed doesn’t really consider them part of the album.
  • “Four Days”, “Prayer for Aradia” and “Scriptures for Illumina” are all pretty much sold out from them. It’s advised to grab these whereever you can if you don’t have them already. I don’t think they mean to let any of them go out of print, but it wouldn’t be unlikely if it’s a little while before they can press more of any of the three. Dna Le Draw D-Kee as well as “Basilisk”, “Atomic Roses” and “Apparition” are due to be reissued by Soleilmoon someday, though probably not any time in the immediate future.
  • The contract with PIAS ends this year, so hold off the temptation to buy any of those cheap imports which they probably won’t see any money from anyhow. These titles all will be reissued by Soleilmoon Recordings someday (next year?).

For more news and older archives, check out Dirk Ruster’s LPD Newsticker at home.rhein-zeitung.de/~druster/news.htm

 


ONLINE UPDATE – 10th November, 1999

WINTER APPROACHES

As the last month of the millennium approaches, the LPDs are making plans for 2000. On the agenda right now is a brand new North American widescale tour (no, there’s no confirmation of a Tear Garden set at this time so stop asking). In the meantime, LPDs would like to get psyched by playing some dates to essentially warm up for the show. LPDs are looking to book the last week of January and the first of February for some dates in France, Belgium and possibly Spain. If anybody can help arrange some shows for these dates, please email kaspel@euronet.nl.

In the meanwhile, please be on the lookout for a New Twilight Circus release plus a new Edward Ka-Spel solo album (“Red Letters” ) before the end of year (it´s finished; cover being worked on). Mimir 3 and a possible Mimir 4 are also nearing completion and should be due soon.

OLDER ISSUES OF REMOTE RELEVANCE
The Live Connections web page has finally been automated for those looking to trade LPD live cassettes with other LPD friends around the world. Go check it out!

Fellow Dotter, and cover artist for one of them Triple Moon Tribute tapes, Jared Butler now has available his short film, Underneath ready to send out to folks and friends. The LPDs granted him permission to use some of their songs in his low budget hi-fi filming effort. Filmed in Sweden and San Francisco, it’ll be a neat thing to have once our friend has made the big time! It is on an NTSC-only stereo VHS tape. Sorry, no European machine compatible copies…

Help sought for Scandinavia and Baltic States: LPD are looking to book a string of dates in October/November and are looking for any leads in Sweden, Norway and Finland. If you have any ideas of clubs in Malmo, Stockholm, Jonkoping, Norrkoping, Sundsvall, Uppsala, Umea or Tornio, please email kaspel@euronet.nl.

RECENT RELEASES

  • DNA LE DRAW D-KEE – Reissue on CD of very obscure vinyl release project of Edward Ka-Spel, Elke P., Ryan Moore.
  • Sing While You May – Russian compilation CD in Cyrillic fonts. 2 new tracks, one new version of Supper at J’s, domestic USA price from Soleilmoon…
  • LEGENDARY PINK DOTS Live at the metro (35 DFL/20 $ US/ 17 goddamn Euros).
First full-length live CD from the Dots. A good audience recording of our show in Chicago last November (thanks to Nick who provided the CDRs for us). Original plan was to issue multi-tracked recording from Poznan a couple of years ago…but the fire and spirit of this performance in Chicago simply came across much stronger even if it isn’t quite so hi-fi. Parts of the Poznan show (3 tracks) will eventually emerge …possibly as a mini-CD.
This “Live at Metro” CD is a Polish import, features many photographs and includes CD-rom material of a rather silly interview.
  • EDWARD KA-SPEL, “Share the Day/Dream Stealer” (15 DFL/8 $ US)
2 new tracks on a 7″ vinyl single released by long term LPD friend jon Whitney of the excellent Brainwashed website (www.brainwashed.com).

For other news and older archives, check out Dirk Ruster’s LPD Newsticker at home.rhein-zeitung.de/~druster/news.htm

Freq E-Zine- Along the Dotted Line… Edward Ka-Spel

The Legendary Pink Dots are a phenomenon, producing a seemingly endless stream of deeply intense records and genuinely spellbinding live shows for nearly twenty years, initially as a London-based group and for more than a decade now from their Nijmegen base in The Netherlands. While former days on mammoth independent label Play It Again Sam in Belgium produced widespread distribution for a series of classic albums, it also had all the negative aspects of association with the near-majors; the linking of sales to popularity and promotion to potential Indie chart success. For a while the band were in small-scale, own-label limbo, before the saving graces of Brainwashed’s excellent LPD internet site and the supportof first Staalplaat in Amsterdam, and then Soleilmoon in Portland, Oregon restored and replenished their status as one of the most strangely neglected of Britain and Europe’s true musical underground.

With the benefit of Soleilmoon’s re-issue and new-release schedules for not only the Pink Dots but the solo releases by co-founders Edward Ka-Spel and Phil Knight (AKA The Silverman), and audiences drawn in by the band’s ongoing collaborative work with Skinny Puppy/Download as The Tear Garden as well as tangentially from the playful dubs of bassist/drummer Ryan Moore’s one-man old-school psychedelic Reggae sound system Twilight Circus (also with an ever-expanding back-catalogue and new album Dub Plate Selection 2), things are looking up for this most apocalyptic of bands in 1999. Freq caught up with EdwardKa-Spel at The Underworld in London, where the Dots played their second show of the year as the penultimate gig on their European tour, a significant event considering their absence from the country for six years. For this tour, the remainder of the line-up was completed by reedsman Nils vanHoornblower and guitarist Martijn de Kleer, with the crucial (but frequently overlooked) engineering skills of Frank Verschuuren on the mixing desk.


 

FREQ: The Dots remain underground in Britain particularly, but are perceptions different elsewhere? How does it appear to you?

Edward Ka-Spel: The thing about the Dots is that it’s an underground band everywhere, even in the countries where we do well, like America and Poland. It’s just a much bigger underground band in those kind of countries – there seems to be much more fanaticism in those countries, with people who turn up in some numbers – I don’t know why that is, it’s probably something to do with the whole way that music is listened to, and exposure there. Oddly, since it’s been impossible to buy our records in Britain, our popularity has gone up! We don’t know why that is, but it seems to be a lot to do with the Internet. Things are very fragmented, but it makes not a lot of sense. To be honest, it’s much worse for us in the country we now live in, Holland. That’s the worst of all; we get one show a year, and always in the same place. A hundred people show up, the whole media ignores it, and that’s it, we go on our way. It’s kind of dry.

FREQ: Was it always that way in Holland for example?

EK-S: No, for a period we were really rather popular there. In the middle ofthe Eighties we played a couple of big festivals, we were on the radio a lot, and all the bigger journalists seemed to chase after us. We really thought “Wow! We’ve made it in this country” – it was one of the big reasons to move to Holland, but it was a bit like Andy Warhol’s thing where you’re famous for fifteen minutes, and then they move on.

FREQ: Would you be tempted to come back to live in England?

EK-S: I’ve got family in Holland, but in some ways I’m very dissatisfied withthe place. There is something very odd about it – I don’t feel completely in my place there. But then again, I don’t think there’s anywhere on the planet I feel completely in my place.

FREQ: Is that where the Dots’ music comes from – a placeless feeling?

EK-S: Right – it’s been about not really belonging; almost not particularly relating to the human race. It’s a perspective other people do seem to connect to – there are a lot of satellites floating around on the surface of this planet, and somehow we seem to get through to those. The internet really changed the whole position of the band.  You know, we used to go to a place like Sweden, and we’d have about ten people on the door, or twenty people here or there. Now we can go there and we get a couple of hundred at every show – yet everything we do is harder to get – we are more elusive than we were, and again it’s the internet – which is a very very powerful medium.

FREQ: Do you associate the problems you had with Play It Again Sam with the cause of the difficulty in getting Dots records?

EK-S: They were a lot to do with it in that there were two records which did really, really well for the Pink Dots, The Crushed Velvet Apocalypse and TheMaria Dimension, which sold about 30,000 copies, but Shadow Weaver,the record after The Maria Dimension, Play It Again Sam did not like. They thought it was very uncommercial, they didn’t do anything with it – they almost buried it – and that became our fate from then on with PIAS. They never really put much effort into us at all. They’d kind of thought “Well, they have a cult following, most people will buy it anyway”- and the view from then on was that that cult following was still there but getting older and getting smaller – but this wasn’t strictly true. In America we actually had a very young crowd, and that was why it did indeed slip for us in Europe, but the emphasis simply changed – Soleilmoon just believed in us straight away, really treated us like no other band they’d ever had on the label – you know, they promote us quite heavily, all with consultation, there’s a little bit of a plan involved, and we’ve swung along with (label manager) Charles Pownes’ ideas, and it’s proved to be reallyworthwhile.

FREQ: The PIAS records are going to be re-released through Soleilmoon next year- how do you feel about those reissues?

EK-S: Well, it’s very hard to get any of them – it’s really to keep them alive- I believe in those old records. Some I believe in more than others, but I think they should be there. Because the Pink Dots isn’t one of those bands where it’s just the new album, off it goes and the back catalogue is dead. It’s all part of an ongoing present, really – that stuff is still relevant.

FREQ: Word of mouth on those records and on the very existence of the Dots seem to have been a major factor in keeping you going – it’s not like bands who are popular because the media say they should be.

EK-S: No, in some ways we’ve been one of the most ignored bands of these times.  Considering what we’ve done and where we’ve been, it’s an odd status that we have. Why have The Wire magazine always completely ignored the band? I get the feeling they hate us; they wouldn’t be the first magazine of that type to literally hate us – I don’tknow why. We seem to garner that kind of response, that people either love or hate us, and nothing in between.

FREQ: One listing for this show at the Underworld described the Dots as “surviving members of Eighties Industrialists…”

EK-S: I mean, it’s completely off the rails – it’s obvious they have no idea what they’re talking about

FREQ: If you had to put yourself into any category, what would your preferred one be?

EK-S: There just is none. I’m glad – I think people are too quick to pigeonhole, which is in a way some magazine’s whole trip: if you can’t pigeonhole it, they don’t want to know about it. We don’t move in this boy’s club of chin-stroking, which is actually an area I’m really very allergic to – it’s not a trainspotter’s band.

FREQ: It does seem to be a very British attitude to take a band and analyse it to death.

EK-S: No, it’s quite global!

FREQ: On the actual process of the music-making, how do arrive at a song? Doyou have any particular process that you’ve fallen into over the years, or is there amore conscious design?

EK-S: It comes from all angles really. A lot of the basic ideas either come from myself or Ryan, and we would tend to improvise over these ideas, and develop it from there. If I’ve got really incredibly firm ideas about a piece then normally I would claim it for a solo record.

FREQ: There’s definitely a different feel to your solo records that is identifiable once you get beyond the sound of your voice, which is obviously essential to both; but do you feel that your position within the Dots is over-emphasised as being “your” band…?

EK-S: Yeah, I’d say it was. It’s a very commited bunch of people really. In some ways, like I know Ryan sometimes gets sad that he’s been in the band for ten years and doesn’t get the recognition that he absolutely really deserves. He does deserve more, alot more. Phil, he’s been there since the start, he’s written a lot of the really classic tunes for the Pink Dots. It’s not really fair – OK, I’m the face of the Pink Dots and the lyricist of the Pink Dots, so there’s an acceptance that that’s also part of it…

FREQ: That seems to be a general thing with most bands that have lyrics, that you get the person who sings them seen as the spokesman – but it’s also interesting to see that the solo recordings are very different to the Dots’, but also you can feel the same atmosphere coming from them, from The Silverman recordings, and from the TwilightCircus records too.

EK-S: Sure, they’re very individual projects, and I really like them both, I mean they’re great. There’s a new solo album of mine on the way, a very dark record, it’s an uncomfortable record. Very musical, very beautiful, but it’s actually a lot darker than The Blue Room.

FREQ: There’s still a lot of optimism underpinning your lyrics.

EK-S: Yeah, I don’t know why, well, I do know why, it’s to do with maybe a year I had, it’s all tended to find it’s way into this new project.

FREQ: The source of the lyrics seems very personal, and encoded as well, inlayers and layers and layers, which is part of the fascination as you listen to a Dots song or one of your solo songs, and maybe five years later finally get some perspective on it which is different to what might have been there the first time you hear it.

EK-S: You need a heavy drill! It’s usually straight, I don’t think about it -it’s like automatic writing. You can read it later and you think “Oh my god, did I write that!” I know exactly what I mean, and sometimes it’s like “Ooh, my god!” somebody else who’s involved in this song is reading this – I’ve had that; ex-girlfriends who’ve said “I really have to listen to that song!”

FREQ: Has that caused you any personal problems?

EK-S: Yes, it’s not without them…

FREQ: It’s very exposed and raw

EK-S: It’s painful, it can be painful.

FREQ: Is it a form of catharsis?

EK-S: Yeah, it’s the only way to let it go, to let everything which gets bottled up out. If there wasn’t that escape route, that valve to let all that kind of thing out, I don’t know where I’d be.

FREQ: The persona that you project on stage and on record, it’s quite an intense one; was one that you arrived at consciously?

EK-S: It’s just part of me. It’s caused me a lot of trouble in my life really. Often relationships begin, and your better half wants you to be like you are on stage allthe time, which you can’t be yet it’s undoubtedly part of you. I don’t even know how to talk about it really, it’s part of my personality, something that needs to scream. It can make you laugh as well, but it’s wiser just to preserve itself to the stage, or intense moments offstage. I don’t know, I’m English, I have the traditional British reserve. It upsets a lot of people, that stage persona – I’ve had more than one reviewer describe me as the most arrogant person ever to walk on a stage.

FREQ: It doesn’t really come across as arrogant, it’s more revelatory, showing an aspect of the human condition which is quite often hidden or for that matter restricted…

EK-S: Yeah, it’s letting it out. It’s absolutely serious what I’m doing – I don’t want to push anyone over the edge, but I’d certainly like to see them stand on that edge, becoming aware of that edge, and looking down over that precipice and seing what’s going on down there. I would hope that it’s life-changing.

FREQ: How do you deal with that role? Do you think it was something that just comes to you?

EK-S: It was never thought out, it was never planned, I don’t even know if if it’s for positive reasons or negative reasons. I suppose it’s like getting every part of me out there, showing it all. You know, almost like standing naked. I believe that every answer to everything lives within one human being and it’s just a case of looking, of searching and searching through all the dark parts. If that’s what I can inspire, if that’s what I’m doing, and it’s very much something for myself as well, then I’m successful. As I said earlier, we’re not a trainspotter’s band, we’re not the sort of band where it’s a matter of that cassette came out then, and collecting everything -every band has that, the collector. What is nice with the Pink Dots is that we seem to have a really very mixed audience. A mix of the type of people who come, agewise, appearance-wise, very split between male and female. in America I’d say we even had a larger percentage of female rather than males, which pleases me as females tend to be more sensitive people.

FREQ: Where do you see the Dots going? Is there a master plan?

EK-S: There never has been really… it just is. it’s as intense as it’s ever been, and that’s why it’s a shock to be described as “surviving members” of The Dots, it’s a ridiculously absurd thing to say. I mean he whole core of this band has been there ten years, Martijn has been there almost ten years, though he was out for a little time, that’s twice as long as most bands last.

FREQ: Is Martijn back as a permanent member of the Dots now?

EK-S: We’re not sure yet, Edwin had a very bad time and we’re giving him the space to see how it goes, what he wants.

FREQ: Wiil you be doing anything specific to mark or acknowledge the existence of the Millennium?

EK-S: Probably not. There was a vague plan to play at this nuclear power plant in Germany which never opened. The building cost of zillions of Deutschmarks and never operated and there was originally a little plan to play a show there, but it’s faded into nothing. Bit of a shame. There was also a vague plan to play Jerusalem, but it didn’t work out. Israel is a place we must go back to. We got a lot of people from Israel asking us back. They were fantastic, which was a shock. It’s the only place where there have been people waiting at the airport for us to arrive! Great people, they really liked us.

FREQ: You do inspire fanaticism.

EK-S: Yeah, sure. Sometimes a little over the top. There was one show where someone was arrested carrying a gun in LA, where else? About three shows ago at The Roxy. I love The Roxy, they treat us great, but it could only happen in LA! I’ve had strange people in Texas following me around saying “You have the key to The Tower.” We get some dangers – I’ve had people jumping onto the stage and pushing me too, and yelling the words of “The Fool” at me.

FREQ: What do you think about when that happens?

EK-S: Part of me expects it. You can’t do what you do without having that element there. It’s not an act, it’s not really a show. you know it’s for real, and so you’re gonna get very real reactions in your turn. You can’t be shocked or appalled when that happens. I don’t feel comfortable with it always, but you know, that’s the path I chose. It’s how it’s got to be – at least I know that it’s getting through. It’s the only way.

FREQ: It’s often been said that there’s a cultish aspect beyond that of being a cult band to the Dots, as when you used the name The Prophet Qa’spel in previous years – if you weren’t doing this would you be a cult leader leading people through to a Millennial apocalypse?

EK-S: That’s quite a hard one! No, no, these sort of people interest me for sure, but usually i’m someone who reallly dislikes anyhting that’s that organised, you know, I mean the whole message is really look inside yourself, see what you find. I want the world to be a better place, not a worse place. Not being another nutcase leading a flock up a mountain – I don’t think anything’s particularly going to change anyway. You know it’s not really heading into anything worthwhile for this world that we live in.

FREQ: Your efforts seem to make a difference for some people.

EK-S: Sure, I mean this is my own way. The planet is changing absolutely, and I think if you take a holistic view of recent events, more and more I abolutely believe in this hand that basically pulls everything along, and shapes it. We have to go, no matter what happens, along with this. Call it destiny; and I believe it happens very much at apersonal level as much as on the global level. I think it’s immovable, but I don’t thinkit’s negative. It is positive; how the planet is now is how it has to be now. It’ll be a completely different place within ten years, but now it has to be trauma before it’s solace. We need this chaos now – we need it to learn. I believe in self-awareness, but I also believe in destiny. Sometimes it’s easier than other times, but at this time I’m in personal chaos at the moment. Sometimes you want things to be clear, to have some kind of order, but that’s impossible right now. I tend to treat myself a little bit like a leaf on the wind…

FREQ: Just being part of the programme?

EK-S: Yes, we’re players on the board.

©Freq 1999

The Golden Age (Satan Stole My Teddybear)

Something I’ve noticed with bands who have a vast, expansive back catalogue of albums such as the Legendary Pink Dots is that generally the albums you pick up first in your collection are the ones that are the most endearing and enduring. If I recall correctly, The Golden Age was perhaps the second Dots album I ever purchased and to this day it remains one of my favorites. There is a certain charm to this record, perhaps in the warm combination of the keyboards and violin of Patrick Wright (whose contributions to the Dots in the 80’s represent some of my favorite material). The main focal point of the album is the haunting, waltz based violin epic of “Hotel Noir”. Featuring a great Ka-Spell narrative and smartly composed music, this is easily one of the best songs in the Dots history. Some of the other great tracks on the album are “The More It Changes”, “Black List”, “The Month After” and “Methods”. The album flows through a more accessible, quaint and charming sound to very abstract soundscapes and then right back into safe ground again. Regardless of all else, The Golden Age is highly responsible for capturing my initial interest in the Legendary Pink Dots and gets high praise, if nothing else, for that.

 

Starvox- Edward Ka-Spel

The Legendary Pink Dot’s Edward Ka-Spel

Interview by Matt Heilman
Introduction Courtesy of Edward Ka-Spel

HISTORY

If myths have substance then it would be possible to believe that LPDs change their line-up every week. Not true at all..The line-up changed once in the last 9 years.Right now it looks like this…….

THE SILVERMAN/keyboards
RYAN MOORE /drums, bass
EDWARD KA-SPEL/vox,keyboards
EDWIN VON TRIPPENHOF/guitars
NIELS VAN HOORNBLOWER/horns,flute
FRANK VERSCHUUREN/Sound wizardry

It wasn’t always so stable. In the early 80s people came and went so fast that for about a month or so there were actually 2 versions of the Legendary Pink Dots with the same lead vocalist. A troubled merger occurred in 1981 and the peculiarly unified results can be heard on LPDs first official album “Brighter Now” released at the end of ’82. LPDs first appeared live in October 1980 at a local folk club in East London.

Unfortunately half of the audience retreated to the back wall, interpreting the bands nervous state as a bad attitude. This attitude problem seemed attractive to the rest of the 100 strong crowd, but alas the band was never invited back.The Dots were paid 5 English pounds for this spectacle.

For some years during the 80s The Dots enjoyed a strong 6 person line-up (all English) and recorded albums such as “Island of Jewels”, “Any Day Now”, and “The Golden Age”. They also toured Europe seriously and signed with the then small independent label, Play it Again Sam Records.

Perhaps a little prematurely 4 people left the band in 1988, and Niels Van Hoornblower stepped in as horn player while Bob Pistoor took over the guitarists role.

With this line-up “The Crushed Velvet Apocalypse” and “The Maria Dimension” were recorded, and the success of these albums led to Warner Bros. USA approaching the band with a view to making a deal. A little naively, the Dots never followed up this approach and remained under the wing of PIAS.

Tragedy struck in 1992 when Bob Pistoor died from cancer. Martyn de Kleer took over on guitar while Ryan Moore stepped into the band on bass after meeting them in his native Vancouver during LPDs second USA tour.

A protracted battle with Play it Again Sam dominated the next years, and the band quit the label in 1994, deciding to take over their own affairs.

A fruitful partnership began with USA label, Soleilmoon in 1995 and the bands popularity steadily began to grow again on the other side of the Atlantic.

The year ended in spectacular fashion when the Dots played to the biggest ever audience in Mexico city (around 2,500 people). It meant that The Dots focus switched from Europe to America and the band returned there for a 30 show tour in 1997, and followed up with 36 dates one year later.

THE PHILOSOPHY Sing While you May. The band’s catchword since the start…it is an OPTIMISTIC statement in these disturbing times.

* * *

Starvox: There is such a long history to absorb in regards to your work and the Legendary Pink Dots. And I have to be honest, I am a relatively new fan, and I am not too familiar with the extensive history of the band and many of the releases. What I have heard, I absolutely LOVE and ADORE. So if you can, please discuss how/when/where the band formed, and what were the initial goals and intents of the project?

Ka-Spel: LPDs were formed in 1980 (August) by myself, The Silverman and April Iliffe (the only one of us who could actually play an instrument). It was a time when bands were popping up out of the woodwork all over Britain. They’d make a cassette, duplicate a few, give them a cover and hand their work off to NME where it was miraculously often reviewed. I used to buy some of these cassettes, and regrettably normally had to find ear protection fast. Even so, the climate was healthy, and we bought a synth (Korg MS10), a drum machine and an amplifier…all on credit because we were broke. Songwriting began almost straight away and we cobbled our first cassette release together in around 3 months (Only Dreaming). I think 10 were made, each with hand-made cover (a pop-up messiah figure).

Bored with duplicating, we simply moved on to the next release, and the next until DDAA (a great little band in France) offered to release something properly (“Atomic Roses”). Again a cassette, but so beautifully made. The first record came out at the end of ’82 (Brighter Now) in an edition of 1990. Our initial goal? As obscure as it is now…we do it because we HAVE to…

Starvox: I know that most artists despise labels. I know myself that sometimes a particular tag seems to limit things and spark an unjust comparison. But inevitably, people seem to feel the need to label things. Do you prefer any labels to your art? Are you comfortable with the Gothic tag or do you prefer perhaps experimental or psychedelic? Genius perhaps?

Ka-Spel: Just Legendary Pink Dots. Like others, I hate categories… but I’ve nothing against those who label themselves gothic, experimental or psychedelic.

Starvox: I have found it increasingly difficult to find many LPD releases, unless of course I go through mail order and I always feel like I am getting majorly ripped off with the shipping and prices. Nonetheless, it seems that when a bands discography is hard to find it adds a deeper mystery to them. Do you enjoy this cult-like status of your music? And also, are there many plans to make some of the older releases more readily available?

Ka-spel: Older releases will become much easier to find in 2000 when Soleilmoon assumes responsibility for the back catalogue. LPDs is unashamedly a cult band…it always will be.

Starvox: The quote ‘Sing While You May’ is a said to be personal philosophy of the band. Obviously, I can gather that it has an optimistic carpe diem vibe to it, but is there a deeper scheme of thought behind it? What exactly does this quote mean to you on a personal level and what are you trying to express to your fans?

Ka-Spel: More my personal philosophy… we can argue about this within the group. It’s meant to be positive at a strange time when (in my view) events are accelerating towards saturation point and systems we rely upon are likely to collapse. Not the end of the world, but a dramatic transformation when excess will no longer be possible. Enjoy this exciting time. Be glad you live now. Sing while you may.

Starvox: It was actually the Tear Garden that sparked my interest in the LPDs. I was thoroughly enthralled with the first record and I quickly got a copy of ….Crippled Soul Divide, and it is by far one of my favourite records. Can you tell us a little bit about how the Tear Garden project came into being and your relationship with cEvin Key?

Ka-Spel: cEvin first wrote me in 1982…he collected our early cassettes and we stayed in touch by mail. In ’86 I was invited to play some solo shows in Vancouver and he asked to engineer. Before I came he sent a cassette of Center Bullet and asked if I could sing with it. I wrote the lyrics on the plane…and TG was born.

Starvox: I have heard that there is a new Tear Garden CD soon to be released. Can you tell us a bit about that? Any particular concept behind the album or any new musical direction? How does it compare to the other material?

Ka-Spel: New TG (Crystal Mass) bears closest relationship with the first TG (Tired Eyes) in that it is more electronic than its predecessors. A deliberate move, as we felt LPD and TG were becoming a little too similar.

Starvox: You seem to be quite a busy man. Is there any particular reason why you surround yourself in so much music, and any reason for the many side projects? How do you think they all differ? Do they represent a certain personality of yours or specific mindset/idea?

Ka-Spel: I enjoy new approaches, different inputs from people…so collaborations are exciting if I have time.  But there’s also a side of me which wants to have complete control..so that’s why there are solo CDs (a new one is due soon- “Red Letters”)

Starvox: To me, the music of LPD seems to be so eclectic and open, that basically any style of music could be performed on a LPD record and it would sound right, it would have the signature LPD sound. From what I have heard, the music of Tear Garden and LPD seem almost interchangeable and compliment each other.

Ka-Spel: Its a particularly feeling about a piece that sees it end up on an LPD album…an intuitive thing.

Starvox: I had the pleasure of seeing you guys live a couple of years ago in Pittsburgh. I went to the show because I try to attend all dark music shows in the area and I had never even heard you guys before. I just heard, They are really cool and very trippy! LOL! So I went and I was absolutely spellbound. I love the effects that were used on the brass instruments and just the stage performance itself was hypnotic. So do you plan to return to the US any time soon? How have the responses to your shows been overall in the US? What do you think of the US and the music scene over here?

Ka-Spel: That Pittsburgh show was actually one of our lesser ones, honestly.  Normally USA is much better for us to play than almost anywhere in western Europe. Bigger and more open crowds (especially on the west coast)…the whole continent just seems to care more about music. The plan is to return in June.

Starvox: I know this is sort of a worn out question, but every time it is posed unto a different artist, a unique response is given, so I will ask you.  Where do you draw your inspiration for your art?

Ka-Spel: Radio Zophquiscuo, a pirate sender emanating from the Planet Erg, operated by a race of utterly oppressed, but supremely gifted stick insects who sing about their tragic history in high pitched Finnish (backwards). I record it , slow it down and translate it into English. I ensure that they get part of the royalties.

Starvox: If you dont mind me asking, what are some of your personal hobbies besides music? What other musicians, writers, artists, or filmmakers do you admire or enjoy? What do you like to do in your spare time?

Ka-Spel: Harlan Ellison,Robert Sheckley are great writers…mostly I read when I have the chance.

Starvox: What is your fondest memory as a musician? Any particular tour or time spent in the studio for a particular album?

Ka-Spel: Recording of Maria Dimension.  A glorious summer..lots of inspiration, playing Mexico City for the first time. That solo tour of USA with Skinny Puppy.

Starvox: Since I am not all that familiar with a lot of your material, in closing I would like to ask on behalf of people who may never have heard ANY of your material: what releases would you most recommend as introductions to LPD, Tear Garden, or any of your other projects? What were your favourite recordings and why?

Ka-Spel: Maybe “Maria Dimension”, “9 Lives to Wonder”, “The Last Man to Fly” or..for the complete depressive….”The Golden Age”.

Starvox: I appreciate you taking the time out to participate in this interview. I hope to see you on tour soon!!! On behalf of Starvox Music Zine, we thank you for your time.

Ka-Spel: All the best

 

Any Day Now (Satan Stole My Teddybear)

An exceptionally fine piece of work from the mid-era Legendary Pink Dots. Easily the best thing about this period for the Dots is the lush and remarkable violin of Patrick Wright and the way the band so flawlessly melds it into their psychedelic pop format. Tracks like “True Love”, “Under Glass” and “The Plasma Twins” are instantly memorable, profound and lush with a full sound. Compared to some of the other Dots albums, this one is definitely more pop-oriented, though still containing the signature Dots sound. It is certainly an album that will continually grow on you, the same way The Golden Age (released not long afterwards) did. Good, good stuff.