Found on the WWW
Martyn White
white at BORG.MED.ECU.EDU
Sat Apr 20 15:53:22 EDT 1996
IN THE BEGINNING (CDCD 1131)
1. MASTER OF THE UNIVERSE Brock, Turner 6.03
2. DREAMING Brock 4.05
3. SHOULDN'T DO THAT Brock 6.00
4. HURRY ON A SUNDOWN Brock 6.20
5. PARANOIA Brock 2.59
6. SEE IT AS YOU REALLY ARE Brock 9.27
7. I DO IT Brock 6.36
8. CAME HOME Brock 7.20
The Notting Hill/ Ladbroke Grove area of wet London was a
focus for the "alternative culture" growing out of art
collegehippydom in the late 1960s. It had record shops and
clothes stalls, clubs and pubs, magazines (Time Out started
there as a one-sheet gig guide, and it was home to Oz and It)
and of course it had the bands. Hawkwind, half noise and half
mysticism, were one of them, and another was r&b outfit the
Pretty Things, whose guitarist Dick Taylor was to produce
Hawkwind's first album.
Science fiction was Hawkwind's chosen metaphor for escape
(the sci-fi writer Michael Moorcock was involved with the
band) and illicit chemicals fuelled their rocket. They began as
Group X, became Hawkwind Zoo, and then dropped the Zoo.
A nucleus developed around founder members Dave Brock
(guitar) and Nik Turner (saxophone). Other notables in the
ranks included bass player Lemmy, soon to become
Motorhead's greasy mainman, dancer Stacia, never averse to
shaking her stuff around, drummer Simon King and South
African-born writer Robert Calvert, later to go solo.
Eventually, in 1972, they broke the rules and found huge
commercial success with 'Silver Machine'. They were also to
break another rule for 60s hippy bands - they survived into the
90s. But this live record takes us back to Brock and Turner's
early days in Hawkwind, when there was always a community
benefit or college freak-out going on, and inevitably
Hawkwind were on the bill.
From: http://www.cdj.com.br/cdj/labels/charly/cd1131.htm
(Also worth seeing for the cover photograph)
Martyn
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