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Hawkwind
Progressive

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SOUTH BRITAIN
United Kingdom

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Last Login:  7/11/2006
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   Hawkwind: General Info
Member Since11/28/2005
Band Websitewww.hawkwind.org.uk
Band MembersGroup Members: Dave Brock, Robert Calvert, Paul Rudolph, Nik Turner, Huw Lloyd-Langton, Ginger Baker, Tim Blake, Steve Swindells, Andy Anderson, Dave Anderson, Harvey Bainbridge, Richard Chadwick, Thomas Crimble, Alan Davey, Clive Deamer, Del Dettmar, Dikmik, Martin Griffin, John Harrison, Keith Hayles, Paul Hayles, Rob Heaton, Simon House, Simon King, Lemmy, Terry Ollis, Alan Powell, Adrian Shaw, Bridgette Wishart, Mick Slattery, Ron Tree, Fred Reeve, Stacia, Danny Thompson
Record LabelUnknown Indie
Type of LabelIndie


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   About Hawkwind
Any sci-fi fan with long memories probably remembers those 1970's DAW paperback editions of Michael Moorcock's sword-and-sorcery novels, with their images of heavily armored, very muscular warriors, carrying large swords and standing against eerie land- and starscapes. Take that imagery, throw in some terminology and names seemingly lifted from the Marvel Comics of the era (The Watcher, etc.) and particle physics articles of the period, translate it into loud but articulate hard rock music, and that's more or less what Hawkwind is about. One of England's longest-enduring heavy metal bands, Hawkwind was formed during the late '60s, just as art-rock was coming into its own. They combined bold guitar, synthesizer, and Mellotron sounds, creating heavy metal music that seemed to cross paths with Chuck Berry and the Moody Blues without sounding like either of them. At their best, their early records sounded like the Beatles of "Yer Blues" combined with the Cream of "I Feel Free." The introduction of lyrics steeped in science fiction and drug effects on their second album helped define the group and separate them from the competition -- in some ways they were like Pink Floyd with more of a rock & roll beat and a vengeance. They've never charted a record anywhere near the heights that Dark Side of the Moon has achieved, but it's a sign of the dedication of the fans they do have that the group has about 30 CDs out, including archival releases of decades-old live shows and multiple compilations. Hawkwind's history has been marked by a series of confusing lineup changes, as members began an almost revolving-door relationship with the band virtually from the outset. The seeds of the group were planted when guitarist/singer Dave Brock and guitarist Mick Slattery of the group Famous Cure, which was playing a gig in Holland in 1969, met saxman/flautist/singer Nik Turner, a member of Mobile Freakout, on the same tour. Once back in England, Brock, Slattery, and Turner hooked up again and, adding John Harrison on bass, Terry Ollis on drums, and DikMik Davies on electronic keyboards, called themselves Group X, later changed to Hawkwind Zoo, and finally to Hawkwind. They secured a contract with United Artists/Liberty Records in England. Before the group recorded, however, Huw Lloyd Langton replaced Mick Slattery on guitar. The fledgling band hooked up with two Pretty Things alumni -- drummer Viv Prince, who occasionally joined them on stage, and bassist (and onetime Rolling Stones member) Dick Taylor, who was recruited as a producer but played on their early records. Their first single, "Hurry on Sundown" (aka "Hurry on a Sundown") b/w "Mirror of Illusion," was released in July of 1970, just in time for Harrison to exit the lineup, to be replaced by bassist Thomas Crimble. Their first album, Hawkwind, was released to little public notice in August, but that same month the group made a modest splash by playing outside the fences of the Isle of Wight Festival. The following month, Huw Lloyd Langton quit the band along with Thomas Crimble -- the replacement bassist, ex-Amon Duul member Dave Anderson, joined in May of 1971, the same month that DikMik Davies quit, to be replaced on keyboards by Del Dettmar. In June of that year, two more new members came aboard -- poet Robert Calvert, who became lead vocalist, and a dancer named Stacia, who began appearing with the group on stage. Meanwhile, the band also hooked up with artist Barney Bubbles, who gave the group a new image, redesigning their stage decor and equipment decoration, and also devising distinctive new album graphics. Ex-bassist Crimble helped arrange for the group's performance at the Glastonbury Fayre in Somerset in June of 1971, which gave Hawkwind fresh exposure, and brought them to the attention of writer Michael Moorcock, who was entering a vastly popular phase in his career as the author of many science fiction and fantasy novels. Moorcock helped organize some of their performances, as well as occasionally serving as a substitute for Calvert. Equally important, in August of 1971, Dave Anderson departed the group, while DikMik Davies returned to the lineup to join Dettmar on keyboards and brought as Anderson's replacement -- his friend Lemmy (born Ian Kilmister), an ex-roadie for Jimi Hendrix and a member of the rowdy mid-'60s Blackpool rock & roll band the Rocking Vicars. Lemmy had joined the group just in time to participate on the recording of the band's second album, In Search of Space. Released in October of 1971, it proved a defining work, carving out new frontiers of metal, drug, and science-fiction-laced music, including one major classic song, "Masters of the Universe," which became one of the group's most popular concert numbers and turned up on numerous studio and live compilations. More lineup changes followed, as Simon King succeeded Terry Ollis on the drums in January of 1972. The group played the Greasy Truckers Party -- a showcase of underground and alternative music and politics -- at the Roundhouse in London the next month, parts of which later surfaced on a pair of subsequent albums. All of these lineup changes and career steps had been compromised by a string of annoying bad luck and thefts of equipment, which were serious enough to threaten their solvency. Coupled with Bob Calvert's shaky health, the result of a nervous breakdown, Hawkwind went into 1972 on a very uncertain footing. The group's early sound, characterized by their singles up through this point, was essentially hard rock with progressive trappings. They slotted in perfectly with the collegiate and drug audiences, putting on the kind of show that acts like King Crimson and ELP were known for, but with more of a pure rock & roll base (not surprising, considering Lemmy's background). Their commercial breakthrough took place when a version of the driving hard rocker "Silver Machine," sung by Lemmy, got to number three on the British charts in August of 1972. They were unable to follow up on this unexpected flash of mass success, particularly when their follow-up single, "Urban Guerrilla," a surprisingly melodic rocker with lots of crunchy guitar at the core of multiple layers of metallic sound, was withdrawn amid a series of terrorist attacks in London, even though it had reached the British Top 40 and seemed poised to mimic "Silver Machine"'s success. The British tour that followed "Silver Machine," their first major circuit of the country, gave them more concert exposure, and their third album, Doremi Fasol Latido, released in November of 1972, which got to the number 14 spot on the British charts. This album codified the group's science-fiction orientation, presenting an elaborate mythology about the history of the universe (or some universe) into which the group and their music was woven. By this time, they had a major reputation as a live act, and rose to the occasion with an elaborate concert show called the Space Ritual. Their fourth album, a double-disc set recorded in concert called Space Ritual, issued in June of 1973, got to number nine. By the time of their next album, In the Hall of the Mountain Grill in 1974, Bob Calvert had departed to work on a planned solo project (Captain Lockheed and the Starfighters), and violinist and keyboard player Simon House had joined the group. This was the heyday of progressive bands such as Yes, ELP, and Genesis, and Hawkwind's mix of dense keyboard textures and heavy metal guitar and bass, coupling classical bombast and hard rock playing, became the sudden recipient of massive international press coverage -- though they'd never charted a record in the United States, they became well known to readers in the rock press, and their records were available as imports. The group toured the United States twice during this era, once in late 1973 and again in the spring of the next year. These tours had their usual share of problems -- the band and its entire entourage were arrested in Indiana for non-payment of taxes -- but it was after the release of their 1975 album, Warrior on the Edge of Time, that a major membership change ensued. They were touring the United States behind the release of the album when Lemmy was arrested on drug charges. He was fired from the band and went on to form Motörhead, a successful and influential metal band. His exit also took away a lot of the energy and focus driving Hawkwind's sound. There was talk about the band calling it quits, but they carried on with Lemmy's replacement, Paul Rudolph, and with Bob Calvert back in the lineup. By this time, their chances for a breakthrough in America had been reduced considerably by the chart success of such groups as Kansas and Blue Oyster Cult, both of which melded proletariat rock with progressive sensibilities in just the right portions to appeal to kids on this side of the Atlantic. Hawkwind's revamped lineup did release a new album, Astounding Sounds, which performed moderately well, and followed it a year later with Quark Strangeness and Charm (1977), which had a good title song, among other virtues. Hawkwind was still working as a quintet, but by this time their chronic instability was about to reach critical levels -- at the end of their 1978 American tour, Calvert quit the band again, and then the entire group virtually disbanded. When the smoke cleared, Calvert had put together a direct offshoot group, the Hawklords, and abandoned an entire finished album to record 25 Years On with a lineup that included Brock, Martin Griffiths on drums, Steve Swindell on keyboards, and Harvey Bainbridge on drums. That record made a respectable showing at number 48 on the British charts with a supporting tour, but the new group wasn't much more stable than the old one, with drummer Griffiths gone by December of 1978. Then Calvert quit (again), while Simon King, who had been a Hawkwind member a couple of years back, rejoined on drums, replacing Griffiths. The group was left as a four-piece and resumed the use of the name Hawkwind in January of 1979. Huw Lloyd Langton was back in the lineup by May of 1979, while Tim Blake replaced a departing Swindell. This lineup proved relatively stable and recorded a very successful live album (number 15 in the U.K.), released as part of a new contract with Bronze Records. The one big change took place in September of 1980 when Ginger Baker replaced Simon King, although Baker himself only lasted until March of 1981, when he was let go from the band and replaced by "Hawklords" drummer Martin Griffiths. This core lineup cut a string of good-selling albums through 1984, which were embraced by the heavy metal community and initially propelled into the Top 30 and Top 20 in England, culminating with another live album. By their 1984 album This Is Hawkwind, Do Not Panic, released under a new contract with Flickknife Records, Turner, Brock, and Langton were back together again. By this time, the band's 1970s recordings were starting to show up in profusion, in competition with their current work. Ironically, it was in 1985, just as the current group was starting to compete with their own early history, that they released their most ambitious record of all, Chronicle of the Black Sword. An adaptation of Michael Moorcock's sci-fi novels, the album was a return to their old style as well. It was in this same period that Brock, Turner, Langton, Anderson, Crimble, Bainbridge, and Slattery attended the first Hawkwind Convention, held in Manchester -- Turner left soon after, but the remaining members held together for three years, a record for the band. Bob Calvert, who had quit the band twice at the end of the '70s, died of a heart attack in 1988. Hawkwind was still together, however, and the following year even managed its first American tour since Calvert's first exit from the band. By 1990, their fortunes were on the upswing again, when their sudden embrace of the rave culture on a new album, Space Bandits, gave them a new chart entry and a distinctly younger listenership. Their commercial revival was short-lived, however, and by 1991, they were busying themselves re-recording their classic material. They toured America again in 1992. They were left as a trio after a falling out among the members at the end of that tour, and in recent years, apart from periodic reissues of their classic material, the surviving group has achieved a serious following on the underground, drug-driven dance/rave scene in England, ironically returning to a modern version of their roots. They've played various major showcases (including the 12 Hour Technicolor Dream All Nighter at Brixton Academy), as well as benefit performances. Their entire catalog has been reissued on CD by several different labels (Griffin, Cleopatra, One Way, Magnum, etc.), in some cases recompiled and retitled (especially the live recordings), including numerous compilations and archival explorations, all very confusing and numbering in the dozens. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

   Hawkwind's Friend Space (Top 6)
Hawkwind has 1090 friends.
 Deanna 


 megan leann 


 Dickhead 


 Jen Zatoth 


 Tom 


 steff 





Hawkwind's Friends Comments
Displaying 25 of 258 comments  ( View All | Add Comment )
alexander de large





Mar 23 2009 1:06 PM






lprs037 - Frogwomen & alexander de large - 66.
6


Frogwomen’s last album is just water under the bridge
and only the disrespectful de large could encourage him to create a new one… it is a one-song record which symbolically
lasts 66.
6
minutes.
Satan worshipping and overused topic in pop music is just the straw that allowed the struggle between the two artists to
begin: a patchwork of microsongs in which each one of them tries to annihilate the other’s style, a record that ranges
between love ditties, doom-noise cants, and irreverent & wild tarantellas (ehm.... maybe i’m overstating now). .






FREE DOWNLOADABLE

at



WWW.LEPERS.IT


-adl
@nimal...





Feb 22 2009 4:34 PM

This comment was sent by your friend via the GoodTree Causes app.
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-------------------------------------------

Hey Hawkwind,
I left you a gift. Click and pick it up.

morgana





Feb 12 2009 2:10 AM

Hope your Valentines Day is delightful and filled with~~~ much love! ♥




xo Morgana
Rockadrome Records





Jan 25 2009 1:34 AM


JERUSALEM CD available now!!
Jerusalem heavy rock CD


morgana





Dec 14 2008 10:01 PM

May peace, love and joy be yours during this beautiful holiday season and in the new year.
Many blessings to you and yours.
xo morgana
Skywise





Dec 11 2008 3:15 PM

Psychedelic Warlords.
Greetings from Skywise!

www. skywise. it
The Amorphous Androgynous





Nov 24 2008 1:59 PM

sorry for double post but thanks to Hawkwind for participation in this project . .









" . . the strongest argument to turn on/ tune in etc since Lennon thought naming a song after a children's home might be a good laugh.
" 9/10 NME....



" Compilation of the Year by a light year. It's gonna blow your mind out so bad that you'll be picking bits of your brains outta the carpet for the rest of your days"
the Electric Roulette ....


" a reinterpretation of psychedelic music tracing the dots from its birth in 1967 to the present - a dj trip through over 4 decades of genre busting, sonically diverse music. .. a true sonic trip.
" ROUGH TRADE......
The Amorphous Androgynous





Nov 20 2008 9:56 AM

thankyou for your participation in this project . .






" . . the strongest argument to turn on/ tune in etc since Lennon thought naming a song after a children's home might be a good laugh. " 9/10 NME



" Compilation of the Year by a light year. It's gonna blow your mind out so bad that you'll be
picking bits of your brains outta the carpet for the rest of your days"
the Electric Roulette


" a reinterpretation of psychedelic music tracing the dots from its birth in 1967 to the present - a dj trip through over 4 decades of genre busting, sonically diverse music. .. a true sonic trip.
" ROUGH TRADE
GUILD NAVIGATORS





Nov 4 2008 4:17 AM

Here is the latest and greatest contribution to the world of music. This is a CD release with original gatefold artwork. Here is Jet Jaguar vs. Guild Navigators in this 14 song split ep-CD called Death Race Beyond the Stars. Here you will find a highly imaginative journey into the darkest realms of the musical Science Fiction netherworld.

From fiery apocalyptic audio scenery to journeys into the future. You may find yourself immersed and marooned on desert island like planetoids, singing cyberspacepunk kumbaya's in some lonely corner of our galaxy. You may find yourself being seduced in your tv room by a sexy fem-alien in the middle of the night or having a close encounter of the road trip - stoner kind on a long empty section of a the Interstate with your buddies.
Good head phones -or- stereo surround sound are not only recommended but essential!

Come experience first hand the battle that rages between these deep space cruisers and much more. Order your copy before they are gone. Available for a limited time as there are only a limited amount pressed. Distribution available soon through Black Widow Records and Distribution in Italy.

So, let this cd Death Race Beyond the Stars take you far out of your mundane reality and send you on an frolicking science fiction adventure into SPACE the way it was meant to be done, with high velocity electro space -pulp rock and roll!

Who's gonna win the Death Race Beyond the Stars?????????? You decide!!!

On OVERLORD RECORDS available soon for order from your favorite CD music store. Distribution Black Widow
Records. Or hit me up personally for a copy.


WE Win&

The Bimble Inn





Aug 4 2008 11:14 PM

COLOSSLOTH





Aug 4 2008 6:34 AM

Photobucket
Skywise





Jul 18 2008 12:36 PM

CCE Pres Eng
ROCKFOUR





Jun 9 2008 2:41 PM

Dear Friends,

Help Rockfour get to the Lollapalooza festival this year by voting for us.
To vote, click on the flyer below, scroll to the bottom of the page and put in your email address.
Be sure to check your email for your vote confirmation and click the link where indicated to confirm and cast your vote!

You can vote once a day, every day per email address and it only takes a few seconds so VOTE NOW!!

Thanks in advance!
Rockfour
Full Throttle





Jun 1 2008 10:27 PM

Hey Hawkwind, I just bought you as my PET!
Click here to find out how much I think you're WORTH!


Time to play the GAME --- Hop on ABOARD!!!

-------------------------------
This comment was sent by your friend via the Own Your Friends! application. To block comments sent via Apps.

click here.


alexander de large





May 16 2008 1:22 PM

lepers produtcions present



for free! and as simple and harmless as a click...

only at www. lepers. it

may leprosy be with you...

-adl
OGRE





Apr 4 2008 12:36 AM

Please help us out! Click on the picture, vote OGRE, cast your ballot, and help us get the word out! Thanks!
..Photobucket">">

Spaceseed





Apr 2 2008 10:36 PM

heh heh all the best)
Lauren





Mar 19 2008 10:22 AM

Hawkwind

Remember puffin, now puff from this website, yep a website sells puff! www.ludofg.com
Music Street Journal





Mar 10 2008 5:46 PM

I'm just uploading an audio interview with Dave Brock of Hawkwind from 1998. It's going to be in our members area. Other audio interviews there include Ray Manzarek of The Doors, Bernie Shaw of Uriah Heep, Gary Holt of Exodus and two members of Enslaved. In addition membership gets you access to all our archived articles, concert photo galleries (including Hawkwind), song clips provided by participating music artists and more. Memberships start at $6. Go to www.musicstreetjournal.com and log in to check out the members area. If you need a membership, just hit the "click to register" link and you'll be set up in no time. Remember, you can always view our current issue whether you are a member or not, but without a membership you are only getting a small part of the whole picture that is Music Street Journal.
Music Street Journal





Mar 7 2008 7:20 PM

Thanks for your friendship, Hawkwind

Be sure to check out the new look of Music Street Journal
www. musicstreetjournal. com


Sign up for our members area to get access to audio interviews, large photo galleries and lots more - including the chance to interact with musicians through Q & A's. If you aren't a member, you are only getting part of the picture - you can belong for as little as 6 dollars a month.

Also, if you are in a band or are a publicist or label check the "I'd Like To Meet" and "interests" sections of the profile for more information about using MSJ for publicity.

In fact, no matter your business, the information in the "Interests" section might be valuable to you.


Be sure to subscribe to the blog and check out the latest edition for more information on the members area.
Music Street Journal





Mar 1 2008 5:10 PM

Be sure to check out the newly redesigned Music Street Journal at www. musicstreetjournal. com and the Hawkwind Concert Photo Gallery in our members' area - memberships start at six dollars. You can also sample a couple Alan Davey solo songs in there.
IronMan





Feb 17 2008 9:57 PM

Omg you dont want to miss this free ringtones for a year.. they have everything!!

http://www.unreleasedtones.com
Hugo





Feb 13 2008 6:49 PM

Hugo





Feb 7 2008 11:18 AM

Hugo





Feb 5 2008 7:06 PM

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