Live '79 [Bonus Tracks] [PA]

Hawkwind
Release Date: 03/24/2009
Original Release:  1993
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 1070326_CD
UPC # 5013929631120
Label: Atomhenge
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Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Shot Down in the Night
2. Motorway City
3. Spirit of the Age
4. Brainstorm
5. Lighthouse
6. Master of the Universe
7. Silver Machine (Requiem)
8. Urban Guerrilla
9. Shot Down in the Night

Performer: Hawkwind
Producer: Hawkwind; Ashley Howe
Distributor: Infinity Entertainment Gr

Notes: Hawkwind: Dave Brock (vocals, guitar, synthesizers), Huw Lloyd-Langton (guitar, background vocals), Tim Blake (keyboards, synthesizers), Harvey Bainbridge (bass, background vocals), Simon King (drums). Recorded live in England in 1979. All songs written or co-written by members of Hawkwind except "Shot Down In The Night" (Swindells) and "Brainstorm" (Turner). Personnel: Dave Brock (vocals, guitar, synthesizer); Huw Lloyd-Langton (guitar, background vocals); Tim Blake (keyboards, synthesizer); Simon King (drums); Harvey Bainbridge (background vocals). Liner Note Author: Brian Tawn. Recording information: 1979. Author: Steve Swindells. Recorded, of course, during Hawkwind's 1979 U.K. tour, Live '79 wrapped up seven tracks from the hour-plus extravaganza that greeted concert-goers, with the emphasis (hardly surprisingly) on the older classics that remained the band's most dramatic calling card. For longtime fans, however, there were still several surprises, as the solid mass of earlier band lineups opened out to almost virtuosic proportions. With one eye surely fixed on the rapidly emerging New Wave of British Heavy Metal, guitarist Huw Lloyd Langton lays down guitar solos that the likes of "Silver Machine" and "Master of the Universe" had never previously imagined. Keyboard player Tim Blake (ex-Gong) was granted his own solo showcase mid-set -- "Lighthouse," from his newly released New Jerusalem solo album, is included here, although he also performed the epic title track. Both newcomers went at least some way toward compensating for the recent loss of Bob Calvert -- indeed, the sheer vivacity and variety of the band's performance might not even have been possible had the idiosyncratic poet remained on board. The sound quality is not necessarily all that one would expect from a major-label release, although compared to Space Ritual, Hawkwind's only previous in-concert set, that's hardly surprising. The truncating of the performance itself can, however, be remedied via its inclusion on Dave Brock's own Complete '79 anthology. ~ Dave Thompson Recorded, of course, during Hawkwind's 1979 U.K. tour, Live '79 wrapped up seven tracks from the hour-plus extravaganza that greeted concert-goers, with the emphasis (hardly surprisingly) on the older classics that remained the band's most dramatic calling card. For longtime fans, however, there were still several surprises, as the solid mass of earlier band lineups opened out to almost virtuosic proportions. With one eye surely fixed on the rapidly emerging New Wave of British Heavy Metal, guitarist Huw Lloyd Langton lays down guitar solos that the likes of "Silver Machine" and "Master of the Universe" had never previously imagined. Keyboard player Tim Blake (ex-Gong) was granted his own solo showcase mid-set -- "Lighthouse," from his newly released New Jerusalem solo album, is included here, although he also performed the epic title track. Both newcomers went at least some way toward compensating for the recent loss of Bob Calvert -- indeed, the sheer vivacity and variety of the band's performance might not even have been possible had the idiosyncratic poet remained on board. The sound quality is not necessarily all that one would expect from a major-label release, although compared to Space Ritual, Hawkwind's only previous in-concert set, that's hardly surprising. The truncating of the performance itself can, however, be remedied via its inclusion on Dave Brock's own Complete '79 anthology. [The 2009 edition included bonus tracks.] ~ 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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