Hawkwind
- Silver Machine (
Dik Mik departed during 1973 and Calvert ended his
association with the band to concentrate on solo projects. Dettmar also
indicated that he was to leave the band, so Simon
House was recruited as keyboardist and violinist playing live
shows, a North America tour and recording the 1974 album Hall of the Mountain Grill.
Dettmar left after a European tour, emigrating to Canada, whilst Alan
Powell deputised for an incapacitated King on that European
tour, but remained giving the band two drummers.
At the beginning of 1975, the band recorded the album Warrior on the Edge of
Time in collaboration with Michael
Moorcock loosely based on his Eternal Champion figure. However,
during a North America tour in May, Lemmy was caught in possession of amphetamine
crossing the border from the USA into Canada. The border police mistook
the powder for cocaine and he was jailed, forcing the band to cancel
some shows. Fed up of his erratic behaviour, the band fired the bass
player
replacing him with their long standing friend and former Pink Fairies
guitarist Paul Rudolph. Lemmy then
teamed up with another Pink Fairies guitarist, Larry Wallis, to form Motörhead,
named after the last song he had written for Hawkwind.
1976-78: Charisma era
Robert Calvert made a guest appearance with band for their
headline set at the Reading Festival in August 1975,
after which he chose to rejoin the band as a full-time vocalist and
front man. Stacia,
on the other hand, chose to relinquish her dancing duties and settle
down to family life. The band changed record company to Charisma
Records and band management from Douglas Smith to Tony Howard.
1976's Astounding Sounds,
Amazing Music is the first album of this era
and highlights both Calvert's well crafted lyrics written with stage
performance in mind and a greater proficiency and scope in the music.
But on the eve of recording the follow-up Back on the Streets
single, Turner was sacked for his erratic live playing
and Powell was deemed surplus to requirements. After a tour to promote
the single and during rehearsals for the next album, Rudolph was also
sacked for allegedly trying to steer the band into a musical direction
at odds with Calvert and Brock's vision.
Adrian "Ade" Shaw, who
as the bass player for Magic Muscle had supported Hawkwind on
the Space Ritual tour, came in for the 1977 album Quark, Strangeness and
Charm. The band continued to enjoy moderate
commercial success, but Calvert's mental illness often caused problems.
A manic phase saw the band abandon a European tour in France,
while a depression phase during a 1978 North American tour convinced
Brock to disband the group.
Inbetween these two tours, the band had recorded the album PXR5
in January 1978, but its release was delayed until 1979.
On 23rd December 1977 in Barnstaple, Brock and Calvert had
performed a one-off gig with Devon band Ark as the Sonic
Assassins, and looking for a new project in 1978, bassist Harvey
Bainbridge and drummer Martin Griffin were recruited from
this event. Steve Swindells was
recruited as keyboard player. The band was named Hawklords,
probably for legal reasons having recently split with their management,
and recording took place on a farm in Devon using a mobile studio
resulting in the album 25 Years On.
King had originally been the drummer for the project but quit during
recording sessions to return to London, while House, who had
temporarily left the band to join a David
Bowie tour, elected to remain with Bowie fulltime, but
nevertheless did contribute violin to these sessions. At the end of the
album's UK tour, Calvert, wanting King back in the band, fired Griffin,
then promptly resigned himself, choosing to pursue a career in
literature.
Swindells left to record a solo album after an offer had been made to
him by the record company ATCO.
1980s
In the Winter of 1979, Hawkwind reformed with Brock,
Bainbridge and King being joined by Huw
Lloyd-Langton and Tim Blake, embarking upon a UK
tour despite not having any product to promote. Some shows were
recorded and a deal was made with Bronze Records resulting in the Live
Seventy-Nine album, quickly followed by the
studio album Levitation.
However, during the recording of Levitation King
quit and Ginger Baker was drafted in
for the sessions, but he chose to stay with the band for the tour,
during which Tim Blake left to be replaced by
Keith Hale.
In 1981 Baker and Hale left after their insistence that
Bainbridge should be sacked was declined,
and Brock and Bainbridge elected to handle synthesizers and sequencers
themselves with drummer Griffin from the Hawklords rejoining. Three
albums, which again saw Michael Moorcock contributing lyrics and
vocals, were recorded for RCA/Active: Sonic
Attack, the electronic Church
of Hawkwind and Choose
Your Masques. This band headlined the 1981 Glastonbury
Festival and made an appearance at the 1982 Donnington
Monsters of Rock Festival, as well as continuing to play the summer solstice at Stonehenge Free Festival.
Nik Turner had returned as a guest for the 1982 Choose
Your Masques tour and was invited back permanently. Further
tours ensued with Dead Fred Reeves augmenting the line-up on keyboards
and violin, but neither Turner nor Reeves would appear on the only
recording of 1983/84, The Earth Ritual Preview,
but there was a guest spot for Lemmy. The Earth Ritual
tour was filmed for Hawkwind's first ever video release, Night Of The Hawk.
Alan
Davey was a young fan of the band who had sent a tape of his
playing to Brock,
and Brock chose to oust Reeves moving Bainbridge from bass to keyboards
in order to accommodate Davey. This experimental line-up played at the
Stonehenge Free Festival in 1984, which was filmed and release as Stonehenge 84.
Subsequent personal and professional tensions between Brock and Turner
led to the latter's expulsion at the beginning of 1985.
Brock had started using drum machines for his home demos
and became increasingly frustrated at the inability of drummers to keep
perfect time, leading to a succession of drummers coming and going.
First, Griffin was ousted and the band tried Simon King again, but
unhappy with his playing at that time, he was rejected. Andy
Anderson filled in while he was also playing for The
Cure, as did Robert Heaton prior to the rise of New Model Army. Lloyd
Langton Group drummer John Clark did some recording sessions, Rik Martinez started the Earth
Ritual tour but failed to end it, being replaced by Clive Deamer, who was deemed "too
professional"
for the band. Eventually in 1985 Danny Thompson Jr, a friend of
bassist Alan Davey, was drafted in and remained almost to the end of
the decade.
Hawkwind's association with Moorcock climaxed in their
most ambitious project, The Chronicle
of the Black Sword, based loosely around the Elric series of
books and theatrically staged with Tony Crerar as the central character.
Moorcock contributed lyrics, but only performed some spoken pieces on
some live dates. The tour was recorded and issued as an album Live
Chronicles and video The
Chronicle of the Black Sword. A headline
appearance at the 1986 Reading Festival was followed by a
UK tour to promote the Live Chronicles album which
was filmed and released as Chaos.
In 1988 the band recorded the album The
Xenon Codex with Guy Bidmead, but all was not
well in the band and soon after, both Lloyd-Langton and Thompson
departed.
1990s
Drummer Richard Chadwick had been playing
in small alternative free festival bands for a decade and had
frequently crossed paths with Hawkwind and Brock. He was initially
invited simply to play with the band, but eventually replaced stand in
drummer Mick Kirton to become
the band's drummer to the present day. Bridget
Wishart, an associate of Chadwick's from the festival circuit, also
joined to become the band's one and only frontwoman, and this new
lineup was rounded off by the return of Simon House playing lead
violin. This band produced two albums, 1990's Space
Bandits and 1991's Palace Springs
and also filmed a 1-hour appearance for the Bedrock TV
series.
Bainbridge and House departed the band, and Wishart was
forced out after Davey issued a "me or her" ultimatum.
The band continued as a three piece relying heavily on synthesizers and
sequencers to create a wall-of-sound. The 1992 album Electric
Tepee combined hard rock and light ambient
pieces, while It
is the Business of the Future to be Dangerous
is almost devoid of the rock leanings. The
Business Trip is a record of the previous
album's tour, but rockier as would be expected from a live outing. The White Zone
album was released under the alias Psychedelic Warriors
to distance itself entirely from the rock expectancy of Hawkwind.
A general criticism of techno music at that time was its
facelessness and lack of personality, which the band were coming to
feel also plagued them.
Ron
Tree had known the band on the festival circuit and offered
his services as a frontman, and the band duly employed him for the
album Alien 4 and
its accompanying tour which resulted in the album Love
in Space and video Love In Space.
Unhappy with the musical direction of the band, bassist
Alan Davey issued a "change or I leave" ultimatum, the band deciding
that he should leave.
He departed forming his own Middle-Eastern flavoured hard-rock group Bedouin and a Motörhead tribute act
named Ace of Spades. His bass-playing role was
picked up by singer Ron Tree and the band were joined by lead guitarist
Jerry Richards
(another stalwart of the festival scene, playing for Tubilah Dog who
had merged with Brock's Agents of Chaos during 1988) for the albums Distant
Horizons and In
Your Area. Rasta chanter Captain Rizz also joined the band for
guest spots during live shows.
2000s
The concept of a Hawkestra, an event
featuring appearances from all past and present members, had originally
been intended to coincide with the band's 30th anniversary and the
release of the career spanning Epocheclipse – 30
Years Anthology set, but logistical problems
delayed it until the 21 October 2000. It took place at the Brixton
Academy with about 20 members taking part in a 3+ hour set which was
filmed and recorded. However, arguments and disputes over financial
recompense and musical input resulted in the prospect of the event
being restaged unlikely, and any album or DVD release being
indefinitely shelved.
The Hawkestra had set a template for Brock to assemble a
core band of Tree, Brock, Richards, Davey, Chadwick and to use former
members as guests on live shows and studio recordings. The 2000
Christmas Astoria show was recorded with contributions from House,
Blake, Rizz, Moorcock, Jez Huggett and Keith Kniveton and released as Yule
Ritual the following year. Davey agreed to
rejoin the band permanently only after Brock acquiesced to his "Tree
and Richards or me" ultimatum, so Tree and Richards departed during 2001.
Meanwhile, having rekindled relationships with old friends
at the Hawkestra, Turner organised further Hawkestra gigs resulting in
the formation of xhawkwind.com, a band consisting mainly of ex-Hawkwind
members and playing old Hawkwind songs. An appearance at Guilfest in
2002 led to confusion as to whether this actually was Hawkwind,
sufficiently irking Brock into taking legal action to prohibit Turner
from trading under the name Hawkwind. Turner lost the case
and the band now perform as Space Ritual.
An appearance at the Canterbury Sound Festival in August
2001, resulting in another live album Live at Canterbury Fayre,
saw guest appearances from Lloyd-Langton, House, Kniveton with Arthur Brown on Silver
Machine. The band organised the first of their own weekend
festivals, named Hawkfest, in Devon in the summer of 2002.
Brown joined the band in 2002 for a Winter tour which featured some Kingdom
Come songs and saw appearances from Blake and Lloyd-Langton, the
Newcastle show being released on DVD as Out Of The
Shadows and the London show on CD as Spaced
Out In London.
In 2005 the long anticipated new album Take Me to
Your Leader was released. Recorded by the core
band of Brock/Davey/Chadwick, contributors included new keyboardist Jason
Stuart, Arthur Brown, tabloid hack Matthew
Wright, 1970s New Wave singer Lene Lovich, Simon House and Jez
Huggett. This was followed in 2006 by the dual-disc Take Me to Your Future,
but it is essentially a collection of outtakes from the previous album,
remixes of old tracks and samples from forthcoming releases.
On 30
March 2007,
the band were the subject of an hour-long documentary entitled Hawkwind:
Do Not Panic that aired on BBC Four as part of the Originals
series. Although Brock participated in its making he did not appear in
the programme, it is alleged that he requested all footage of himself
be removed after he was denied any artistic control over the
documentary..
Former Hawkwind band members who did appear included Terry
Ollis, Nik
Turner, Huw Lloyd-Langton and Lemmy,
Lemmy in particular was scathing about his treatment by the band and
the way they failed to capitalise on their initial break into the USA
market. Lemmy was however complimentary on his musical pairing with
Brock saying that the two were able to jam together without observing
each other - something he had never experienced previously or after.
June 2007 again saw the departure of Alan Davey, being
replaced by Mr Dibs. Dibs had been a long standing member of the road
crew and was also bassist for Spacehead and Krel who had supported
Hawkwind during 1992.
Discography
-
For more
details on this topic, see Hawkwind discography.
|
Studio Albums
1970 Hawkwind
1971 In Search of Space
1972 Doremi Fasol Latido
1974 Hall of the Mountain Grill
1975 Warrior on the Edge of
Time
1976 Astounding Sounds,
Amazing Music
1977 Quark, Strangeness and
Charm
1978 25 Years On —
Hawklords
1979 PXR5
1980 Levitation
1981 Sonic Attack
1982 Church of Hawkwind
1982 Choose Your Masques
1985 The Chronicle of
the Black Sword
1988 The Xenon Codex
1990 Space Bandits
1992 Electric Tepee
1993 It
Is the Business of the Future to Be Dangerous
1995 White Zone —
Psychedelic Warriors
1995 Alien 4
1997 Distant Horizons
1999 In Your Area —
live and studio
2000 Spacebrock — Dave
Brock solo
2005 Take Me to
Your Leader
2006 Take Me to Your Future
|
Live Albums
1973 Space Ritual
1980 Live Seventy-Nine
1986 Live Chronicles
1991 Palace Springs
1994 The Business Trip
1996 Love in Space
1999 Hawkwind 1997
2001 Yule Ritual
2002 Canterbury Fayre 2001
2004 Spaced Out In London
|
Archive Albums
1980 The Weird Tapes Volumes
1-8 (1966-1983)
1983 Text Of Festival
(1970-1971)
1983 Zones (1980
and 1982)
1984 This Is Hawkwind, Do
Not Panic (1980 and 1984)
1984 Bring Me The Head
Of Yuri Gagarin (1973)
1984 Space Ritual Volume 2
(1972)
1985 Hawkwind Anthology
(1967-1982)
1987 Out and Intake
(1982 and 1986)
1991 BBC
Radio 1 Live in Concert (1972)
1992 The Friday Rock Show
Sessions (1985)
1992 Hawklords Live
(1978)
1992 California Brainstorm
(1990)
1995 Undisclosed Files Addendum
(1984 and 1988)
1997 The 1999 Party
(1974)
1999 Glastonbury 90
(1990)
1999 Choose
Your Masques: Collectors Series Volume 2 (1982)
1999 Complete '79: Collectors Series
Volume 1 (1979)
2000 Atomhenge '76
(1976)
2002 Live 1990
(1990)
|
Videography
- 1984
- Night Of The Hawk
- Visionary Videos
- 60m concert
- 1984
- Stonehenge
(Various Artists video) - Visionary Videos - 60m concert with
The Enid and Roy Harper
- 1984
- Stonehenge
- Visionary Videos
- 60m concert
- 1985
- Chronicle
Of The Black Sword - Visionary Videos - 60m concert
- 1986
- Bristol
Custom Bike Show (Various Artists video) - Visionary Videos
- 15m concert with Voodoo Child
- 1986
- Chaos
- Visionary Videos
- 60m concert
- 1989
- Treworgey Tree
Fayre - Taste Video - 90m concert
- 1990
- Nottingham
- Classic Rock Productions -
60m TV concert
- 1990
- Bournemouth
Academy - Taste Video - 90m concert
- 1992
- Brixton Academy
- Taste Video - 90m
concert
- 1995
- Love In Space
- Visionary Videos
- 90m concert
- 2002
- Out Of The
Shadows - Secret Records - 90m concert
Tributes And Remixes
There have been numerous bands over the years and across
the globe who have set themselves up as a Hawkwind tribute/cover act.
Perhaps the most active at the time of writing is the Assassins
Of Silence who operate mainly in and around Oxfordshire,
often pulling in Huw Lloyd Langton for special
appearances.
- 1993
- Remixes - Spirit Of The Age
- Solstice Mixes (4-Real Records, 4R1) 12" & CD
single
- 1995
- Tribute - Assassins
of Silence / Hundred Watt Violence (Ceres
Records) vinyl & CD album
- 1996
- Remixes - Future
Reconstructions - Ritual Of The Solstice (Emergency
Broadcast System Records, EBS117) 2x12" & CD album
- 1999
- Remixes - Silver
Machine - Infected By The Scourge Of The Earth (EMI, DECLIPSE1999) 12"
& CD single
- 2000
- Tribute - Days
Of The Underground (Godreah Records) 2CDs and
(Black Widow Records) 3x12" album
- 2000
- Remixes - The Hawkwind Remix Project
(Unknown,WARLORD777CD) CD album
- 2004
- Zarozinia
sample used on 'Saviour' by the Drum & Bass producer Klute
(musician).
Members
Dozens of musicians have passed through Hawkwind over the
years, but Dave
Brock has been at the heart of the band since they formed. Other
members have included Lemmy (who went on to form Motörhead), Nik
Turner, Harvey Bainbridge, Del Dettmar, Dik
Mik, Huw Lloyd Langton, Robert
Calvert, Paul Rudolph (former Pink
Fairies/Deviants member) and Twink
(another Pink Fairies member) and more recently,
Ron
Tree as bassist and frontman. Cross-pollination with members
of the Pink
Fairies led to albums released under the names Pinkwind
and the Hawk Fairies. The
1990 album Space Bandits included a female vocalist
Bridget Wishart. Other members, who
may have been better known for their careers outside of Hawkwind,
include Ginger Baker and Arthur Brown. Of
all the other band members, bass player Alan
Davey has been with the band the longest, joining in 1984 and
still playing with the band in 2006 (although he did leave for a few
years within this period).
Hawkwind have been known for giving credit to non-musician
members of their crew, such as Liquid Len, a lighting engineer, and Stacia, a dancer.
Their distinctive graphic design was created by Barney
Bubbles, who would later create the graphic identity for Stiff
Records, where Larry Wallis (Pink Fairies
and Motörhead with Lemmy) was an in-house Producer.
| Year |
Vocals |
Sax, Flute |
Lead
Guitar or Violin (v) |
Guitar,
Synths |
Bass |
Keyboards,
Synths |
Drums |
| 1969 |
|
Nik Turner |
Mick Slattery |
Dave Brock |
John
Harrison |
Dik Mik |
Terry
Ollis |
| 1970 |
Huw
Lloyd-Langton |
John
Harrison, Thomas Crimble |
| 1971 |
|
Dave
Anderson |
Dik Mik
& Del Dettmar |
| 1972 |
Robert
Calvert |
Lemmy |
Simon
King |
| 1973 |
| 1974 |
|
Del
Dettmar & Simon House |
| 1975 |
(Michael
Moorcock) |
Simon House |
Simon King
& Alan Powell |
| 1976 |
Robert
Calvert |
Paul Rudolph |
| 1977 |
|
Adrian
Shaw |
Simon King |
| 1978 |
Harvey
Bainbridge |
Simon
House, Steve Swindells |
Simon King
& Martin Griffin |
| 1979 |
|
Huw
Lloyd-Langton |
Tim
Blake |
Simon King |
| 1980 |
Tim Blake,
Keith Hale |
Ginger
Baker |
| 1981 |
(Michael
Moorcock) |
|
Martin
Griffin |
| 1982 |
|
Nik Turner |
| 1983 |
Dead Fred |
Andy
Anderson |
| 1984 |
Harvey
Bainbridge, Alan Davey |
Dead Fred,
Harvey Bainbridge |
Clive Deamer |
| 1985 |
|
Alan Davey |
Harvey
Bainbridge |
Danny Thompson
Jr |
| 1986 |
| 1987 |
| 1988 |
| 1989 |
Bridget
Wishart |
Simon
House (v) |
Richard Chadwick |
| 1990 |
| 1991 |
| 1992 |
|
|
|
| 1993 |
| 1994 |
| 1995 |
Ron
Tree |
(Jerry Richards) |
| 1996 |
|
| 1997 |
(Captain Rizz) |
Jerry
Richards |
Ron Tree |
| 1998 |
| 1999 |
| 2000 |
(Jez Huggett) |
Jerry
Richards & Simon House (v) |
Tim Blake |
| 2001 |
(Arthur Brown) |
Huw
Lloyd-Langton |
Alan Davey |
Simon House |
| 2002 |
Lloyd-Langton
& Simon House (v) |
Tim Blake |
| 2003 |
|
|
|
| 2004 |
|
Jason
Stuart |
| 2005 |
| 2006 |
| 2007 |
Mr Dibs |
- Note
Names in brackets indicate significant guest appearances,
either live or on recordings.
Influence
Former Black Flag and current Rollins
Band singer Henry Rollins is a fan, as is Jello
Biafra. The Sex Pistols included "Silver
Machine" in their reunion performances of 2002; while reviewers may
have seen this as "ultra ironic" [3], John
Lydon made it clear that this was a tribute. [4] Another musician who has
claimed Hawkwind as an influence is Joy
Division/New Order bassist Peter
Hook, who took his father to Hawkwind concert as a teenager
in an attempt to help him appreciate rock music in a more visceral
fashion. Because of the rapid beat of many of their songs and jams, and
perhaps to a lesser extent Robert Calvert's solo collaborations with Brian
Eno, Hawkwind was one of the few bands from the
progressive/psychedelic era to maintain a following in the punk/new
wave era.
Similarly, the group would be cited as a seminal influence once more
with the advent of electronica in the early 90s thanks to
their pioneering work with synthesizers and Brock's motorik-esque
riffs.
There is a tangible connection between the sound of
Lemmy's later group Motörhead and that of the influential
1971-1975 group, with songs such as "Born to Go" and "Master of the
Universe" during that time period played at breakneck tempos live
(characteristic of punk) while containing guitar solos more reminiscent
of heavy
metal and psychedelic rock. With Motörhead, Lemmy would refine this
into the sound of speed metal.
Early Monster Magnet albums have a distinct
Hawkwind feel, and they covered Brainstorm on their 3rd album, Superjudge.
Singer/Songwriter Sam Roberts has credited Hawkwind as an
influence on his music and covers the song "Hurry on Sundown"
(originally on 1970's debut album Hawkwind) during concerts.
Kula Shaker's Sound of Drums
has a version of "Hurry On Sundown" ("Hari Om Sundown"). JJ Burnel (The
Stranglers) regularly performs 1977's "Quark, Strangeness
& Charm". Quoted in Carol Clerk's book, JJ says: "Quark...is a
song I really...wish I'd written... It's punky as hell, and really
clever. I like the energy in it, and the fact that it's just three
chords and yet it made a bloody great racket... and the very
intelligent lyrics, and they were funny and sexy as hell."
Trivia
- Author Michael
Butterworth has written a trilogy of science-fiction books with
Hawkwind as the central characters. The first, The Time of
the Hawklords written in 1976, was co-credited to Michael
Moorcock. Queens of Deliria followed in 1978 and
then Ledge Of Darkness was issued as a graphic
novel in 1994, illustrated by Bob Walker.
- American actor Al
Matthews supported Hawkwind during the mid 1970s with his one man act,
and would often join the band playing congas for their main set,
including the 1975 Reading Festival when his single "Fools" was #16 in
the UK charts.
- Street magician Paul Zenon
started his career as a teenager performing with Hawkwind at selected
gigs in the early 1980s, using the name Xenon at
the band's insistence.
- 1980's Page
Three girl Samantha Fox collaborated
with Hawkwind on the 1993 charity single "Gimme Shelter", and also
appeared as a guest at the Hawkestra event.
- Jonathan Smeeton (aka Liquid
Len), who was the band's lighting designer during the 1970s,
went onto a successful career which included lighting Ronald
Reagan's US Presidential election campaign.
- in the early 1970s, some members of the
band have played wearing nothing but gold body paint
- EastEnders actor David
Spinx who plays Keith Miller was a roadie
for Hawkwind and Motörhead during the 1970s.
Further reading
There are three biographies of Hawkwind.
- Kris Tait This is Hawkwind: Do
Not Panic (1984, published by the band and now only available
second hand)
- Ian Abrahams Sonic Assassins
(Published by SAF publishing; ISBN
0-946719-69-1)
- Carol Clerk's Saga of Hawkwind
(Publisher: Music Sales Limited ISBN
1-84449-101-3)
References
-
Mick Slattery - www.spaceritual.net
-
Douglas Smith - Philm Freax presents...
-
Mojo,
September 1999 - The Egos Have Landed
-
Vintage Guitar Magazine, February 2003 - Huw Lloyd-Langton... Gets on
the move again - www.huwlloyd-langton.co.uk
-
Mojo, September 1999 - The Egos Have Landed - www.starfarer.net
-
Hawkwind Family Tree, Pete Frame 1979[1]
-
The Saga of Hawkwind (pp95) - Carol Clerk
-
NME, 1 September 1973 - News www.hawkwindmuseum.co.uk
-
NME, 28th June 1975 - The Trials Of Lemmy - [2]
-
Hawkwind Family Tree, Pete Frame 1979
-
Hawkwind Family Tree, Pete Frame 1979
-
NME, 12th November 1977 - Hawklord in KGB Wedding Affair - Jon's Attic
-
This Is Hawkwind, Do Not Panic, Chapter 6 - Kris Tait
-
Aural Innovations, Issue 18 -
Working Down A Diamond Mine
-
This Is Hawkwind, Do Not Panic, Chapter 7 - Kris Tait
-
Hawkfan 13 - A Chat With Alan Davey - www.hawkwindmuseum.co.uk
-
Mojo, Dec 2005 - Hello Goodbye - www.starfarer.net
-
Music UK, March 1985 - Hawkwind - HawkFanFare
-
The Saga of Hawkwind (pp403) - Carol Clerk
-
The Saga of Hawkwind (pp413) - Carol Clerk
-
The Saga of Hawkwind (pp418) - Carol Clerk
-
The Saga of Hawkwind, Chapter 30: The Great Hawkestra Disaster - Carol
Clerk
-
The Saga of Hawkwind (pp486) - Carol Clerk
-
The Saga of Hawkwind, Chapter 32: The Hawkwars - Carol Clerk
-
BBC 6 Music, Freakzone, 4 February 2007
- Nik Turner interview
-
Cumming, Tim (30
March 2007), "Hawkwind: They're still feeling mean",
The Independent
-
The Guardian, 5 April 1999 - Laugh
or the rabbit gets it
-
The People, 19 December 2004
External links
| v • d • e Hawkwind |
| Members |
| Dave Brock – Mr Dibs – Jason
Stuart – Richard Chadwick |
|
Former members: John Harrison – Terry
Ollis – Dik Mik Davies – Nik Turner
– Huw Lloyd-Langton – Dave
Anderson – Del Dettmar – Robert
Calvert – Lemmy
– Simon
King – Simon House – Alan
Powell – Paul Rudolph – Adrian
Shaw – Harvey Bainbridge – Steve
Swindells – Martin Griffin – Tim
Blake – Ginger Baker – Keith Hale – Alan
Davey – Danny Thompson Jr – Bridget
Wishart – Ron
Tree – Jerry Richards
|
| Discography |
|
Studio Albums:
Hawkwind – In
Search of Space – Doremi
Fasol Latido – Hall of the Mountain Grill
– Warrior on the Edge of
Time – Astounding Sounds,
Amazing Music – Quark, Strangeness and
Charm – 25 Years
On – PXR5 – Levitation
– Sonic Attack – Church
of Hawkwind – Choose
Your Masques – The Chronicle of the
Black Sword – The
Xenon Codex – Space
Bandits – Electric
Tepee – It
Is the Business of the Future to Be Dangerous –
White Zone – Alien
4 – Distant
Horizons – In
Your Area – Spacebrock
– Take Me to
Your Leader – Take Me to Your Future
|
|
Live Albums:
Space Ritual – Live
Seventy-Nine – Live
Chronicles – Palace Springs
– The Business Trip
– Love in Space
– Hawkwind 1997
– Yule Ritual – Canterbury
Fayre 2001 – Spaced
Out In London
|
| Related
articles |
|
Barney Bubbles – Liquid Len
– Michael Moorcock – Stacia – Sonic
Assassins – Hawklords
– John
Coulthart – Hawkfest
|