Live Seventy Nine
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Live Seventy Nine | |||||
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Live album by Hawkwind | |||||
Released | 1980 | ||||
Recorded | 1979 | ||||
Genre | Space Rock | ||||
Label | Bronze Records | ||||
Producer | Hawkwind and Ashley Howe | ||||
Professional reviews | |||||
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Hawkwind chronology | |||||
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Live Seventy Nine is a 1980 live album by Hawkwind recorded on their Winter 1979 tour. It reached #15 on the UK album chart.
This is a reconstituted Hawkwind with Brock, Bainbridge and King emerging from the dissolved Hawklords, joined by lead guitarist Huw Lloyd-Langton who had played on the debut album Hawkwind and keyboardist Tim Blake who was a long standing friend of the band and had played on Gong's Radio Gnome trilogy. This band embarked upon a UK Winter 1979 tour despite not having a record deal nor any product to promote, recording one of the shows.
Originally the band "didn't think the Oxford gig was very good, but we listened to the mixing-desk tape and were really surprised. So we mixed the master tape and got a deal with Bronze. If we hadn't got that deal, we'd probably have split up - we couldn't have carried on on our own."[1] Manager Douglas Smith secured a two album deal with Bronze Records, even if Gerry Bron confessed "I don't think we would have signed Hawkwind if it weren't for Motorhead, I can't say I was that interested... Once you run a record label and you're employing people, you have to make good commercial decisions - you can't turn away business, even if the business isn't what you particularly want to do"[2].
The music is more energetic and aggressive than the previous albums released on Charisma Records and the album benefited in the rise in popularity of NWOBHM at the time.
"Shot Down In The Night" had been written by Hawklords keyboardist Steve Swindells for single release, but he departed during the year to record a solo album. The single was backed by the non-album cut "Urban Guerilla" and reached #59 on the UK singles chart. Swindells also released a studio version of this track as a single and on his Fresh Blood album which he recorded with King, Lloyd-Langton and Nic Potter.
Contents |
[edit] Track listing
- Side 1
- "Shot Down in the Night" (Swindells) – 7:39
- "Motorway City" (Brock) – 8:09
- "Spirit of the Age" (Calvert/Brock) – 8:20
- Side 2
- "Brainstorm" (Turner) – 8:41
- "Light House" (Blake) – 6:25
- "Master Of The Universe" (Turner/Brock) – 4:33
- "Silver Machine (Requiem)" (Calvert/Brock) – 1:23
[edit] Personnel
- Dave Brock - guitar, keyboards, vocals
- Huw Lloyd-Langton - guitar, vocals
- Harvey Bainbridge - bass guitar, vocals
- Tim Blake - keyboards, vocals
- Simon King - drums
[edit] Credits
- Recorded on the Winter '79 tour.
- Produced by Hawkwind with Ashley Howe.
- Sleeve by Steve 'Krusher' Joule.
[edit] Notes
- "Light House" is from Tim Blake's solo album New Jerusalem.
- "Silver Machine" explodes part way into the song and is suffixed with "Requiem" in Brock's attempt to kill it off, being sick of this 'hit single' he was expected to play every night.
[edit] Release History
- Jul-1980: Bronze Records, BRON527, UK vinyl
- Dec-1988: Castle Communications, TFO17, UK 2CD and vinyl with Levitation
- Feb-1992: Castle Communications, CLABX911, 3CD with Levitation and Space Bandits
- Feb-1992: Castle Communications, CLACD243, UK CD
- Sep-1994: Griffin Records, GCD 229-2, USA CD
- Jul-1999: Essential Records, ESMCD735, UK CD digipak
[edit] Complete '79: Collectors Series Volume 1
Complete '79: Collectors Series Volume 1 | |||||
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Live album by Hawkwind | |||||
Released | 29 November 1999 | ||||
Recorded | Hammersmith Odeon, 1 December 1979 | ||||
Genre | Space Rock | ||||
Label | Voiceprint Records - HAWKVP4CD | ||||
Producer | Hawkwind | ||||
Professional reviews | |||||
Hawkwind chronology | |||||
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Complete '79: Collectors Series Volume 1 is 1999 released album of a 1979 concert by Hawkwind.
During 1999, Brock issused a slew of archive recordings through Voiceprint Records to generate money to pay off an outstanding Inland Revenue tax bill. No permission from the other musicians was sought, although they did duly receive accounting and royalties once the outstanding bill was settled, leading to several members complaining about this activity, and former manager Douglas Smith commenting "I think it's wrong. As a human being and as a manager, I have to get the permission of all the artists involved before I would do a deal." [3]
This recording is not professional, possibly being a mixing desk tape but probably an audience bootleg. The sound levels and frequency fluctuate throughout making this difficult listening despite a good band performance[4]. It purports to be the full unexpurgated concert, but there are clearly edits, notably during "Brainstorm" at 5:08 into Brock playing "You Know You're Only Dreaming".
Exactly why such a poor quality recording was used for this release is uncertain, as the Hawkwind Anthology full versions of "Shot Down in the Night" and "Urban Guerilla" demonstrate there is superior recordings available. Nevertheless, this CD contains the only available live versions of "PXR5" and Tim Blake's "New Jerusalem". The CD booklet is a reproduction of the 1979 tour programme by Steve 'Krusher' Joule.
- CD 1
- "Shot Down in the Night" (Swindells) – 7:36
- "Motorway City" (Brock) – 9:07
- "Spirit of the Age" (Calvert/Brock) – 7:28 – 8:01
- "Urban Guerilla" (Calvert/Brock) – 6:58 – 6:25
- "Who's Gonna Win The War?" (Brock) – 8:30 – 5:58
- "World of Tiers" (Bainbridge/Lloyd-Langton) – 3:11 – 5:41
- CD 2
- "New Jerusalem" (Blake) – 9:34
- "Light House" (Blake) – 10:08
- "Brainstorm" (Turner) – 8:10
- "Satellite" (Brock) – 2:41
- "PXR5" (Calvert/Brock) – 5:28 – 4:11
- "Master of the Universe" (Turner/Brock) – 1:57 – 3:14
- "Silver Machine" (Calvert/Brock) – 6:54 – 4:00
- "Levitation" (Brock) – 3:28 – 6:20
Note: The banding of tracks on the CD deviates from the actual songs, the first timings listed being those of the CD tracks, the second being the actual timings of the song.
[edit] References
- ^ Orbit 4 (June 1983): Huw Lloyd-Langton interview
- ^ DMME.NET - Classic Rock and Beyond - Interview with Gerry Bron, November 2004
- ^ The Saga of Hawkwind, Carol Clerk, pp450
- ^ Starfarer - CD Review