Edward Ka-Spel has built an international following with his dark psychedelic folk melodies and astute lyrics, first as the enigmatic and prolific founder/lead singer of London-cum-Netherlands-based band
the Legendary Pink Dots and then as a solo recording artist and performer.
Ka-Spel is widely regarded as a genius bordering on madness, which explains the frequent comparisons to
Syd Barrett, the first singer of
Pink Floyd. Since
the Legendary Pink Dots' beginning in 1980,
Ka-Spel has created an extensive personal mythology, like
Current 93 or
Psychic TV, and has composed several ongoing narratives of love, chaos, destruction, and other darkly tinged topics in what might be a works-in-progress goth opera. Accordingly, he has taken on many pseudonyms such as
the Prophet Qa'Sepel and
D'Archangel, making his incredibly varied recording history even more difficult to map. With dozens of albums credited to the Dots,
Ka-Spel could already be considered a songwriting powerhouse, but he has also recorded numerous solo albums, collaborated with
cEvin Key of
Skinny Puppy in a group called
the Tear Garden, worked with
Christoph Heemann as part of his project Mimir, and made many guest appearances.
Ka-Spel remembers the young
Key sending him fan letters and mixtapes of his music as a youngster, and given this mutual respect, they have collaborated and toured together.
Ka-Spel has been quoted as saying, "I'll try anything as long as it's different," and this has led to monumental sonic successes (and failures) throughout the artist's extensive career. Stylistically, his solo output has spanned haunted synth pop (Laugh China Doll, 1984), dreamy quasi-industrial (Tanith & the Lion Tree, 1991), warped sea shanties (Pieces of Infinity, 2004), and countless dark ambient and drone recordings. As with the Dots,
Ka-Spel's recordings are often of a limited number and only available through an extensive and devoted mail-order system. He has also released numerous cassette- and CD-R-only special recordings, usually including materials out of print on earlier labels along with new tracks. Each of the recordings feature
Ka-Spel's trademark cigarette drawl, slurred Rs (often misidentified as a lisp, but actually called rhotacism), and brooding mix of found sounds, vintage keyboards, sampled noises, and appearances from various
LPD members and extended family. Occasionally a label like Soleilmoon or Beta-lactam Ring will run a compilation of these rare tracks, such as
Down in the City of Heartbreak and Needles (
I and II) and Melancholics Anonymous.
The
Legendary Pink Dots first began releasing cassettes in 1981, with 1982 LP
Brighter Now (on In Phaze Records) being their official full-length debut. Following more than half-a-dozen additional releases by the band,
Ka-Spel made his solo debut in 1984 with the warped synth pop album Laugh China Doll (also on In Phaze). Until the beginning of the '90s,
Ka-Spel averaged one solo album per year, all of which contained "China Doll" in the title, including 1985's Chyekk, China Doll (Torso), 1987's AaΔzhyd China Doll (Torso), and 1990 cassette Lyvv China Doll (Mirrordot, with an expanded-CD edition on Staalplaat in 1993).
Following two
Tear Garden albums on Nettwerk and several well-regarded
Pink Dots albums on
Play It Again Sam, including 1988's
The Golden Age, 1990's
The Crushed Velvet Apocalypse, and 1991's The Maria Dimension,
Ka-Spel released solo album Tanith & the Lion Tree on Third Mind Records. A few solo EPs surfaced, as well as additional albums by
LPD, Mimir, and
Tear Garden (1992's
The Last Man to Fly), and
Ka-Spel released solo album The Scriptures of Illumina on Terminal Kaleidoscope in 1995.
LPD began a long partnership with Soleilmoon, which released the group's album
From Here You'll Watch the World Go By that same year.
Ka-Spel's solo album
The Blue Room appeared on the label in 1998, and Red Letters appeared on Soleilmoon sublabel Caciocavallo in 2000. Also that year,
Ka-Spel released A Birth Marked Conspiracy and Public Disturbance on Beta-lactam Ring, another label that would issue numerous recordings of his.
Ka-Spel was more prolific during the 2000s than ever before, averaging three albums per year between
LPD and his solo work, in addition to countless compilations, live recordings, and reissues. In addition to the previously mentioned labels,
LPD released several albums on R.O.I.R., and
Ka-Spel solo albums appeared on World Serpent, Trademark of Quantity, and Piehead Records.
Ka-Spel also collaborated with
the Silverman (
LPD member
Phil Knight) on a few ambient albums and live performances. The 2010s found
Ka-Spel and
LPD releasing numerous albums and live recordings online, although physical releases continued to appear, including
LPD's 2013 album The Gethsemane Option on Metropolis, as well as several more albums on Beta-lactam Ring.
Ka-Spel began releasing music on Italian label Rustblade in 2012, starting with the solo album Ghost Logik. The label also released Are You Receiving Us, Planet Earth?!,
Ka-Spel's 2014 collaboration with
Philippe Petit, and two volumes of dark ambient material called Spectrescapes at the end of 2015. 2017 saw
Ka-Spel team up with longtime fan
Amanda Palmer and release the crowd-funded LP
I Can Spin a Rainbow; she also appeared on
Ka-Spel's solo album, High on Station Yellow Moon. In early 2018,
Ka-Spel and
Nurse with Wound's
Steven Stapleton collaborated on the piece "The Man Who Floated Away," sharing a split LP with
Colin Potter and Quentin Rollet.
Ka-Spel's song-based album, The Moon Cracked Over Albion, was released in 2019, around the same time as
LPD's
Angel in the Detail. Additionally that year, he collaborated with Motion Kapture on an album titled Alien Subspace. ~ Daphne Carr & Paul Simpson