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Hawkwind

 
Album Review: Hawkwind

  • Artist: Hawkwind
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1970
  • Total Time: 39:25
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Produced by former Pretty Things guitarist Dick Taylor, Hawkwind's first album was rightfully compared to Pink Floyd's early sound: an appealing conglomeration of hippie rock grooves and interplanetary guitar trips set to the phosphorescent wandering of Dik Mik's electronics and Nik Turner's cool sax playing. Hawkwind may not have been their most lucrative album, but it's where it all began. Hawkwind's initial galactic blues-rock sound is based on Dave Brock's guitar playing, rising smoke-like through the haze of lyrical space funk. The two opening tracks set the tone, with "The Reason Is" sinking in nicely to the mood of both Dave Brock's and John Harrison's guitar viscosity. After this, the real Hawkwind begins to emerge, as the eight-minute "Be Yourself" is delightfully plastered with echoed vocals and comic book ominousness, putting drummer Terry Ollis in the spotlight this time. "Seeing It as You Really Are" moves hauntingly forward through the blackness of space as a constant jam, with the keyboards, saxophone, and guitar set adrift on a nonstop instrumental voyage. What begins to materialize throughout this debut album is the band's trademarked sound as a whole, with each player making their instrument effectual and authoritative from the get-go. Hawkwind's sound indeed solidified as their career moved upward through the '70s, but their first album magnificently introduces the starting point of what was going to be a long and peculiar journey. ~ Mike DeGagne, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Hurry on Sundown Hawkwind, Dave Brock Hawkwind (4:59)
The Reason Is? Dave Brock Hawkwind (3:30)
Be Yourself (Lyrics) Dave Brock Hawkwind (8:07)
Paranoia, Pt. 1 Hawkwind, Dave Brock Hawkwind (1:09)
Paranoia, Pt. 2 Hawkwind, Dave Brock Hawkwind (4:10)
Seeing It as You Really Are Hawkwind, Dave Brock Hawkwind (10:48)
Mirror of Illusion (Lyrics) Dave Brock Hawkwind (6:59)

Credits

Nik Turner (Sax (Alto)), Mark Brennan (Liner Notes), Dave Brock (Vocals), Dave Brock (Harmonica), Hawkwind (Producer), John Harrison (Bass), Barry Ainsworth (Engineer), Dave Brock (Keyboards), Lloyd Langton (Guitar), John Harrison (Guitar (Bass)), Dave Brock (Guitar), Hawkwind (Arranger), Dikmik (Keyboards), Dave Brock (Guitar (12 String)), Dave Brock (Percussion), Nik Turner (Vocals), Dick Taylor (Producer), Terry Ollis (Drums), Nik Turner (Saxophone), Nik Turner (Percussion)
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Wikipedia: Hawkwind (album)
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Hawkwind
Studio album by Hawkwind
Released August, 1970
Recorded March, 1970, Trident Studios
Genre Space rock
Length 57:41
Label Liberty - LBS 83348
Producer Dick Taylor and Hawkwind
Professional reviews
Hawkwind chronology
Hawkwind
(1970)
In Search of Space
(1971)

Hawkwind, the self-titled debut psychedelic rock album by Hawkwind was released in 1970, originally on Liberty Records (catalogue no. LBS 83348).

Contents

Recording

Pretty Things guitartist Dick Taylor, who was looking for a new venture after leaving the band, was pulled into Hawkwind playing some gigs and producing this album. After several unsuccessful attempts to capture the band's sound in the studio, it was decided simply to record it live in the studio.[1]

Songs

All songs on the original release were credited to Dave Brock to the amazement of the others as they had been borne from band jams. From the 1996 Remasters onwards the tracks have been credited to the entire band.

The bulk of the album is composed of a freeform instrumetal piece that the band named "Sunshine Special" but it was separated into different tracks on this album. On the LP, "Paranoia" ends after the first minute with the music slowing down as though the turntable is stopping, and then picks up as the first cut on Side 2. Lyrics are scant, but those that are present and the song titles are a reference to the drug experience, as the sleeve notes explain:

This is the beginning. By now we will be past this album. We started out trying to freak people (trippers), now we are trying to levitate their minds, in a nice way, without acid, and ultimately a completely audio-visual thing. Using a complex of electronics, lights and environmental experiences.

The two book-end pieces of "Hurry on Sundown" and "Mirror Of Illusion" are more of a nod to Brock's alternative activity of busking and were released as a single in edited form.

Sleeve

The cover is a fantasy painting that shows several dragon figures emerging from piles of leaves that also spell out the name of the band. On the front cover, the dragons are shown with human arms, while the reverse cover shows a dragon's head as an automobile with a driver wearing sunglasses.[1]

Adverts for the album proclaimed Hawkwind Is Space Rock.

Critical Reaction

Mark Plummer from Melody Maker reviewed the album in the context of electronic music as "interesting and exciting. The reason for this is that the group never goes too mad, and they keep within musical bounds, using sound discriminatingly, and only when they are needed to convey a feeling." adding that "Seeing It As You Really Are is a lesson in electronic music itself. Any group thinking of using weird sounds should listen to this album, it's tremendous." [2]

Band members

Members of the band warmly regard the album, many feeling that it was the band's best. Various reactions include:

  • "That was the great magical album. It was quite daring, I thought" - Dave Brock[3]
  • "I remember being a bit apprehensive because Dick Taylor was the main man there and he was an older guitarist - I felt intimidated and didn't really enjoy doing it. It was a good album though and I still enjoy hearing it, even now." - Huw Lloyd-Langton[4]
  • "We're very much a live band - with the exception of the first album which I had nothing to do with, and which I think was the best studio album Hawkwind's done - I think the "Space Ritual" album is the best one we've done, because that was live, that's Hawkwind, that's us as we are." - Simon King[5]
  • "My fav Gong album, and my fav H-W one, curiously-or obviously, I don't know, are records I've not played on... Camembert & Hawkwind (1) !" - Tim Blake[6]
  • "Some of the band hated that album, but I thought it was the most musical they did" - Dik Mik[7]

Track listing

Side 1
  1. "Hurry on Sundown" (Brock/Hawkwind) 4:50
  2. "The Reason Is?" (Brock/Hawkwind) 3:30
  3. "Be Yourself" (Brock/Hawkwind) 8:09
  4. "Paranoia (part 1)" (Brock/Hawkwind) 1:04
Side 2
  1. "Paranoia (part 2)" (Brock/Hawkwind) 4:11
  2. "Seeing It As You Really Are" (Brock/Hawkwind) 10:43
  3. "Mirror of Illusion" (Brock/Hawkwind) 7:08
bonus tracks on 1996 Remasters CD
  1. "Bring It On Home" (Willie Dixon) 3:18
  2. "Hurry on Sundown" (Hawkwind Zoo demo) (Brock/Hawkwind) 5:06
  3. "Kiss of the Velvet Whip" [aka "Sweet Mistress of Pain"] (Brock/Hawkwind) 5:28
  4. "Cymbaline" (Roger Waters) 4:04

Personnel

Credits

  • Recorded at Trident Studios, London, March and April 1970. Produced with Dick Taylor.
  • Sleeve by Arthur Rhodes.
  • "Bring It On Home" was recorded pre-Hawkwind by Dave Brock.
  • The other bonus tracks were recorded by Hawkwind Zoo at Abbey Road Studios 1969, produced with Don Poole.

Release history

  • Aug-1970: Liberty Records, LBS83348, UK vinyl - gatefold sleeve. First pressing had blue label, subsequent ones had black label.
  • 1971: United Artists Records, UAS-5519, USA vinyl
  • Sep-1975: Sunset Records, SLS50374, UK vinyl - single sleeve
  • Feb-1980: UA Rockfile, LBR1012, UK vinyl - single sleeve, red on green Doremi shield.
  • Feb-1984: Liberty Records, SLS1972921 UK vinyl, single sleeve; SLSP1972921, UK picture disc. In this guise (its 5th), the album made its only chart appearance, a single week at #75, nearly 14 years after its first release
  • Sep-1992: One Way Records, S2157658, USA CD
  • Mar-1996: EMI Remasters, HAWKS1, UK CD - initial issues in digipak

References

  1. ^ Collectable Records - Original gatefold cover
  2. ^ Melody Maker; 29th August 1970 - HAWKWIND (Liberty)
  3. ^ Record Collector, May-2002
  4. ^ Ptolemaic Terrascope, 1992
  5. ^ Sounds, 1-Sep-1973
  6. ^ Planet Gong Forum, 18-Feb-2005
  7. ^ Pete Frame's Hawkwind Family Tree, 1979

 
 
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