Thought for the day :"Procrastinate Now!"
So, a brighter day today - and a day without rain again so hoping for one more so I can cut the lawns one last time for the season....
But took the dogs for a walk and decided that my patience with the local authority was done as I really don't like to have to bend down so far to get across the Bridge on the Donkey Trail Walk. So I took my Chin saw as well!!
Another picture from Yesterday from Abergavenny Masonic Hall
Why is this of interest? Well, because Hawkwind played the Crimson Moon - or at least the Festival which was a good friends' wedding anniversary in 2009 - Jude and Ant...
Gallery here
Nik Turner |
Of course, it almost did not happen, as we were in a field in Llanthony - yes the field that we have since "sat in" and invited friends to join us... but as it was an anniversary party / Fest, we had local friends and also a party from London who were celebrating a 40th Birthday and so there were two distinct parties thought hey were friends of Ant and Jude. We also had a large stage tent and some very loud PA equipment and a number of various bands who were playing.
Now this sort of think out in the wilds of West Wales can be easily mistaken as an illegal Rave.. so though there were not many people on the site, maybe a couple of hundred at most, it seemed pertinent to put someone on the gate to stop strangers turning up.
Now the lad who found himself 700 yards away from the rest of the site sitting at the top of a track across the field, by a lane that saw a half dozen cars a day was probably pretty bored and certainly not a trained doorman or security person..
So when a battered old van turns up at the gate driven apparently by a couple of old farmers, he can be forgiven for telling the driver that it was a private party and they would have to turn around and go away... to which he had the wonderful repost - "well sonny you aren't going to have much music - We're the band - Hawkwind"
Of course, in reality Nik should not really have been using the name as he lost a legal battle with other members of the band and was not allowed to use it - except in the USA where he patented the name to stop the rest of the band from touring the States !!
But we listened with pride as the Saxophone wailed and the Crimson Moon shook to the sounds of "Silver Machine" ... A great memory ...
A little more history is found in this article from the Guardian...
"Despite his sometimes turbulent relationship with the rest of the band, Turner’s saxophone was an integral part of their gritty and cathartic 70s sound
Fifteen years ago, the BBC broadcast a documentary about the history of Hawkwind. Talking heads attested to their vast influence and reminisced about the kind of misadventures that tend to befall a band apparently existing on a diet largely composed of LSD. But the whole thing was undercut with sadness. The surviving members of what’s generally considered Hawkwind’s classic lineup – the one that recorded their unlikely hit single Silver Machine and the extraordinary 1973 live album Space Ritual – had fallen out, apparently irrevocably. There was clearly very little love lost between bassist Lemmy and his former bandmates while Hawkwind’s one constant member and de-facto leader, guitarist and vocalist Dave Brock, refused to take part in the documentary at all, “due,” the voiceover glumly announced, “to the participation of Nik Turner”.
Turner and Brock’s relationship had long been fractious, perhaps scarred by Turner’s desire to be noticed in a band with no obvious frontman (Brock, Turner, Lemmy and the band’s troubled lyricist Robert Calvert shared lead vocals; another lyricist, the science fiction author Michael Moorcock frequently gave readings on stage) and that presented audiences with a lot to look at: quite aside from the musicians, there was the eye-popping psychedelic light show and the presence of the statuesque and frequently naked dancer Miss Stacia to contend with. The first time Turner parted company with Hawkwind, in 1976, he was fired after playing his saxophone over the other members’ solos and vocals on stage “despite repeated requests not to”.
When Turner briefly returned in the early 80s, he took to performing on roller skates while wearing a fluorescent body stocking, apparently to the rest of the band’s chagrin, and was ousted again. Whatever the underlying reason, it ended in court in the early 00s, an argument over copyright infringement and who could and couldn’t tour using the Hawkwind name that Turner lost: he subsequently copyrighted the Hawkwind name in America, preventing Brock from touring there. Sides were taken among other ex-members and fans alike. It was a depressing end to a creative partnership. “Nik was the band’s spirit,” offered Moorcock. “Dave was its backbone”.Fifteen years ago, the BBC broadcast a documentary about the history of Hawkwind. Talking heads attested to their vast influence and reminisced about the kind of misadventures that tend to befall a band apparently existing on a diet largely composed of LSD. But the whole thing was undercut with sadness. The surviving members of what’s generally considered Hawkwind’s classic lineup – the one that recorded their unlikely hit single Silver Machine and the extraordinary 1973 live album Space Ritual – had fallen out, apparently irrevocably. There was clearly very little love lost between bassist Lemmy and his former bandmates while Hawkwind’s one constant member and de-facto leader, guitarist and vocalist Dave Brock, refused to take part in the documentary at all, “due,” the voiceover glumly announced, “to the participation of Nik Turner”.
Turner and Brock’s relationship had long been fractious, perhaps scarred by Turner’s desire to be noticed in a band with no obvious frontman (Brock, Turner, Lemmy and the band’s troubled lyricist Robert Calvert shared lead vocals; another lyricist, the science fiction author Michael Moorcock frequently gave readings on stage) and that presented audiences with a lot to look at: quite aside from the musicians, there was the eye-popping psychedelic light show and the presence of the statuesque and frequently naked dancer Miss Stacia to contend with. The first time Turner parted company with Hawkwind, in 1976, he was fired after playing his saxophone over the other members’ solos and vocals on stage “despite repeated requests not to”.
Certainly, Turner was a key ingredient in Hawkwind’s initial success. He wrote or co-wrote a string of Hawkwind’s most enduring tracks: You Shouldn’t Do That, Master of the Universe, the awesome Brainstorm. It was Turner who invited Calvert into the band, an old friend from his teenage years in Margate who had bi-polar disorder and went on to co-write but not sing Silver Machine – he had been sectioned while the song was recorded – among umpteen other songs.
Meanwhile, Turner’s saxophone was an integral part of their 70s sound, either roaring along with the guitar riffs – he put the instrument through a succession of effects pedals – or blowing in a particularly unfettered manner: Turner had been introduced to free jazz while living in Berlin in the mid-60s. You could have called this latter contribution solos but, on record at least, his playing didn’t have the grandstanding connotations associated with that word: like the guitar solos that were always slightly buried in the mix, or the electronic bleeps and whooshes Dik Mik produced, they were just part of the sonic maelstrom that Hawkwind generated.
Said maelstrom was unlike anything else in early 70s rock. The tag “space rock” understandably attached itself to them, but it was a catch-all title that had more to do with their science fiction-inspired lyrics than anything else. Sometimes Hawkwind sounded like the British equivalent of Germany’s experimental Krautrock bands: tight, relentless rhythms; simple bass-led riffs endlessly repeated. Sometimes they sounded like punk several years too early (both Joe Strummer and John Lydon were Hawkwind fans: when the Sex Pistols reformed, they finally broke cover and opened a 2002 gig at Crystal Palace with a cover of Silver Machine).
But what Hawkwind really sounded like was the environment they grew out of: west London’s hippy squat land, at the moment when the late 60s counterculture began to collapse and All You Need Is Love utopianism curdled into something darker and angrier. They were a band that clung doggedly to some aspects of hippy idealism, including psychedelic mind-expansion and, initially at least, a dismissive attitude to money: they were, their manager ruefully noted, the kind of band who would invariably turn down paying gigs in order to play free benefit shows. But they also made it abundantly clear they knew the utopian Summer of Love dream was over. “Let’s not talk about love and flowers and things that don’t explode,” ran the lyrics of their notorious 1973 single Urban Guerrilla, throwing in a dismissive reference to the Beatles for good measure: “We used up all of our magic powers trying to do it in the road.”
But what Hawkwind really sounded like was the environment they grew out of: west London’s hippy squat land, at the moment when the late 60s counterculture began to collapse and All You Need Is Love utopianism curdled into something darker and angrier. They were a band that clung doggedly to some aspects of hippy idealism, including psychedelic mind-expansion and, initially at least, a dismissive attitude to money: they were, their manager ruefully noted, the kind of band who would invariably turn down paying gigs in order to play free benefit shows. But they also made it abundantly clear they knew the utopian Summer of Love dream was over. “Let’s not talk about love and flowers and things that don’t explode,” ran the lyrics of their notorious 1973 single Urban Guerrilla, throwing in a dismissive reference to the Beatles for good measure: “We used up all of our magic powers trying to do it in the road.”
There was similar tension in their music. You could, if you wanted, trace aspects of Hawkwind’s sound back to the Summer of Love. The notion of space rock had been more-or-less minted on Pink Floyd’s 1967 debut album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn – the distorted, echoing voices of Hawkwind’s live introduction, Earth Calling, sounded distinctly like a nod to said debut album’s opening track, Astronomy Domine – and when Turner sang, he did so in a blank-eyed, well-enunciated and very middle-class English voice, not a million miles removed from Pink Floyd’s Syd Barrett. Hawkwind’s penchant for willfully repetitious, cyclical vocals recalled the Soft Machine’s famously ad infinitum We Did It Again. But there the similarities ended. Hawkwind had little of the Barrett-era Floyd’s whimsy or childlike wonder and none of the Soft Machine’s love of the highbrow avant garde: you were highly unlikely to encounter a reference to The Wind in the Willows or the Belgian symbolist poet Albert Giraud in a Hawkwind song.
There’s something to commend every album Turner made with the band – the murky sound of 1972’s Doremi Fasol Latido was a mistake, but it somehow potentiates the atmosphere; 1974’s Hall of the Mountain Grill proved they could provide their own brand of sophistication – although a kind of peak was reached with Space Ritual: its astounding 90 minutes best summed up by the title of the Moorcock-penned track Sonic Attack. It’s a shame the lineup that recorded it couldn’t hold together, but then Hawkwind had always had a revolving door approach: someone was always departing in acrimony or staggering away bearing the scars of over-indulgence.
When Turner departed, he went on to an impressively varied career that encompassed everything from jazz to what the title of an album by his subsequent outfit Inner City Unit dubbed “punkadelica” to experiments with the flute: parts of his 1978 album Xitintoday were recorded in the King’s Chamber of the Great Pyramid of Giza. He may well be the only musician who could claim to have recorded with jazz drummer Billy Cobham, Dead Kennedys frontman Jello Biafra and Sting. It’s a hugely impressive CV that pays testament to Turner’s open-mindedness and eclecticism – however turbulent his relationship with Hawkwind, he could clearly fit in with an array of different artists – and it’s meant as no reflection on the quality of his subsequent work to say that it’s Hawkwind he’ll be remembered for. It’s a reflection on how incredible Hawkwind were: despite being rich in the trappings of its era, their music from the 70s doesn’t seem to have dated 50 years on.
“Hawkwind were dangerous, man,” Lemmy offered years later, in an attempt to sum up their appeal. “We used to f*ck people up good.” As anyone spurred by Turner’s death to play In Search of Space or Space Ritual at high volume will attest: they still can."
No comments:
Post a Comment