When did you first meet Metallica?
“Our very first show in the U.S. was with Slayer, but Motörhead took us on our first tour in ’84. When we played San Francisco someone told us about this band called Metallica who had a Danish drummer. We’d never heard of them, but Lars’ [Ulrich] dad was a famous tennis player in Denmark, so we said, ‘Yeah, bring him in’, and they ended up onstage for the encore. They recorded Ride The Lightning in Copenhagen. We had rehearsal rooms in the same building and Lars and James [Hetfield] came to a party at my place as well.”
Was this in your infamously haunted apartment in Copenhagen?
“Yeah, it was really haunted. There was a girl there one time who freaked out because something locked her in the bathroom and she heard growling, then [former K! photographer] Ray Palmer experienced something similar. He went to the bathroom in the morning, then he came out and abruptly said, ‘I’ve got to leave now, I’m going to the airport.’ Another guy felt hands up and down his back, a girl felt her hair being pulled. There were little kid-sized fingerprints that appeared at the top of a mirror, and items would turn up in the wrong places. So much happened and sometimes it was annoying, sometimes it was a lot of fun.”
Was it ever scary?
“No, I don’t feel that these presences are threatening at all. It’s like I wrote in Welcome Princes Of Hell – which was spelled incorrectly on the album, by the way; it says ‘Welcome Princess Of Hell’! But anyway, there’s the line, ‘Welcome to my house princes of Hell’, and then there’s the line, ‘We raise our glasses’. That happened too one night when a few people were there. A glass rose about two feet in the air and then slowly went down. I have always felt those presences protected us in some way.”
A lot of bands use occult imagery and Satanism purely for entertainment or shock value. Is it something that goes deeper for you?
“Much, much deeper. There’s so much more in King Diamond and Mercyful Fate songs that are taken from my real experiences than you would believe. From living in that apartment I started reading books about the occult, but most of what I read was written from a very specific Christian viewpoint. So it was quite liberating to find a book by Anton LaVey called The Satanic Bible. Which is really not the right title for that book, because it’s a book of philosophy. King Diamond lyrics are full of that philosophical side and that’s largely from looking around, seeing what’s happening and how people interact.”
King Diamond’s 1987 album Abigail is widely considered a metal classic. When you were making it, were you aware that you were summoning something special?
“No, not at all. The first King Diamond album [1986’s Fatal Portrait] had some songs that were written for Mercyful Fate, but there was also a mini-story of five songs. That felt right and I wanted so badly to write a horror concept album. The music developed with it, and became more theatrical. It’s not like we were the first to touch on those themes. Black Sabbath had certainly delved into the dark side, but we were one of the first that were standing on the other side of the fence and looking into all these things from a different viewpoint.”
Didn’t the initial idea come to you in a dream?
“Yeah, I was dreaming that night and I woke up because of a thunderstorm. I was so scared that if I went back to sleep I would forget it all by the morning. So I got up against my will, made a cup of coffee and started getting it all down.”