Live Chronicles [PA]Hawkwind
Release Date: 02/03/2009
Original Release:
1988
# of Discs:
2
J&R Item # 1059760_CD
UPC # 5013929630727
Label: Atom
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
1.
Chronicle of the Black Sword, The
2.
Song of the Swords
3.
Dragons and Fables
4.
Narration
5.
Sea King
6.
Dead God's Homecoming
7.
Angels of Death
8.
Shade Gate
9.
Rocky Paths
10.
Narration (Elric the Enchanter, Pt. 1)
11.
Pulsing Cavern, The
12.
Master of the Universe
13.
Dragon Song
14.
Dreaming City
15.
Choose Your Masques
16.
Fight Sequence
Disc: 2
1.
Assault and Battery
2.
Sleep of a Thousand Tears
3.
Zarozinia
4.
Lords of Chaos
5.
Dark Lords, The
6.
Wizards of Pan Tang
7.
Moonglum
8.
Elric the Enchanter, Pt. 2
9.
Needle Gun
10.
Conjuration of Magnu
11.
Magnu
12.
Dust of Time
13.
Final Fight, The
14.
Horn of Fate (Destiny)
Performer: Hawkwind
Distributor: Infinity Entertainment Gr Notes: Hawkwind: Dave Brock (vocals, guitar, keyboards, synthesizer); Huw Lloyd-Langton (vocals, guitar); Harvey Bainbridge (vocals, keyboards, synthesizer); Alan Davey (bass, background vocals); Danny Thompson (drums). Recorded live in 1985. Includes a reprint of Michael Moorcock's short story "The Dreaming City". Liner Note Authors: Dave Brock; Mark Powell. Recording information: Chronicle Of The Black Sword Tour (1985); Hammersmith Odeon, London, England (1985). Recorded live during Hawkwind's 1985 The Chronicle of the Black Sword tour, Live Chronicles is a remarkable retelling of that album's own storyline, spread out over four full sides of vinyl and littered with Hawkwind oldies that really could have been written with Chronicle in mind -- and new material that, apparently, was. Following in the footsteps of 1972's Space Ritual with its combination of music and narration (from original Chronicle author Michael Moorcock), the show more or less follows the studio set's running order, opening with the mood-melding "Song of the Swords" and then pursuing hero Elric through a complex tale that is only strengthened by the sheer cohesion of its re-creation -- Moorcock himself later described the live show as "the pure version," although it must be confessed that vinyl alone loses a great deal of the magic. To truly appreciate Live Chronicles, one needs the accompanying video as well (and how often is that said about Hawkwind?). Necessarily lacking some of the studio album's atmosphere, Live Chronicles nevertheless compensates with energy and immediacy -- the version of "Needle Gun" is positively awesome, while "Master of the Universe" clatters with such metallic mayhem that even its rearrangement as a virtual speed anthem cannot dispel its power, an attribute that is only amplified by the song's positioning between the lower-key "The Pulsing Cavern" and "Dreaming City." Complaints, at the time, that the actual sound of the album is a little on the reedy side do still hold true, although that is as likely a mastering problem as anything else. Certainly, with the volume and bass control cranked up to "full," Live Chronicles echoes with all the passion of the concerts themselves -- and all the imagination of Hawkwind at full throttle. ~ Dave Thompson
Inspired equally by the hippie lifestyle/marathon jamming of the '60s West Coast bands and the interstellar excursions of Pink Floyd, Hawkwind helped invent "space rock" as we know it today. Through countless albums and personnel shifts, they've continued to combine heavy rock with science fiction in a futuristic setting, inspiring a generation of bands and several international space-rock festivals.
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