Hawkwind
By Scott
DB: Dave Brock, AD: Alan Davey, RC:
Richard Chadwick, Jason
LC: Do you remember playing in Bergen in 1974?
DB: I remember playing here, I remember we had a huge
journey from Trondheim with a bus falling apart and it took
us a long time. I think we played at a concert hall the last
time. We have played actually twice before, but you know how
difficult it is to remember these things, one gig after another
You only remember the bad ones or if something that has happened
that sticks in your memory.
LC: Let's talk about the new CD. The CD is coming
out in September and the first single on August 29th.

DB: Yes. That is right. We have Mathew Wright
.he
does sort of a chat show and is an interesting character.
It sort of puts people on the spot
.he is very outspoken
and he is a HW fan. He also has a radio show in London and
we have actually been down there to do an interview with him
and he confessed to us that he had been to Stonehenge where
he taken some LSD and it changed his life. He said "Do
you realize that you had changed my life? I know all the HW
songs". I said I bet you don't and he said oh yes I do.
So I asked him to repeat the words to Spirit of the Age, which
he did just like that and Urban Guerrilla, so I knew it was
true, he was an avid HW fan and so we asked him to sing Spirit
of the Age with us and we recorded it and that's why we are
doing the single. He is also going to come perform with us
he
writes some nice poems too... he is very good and a great
friend.
LC: It is going to be a CD single, a vinyl single
or both??
DB: What we are going to do, is a CD with a DVD with
it. The first 2000 will have a DVD with it of some of the
live stuff we did last year, which were videoed luckily enough.
LC: So there is not like an extra track, it is just
going to be Spirit of the Age with a DVD?
DB: The single has Angelia Android and 1 other track,
so it is not just Spirit of the age by itself. It has one
other track but I can't remember what it is.
LC: Angelia Android, is it a studio version or a live
version?
RC: It is a live version.
LC: Is it the same live version as on the Christmas
single?
DB: No, it is completely different. We sort of adapt
to it making different versions of it.
AD: This one has a key change in it, doesn't it?
DB: yeah...it has a chord change in it.. (laughs
.)
LC: Kris told me that what label is releasing it is
currently as secret and you can't tell me but you know what
it is??
DB: yeah
.we know what it is..
LC: Do you think that once Take me to your Leader
comes out you will tour a bit more?
DB: We have a tour in the Autumn and Christmas
Greece in October, then a UK tour, then Jan-Feb we are going
Australia and New Zealand and then in Canada in March
we
are either going to Canada in October or March, I don't know
which yet
LC: And for the German fans, are there any dates in
Germany?
DB: Not at the moment. We were going to some festivals
but because of this record coming out it has all been shelved,
as there is no point in actually going to Germany unless we
have something to promote over there. You see, we are in this
situation, where the record company turns around and says
what's the point of going to Germany for when you have nothing
to promote. Either you go there to promote a record or
..so
we said oh yes
we will follow your wise words
so
we won't get to Germany until that album comes out and all
things will be organized properly.
LC: Will Arthur Brown join you on any of these dates?
He is on 2 or 3 of the songs on the new CD?
DB: He has got a new band and he is doing some stuff
for himself at the moment.
LC: So will there be a Hawkfest 2005 ?
DB: There is a possibility. We have actually got a
site but the problem is ..I think it is the Outlaws. they
have got a site and they want to do it in conjunction together
but
we just want to do just the family occasion without the biker
side of it
It might happen
. I don't know.. Nice
venue though..
LC: Can we go through the new record
what can
you tell me about To Love a Machine
I heard you play
it during the soundcheck
.
DB: Well, it is about people falling in love with
androids basically and also machines, actually any machine
really.. which is why we got our dancers, last year, we had
two beautiful androids next to me that I sung to, which was
jolly fun.
LC: Was the song born before Angelia Android or after??
DB: After
LC: Greenback Massacre
.that is also in the live
set and written by Alan.. What do you want to say about it?
AD: It is about how the dollar is raging through the
world, destroying it all.. destroying cultures and everyone's
individuality, it's a massacre basically
LC: How did you come with the music for it?
AD: The music for it I wrote in 1989. I have had it
for years. (He looks at Dave). I played it for you once and
you hated it! My new version you liked a bit better
.(lots
of laughs in the room)
DB: It had too many chord changes it in, that is why!
AD: It's an odd rhythm , it's got 10 beats in the
resolving riff
LC: Spirit of the Age is on the record and is the
single..
RC:
Yeah
that is featuring Mathew Wright and Dave singing.
LC: Out here We are, that is also in the live set
AD: It's an instrumental. it is basically about earth
.out
here we are, all alone, its all be got
we better look
after it ..there is no where else to go
LC: The title track, Take me to your Leader
how
did you come up with the title and what inspired that
DB: you know that is funny, I did a phone interview
with this guy
and he asked the same question
I got
this little android, when we were in America, we did the Hawkfest..
RC: and someone gave you a little alien
DB: one of these Roswell aliens and when you touch
its tummy, it says "Take me to your Leader, he he he
he.". so I thought yeah
actually it's on the
beginning of the track.. and then it goes off into the track..
LC: Sunray
.
AD: Sunray, it's about finding the perfect partner
and how it feels..
LC: And Arthur
he brought in lyrics or
AD: I basically said what the song was to be about
and he came up with them.
DB: I thought it was about Donkeys
the Donkey
sanctuary..?
AD: It's about Donkeys chasing women down the road
when they shouldn't be
(massive laughs!)
DB: No, it's a silly joke.. See where we live, actually,
we don't live far from a Donkey sanctuary, where they bring
all these donkeys from all around the world, they rescue donkeys
there
are fields and fields of donkeys, believe it or not
there
must be 1000's of donkeys in our area.
AD: All 5 legged donkey's as well..
LC: Digital Nation
that is credited to Richard..
RC: Yeah..that is a song about computer games and
the whole idea of on line gaming where you, you must have
read about the phenomenon of people, where you play video
games and you build up your skills and it can take a long
time, hours of play to build those skills up and people start
to sell those characters on line because they are worth lots
of money in terms of gaming hours, so the idea of interacting
in a virtual world, that is what that song is all about, really.
I must admit, I based it on the best 3D third person type
gaming environment., which was Tomb Raider. that was the first
one that really brought the whole idea of 3D video gaming
to age
Tomb Raider.
DB: Isn't that the Lara Croft that you fell in love
with??
RC: That's the film
AD: In which case it's called Womb Raider
RC: The whole idea of on line video gaming , the whole
idea of going into a different universe as it were, that it
can become so embracing that you prefer to say there than
in the real world.. and this is actually happening
LC: But it's not happening to you
RC: No, I'm alright!
LC: Reality of Poverty, is clearly a very socially
conscious track
DB: No
that's not on the album, we've taken that
off now
that was on our Christmas Ep instead.(It was
not). That is about the terrible problems with starvation
in the world when there is so much that can be done
a
political comment..
LC: And Morley
. (he is credited as an author
on the song)
DB: Richard Morley, actually, he is the one who had
the idea of the nuclear family. Funny enough he had gone off
to Nepal
the king of Nepal they all got murdered
They gave him 250 acres of land to form a world school so
that people would not be isolated in different categories
around the world and they all got assassinated, didn't they..
the king and the royal family, so it all went down the drain
and I haven't seen him since.
LC: Is Long time Friend
.
DB: No that is not on their either
.I think we
got some other numbers on there.
AD: Sighs, which is an instrumental.. Its about humans
becoming obsolete, machines are coming alive.
DB: "Back to work and on the street, we must
accept them to survive", as we all know. It's about computer
technology taking over everyone's lives.
RC: It's an electronic kind of ambient thing..
DB: Letter to Arthur
Letter to Robert
sorry
Slip of the tongue
.
DB: That was a magic moment. Arthur had come down
we
had actually recorded a jam, prior to this ..
RC: and he says
I have this idea for a letter
to Robert.
DB: Robert Calvert
.this is you see..
RC: So he just starts going into this diatribe as
if he was chatting with Robert as he is just strolling along
in the countryside..
DB: He basically comments to Robert, well "What
do you think of this fucking electric or these power lines,
women taking over our jobs, all they should be doing is the
washing, cleaning up, the cleaning and the hovering"
and off he goes on this fantastic wonderful adlib
..
DB: What's Angelia Android about Richard??
AD: That's the horny drummer song!
RC: No it isn't. It's an extrapolation of whole Spirit
of the Age song where there is a line in the song where the
character in the space ship who's travelling along complains
about his android replica of his girlfriend packing up and
not working properly. IT is an extrapolation of that idea.
Dave and I made this short of jam with our machines and I
did a short of a joke kind of lyric about this idea of the
android going wrong. And the idea was that you program the
android
DB: To satisfy your every whim..
RC: Because he is lonely he programs it to have a
romantic relationship with him but because he programs the
android with the idea of romance and love
.emotions..its
like an emotion engine has been introduced into the android
and it starts to malfunction because its original prime directive
is totally skewed
by this emotive engine. The android
instead of performing the mission, making sure the spaceship
gets where it is going, she gets all into romance instead
of the original idea of what she meant to do..
LC: Does Alan's band Bedouin still exist?
AD: No
LC: Is there archive material still around?
AD: A lot
I got a live album I am mixing at the
moment, when I have time
LC: What is the status of the Ledge of Darkness project,
is it totally dead??
AD: Didn't we get pre-empted by a comic, really??
DB: The Ledge of Darkness was the comic and the idea
was to as in the Michael Moorcock story, like the last band
on earth, the last show on earth, wasn't it? Where we were
playing to all the leftover remnants of people from the cities
and basically what the ledge of darkness was all about and
all the old members come back to do their bit. We did have
this idea of actually doing this whole show which was actually
the Hawkestra, which was such a fucking disaster because of
the greed and the egos involved it became such a monster it
was just impossible to do. When we did the Hawkestra, we discovered
what a lot of them were like and we
.
LC: But you had already composed some tracks at that
point
.
DB: Yeah
we had worked things out and had a rough
idea of what we were going to do. '
RC: IT was all centered around this idea for a death
generator, this anti-lifeforce
LC: And Ron had this very far out
..
DB: He had a lot of good ideas because we were going
to experiment on the audiences with this great throbbing thing..like
earthquake velocity sound effects with the light show kind
of thing pulsating away.. It would actually take people
we
know this from the past; it can be quite dangerous
Jason- The army tried to develop it for years, didn't they..
DB: It all fell apart
LC: Del, he used to do that in his evil ways in the
old days..
DB: Yeah, he used to work on all these sound frequencies
and it's dangerous and it does over a period of time
if
you have an EMS synthesizer and you twiddle around with it
for days on end, it puts you into another world. If have gone
into the bank and people just talking weird synthesized noise
quite weird actually.. IT does affect your brain.. We did
a program for radio 4 about LSD in the new year which was
really interesting. They interviewed us and they used Realms,
an Alan song
RC: He made it while under the influence, didn't you.?
AD: Yes I did..
LC: It seems to me in the early days that when you
went into the studio to record these first 4 records, or so,
that you actually did a lot of jamming in the studio and you
would then later edit it out.
DB: Yeah.. That is right.
LC: Like pieces like Brainstorm are said to have been
like 25 minutes long but then edited down.
DB: Yeah
but some of it was really boring. You
know it would go on for far too long.. it would go on for
so long
.You know bands like CAN, would do like a whole
25 minute side to one track but sometimes it never goes anywhere
and you have got to draw a line. A lot of these jams.. are
just meandering going nowhere, a bit boring.
LC: I also read about the first record that you played
all the tracks as jams and then took the best parts..
DB: Yeah..but you still have to have an objective.
It is easy to just make up things and meander round everywhere.
You have to have a structure and the first album, although
it was a lot of free playing and daring electronically, a
lot of it was structured. Like Paranoia, you can't play Paranoia,
unless you have worked out what is going to happen. A lot
of it was orchestrated even though it was free, you still
had to have an objective. With old music, if you start listening
to free jazz. It is just fucking awful. You have a load of
people just honking on bloody saxophones all over the place.
After so much of it, you say I can't listen to anymore of
this, its fucking rubbish.. Put somebody who can play. That
is the difference, consequently, that is what we had to do
with the first album. We did have Dick Taylor (Pretty Things)
and he was a good producer because, us we were all sort of
like barbarians and he was able to say no no don't do this..he
was very constructive, yet not domineering. He helped it a
lot.
LC: Was Cymbaline recorded in those sessions?
DB: No, we had done Cymbaline earlier with Hurry on
Sundown and Kiss of the Velvet Whip, which was done in a private
studio.
LC: So, do these tapes still exist with the long jams
that were edited down?
DB: Ah
.I think they have probably been chucked
away by now, because they are all on 2" big tape. I remember
we were at Rockfield Studios many years ago, Kingley, who
owns the place went into the big store and he has got all
the bands from around the world's tapes that had been left
there and he asked do you want your tape and he gave us boxes
and boxes of 2" tape, which I've got a home and it has
started getting all moldy and it has been chucked away now,
I think.
LC: You have a new live double CD coming out?
DB: Yeah..that is the whole of the Hawkfest 2003
We have finished all these things. We have been quite busy
you know. It has taken a couple of years. We have the Bob
Calvert album of all his poems.. That is quite interesting.
It was difficult as some of these poems are only 50 seconds
long and you have to come up with like 5 minutes of music
for some one just reciting a poem. Cutting the sentences up
so they come across interesting and relay a message and stuff
like that.
LC: Will you release that on Voiceprint, Hawkrecords

DB: It might go out on Voiceprint probably, because
Rob has a got a deal with Jill Calvert as well. In actual
fact, the actual tapes were the ones that I got off Bob to
start with and I gave them to Trevor Hughes and Trevor gave
them to Jill Calvert and Jill gave them to Rob Eling and Rob
cleaned them up and put them on a CD and gave them to me again!
It took quite a long time to do that, it was quite a task.
LC: That will be very interesting to hear.
AD: I play double bass on that one.
DB: Yeah.. It's got Richard and Alan playing on that
one. IT is a bit different from a lot of the Hawkwind stuff,
isn't it. One of the tracks is just piano, guitar and double
bass and Calvert when he was a child on a swing. Interesting
pieces.
LC: Do you have a title for it?
DB: It's called the Calvert Project.
LC: Do you think there will be more archival Hawkwind
releases coming??
DB: It is possible. There is actually a really good
album, a lot of stuff that was recorded at Rockfield studios
that was never released, I have actually found that I had
because a guy Keith Kniveton , who plays synthesizer with
us started doing archiving and I have got a room filled up
with loads and loads of tapes and he started taking them away
and playing them and cleaning them up and suddenly finding
all these wonderful golden oldies recorded on 16 track and
all that, 8 track at Rockfield..which was quite interesting.
LC: Is this late 70's or 80's??
DB: Late 70's with Simon King, Adrian Shaw, Simon
House. Its interesting stuff.
LC: Oh. wow
.I really hope that sees the light
of day as that sounds really interesting.
DB: Actually, it's all done just sitting there waiting
for releasing at some point. We will probably release that
too.
LC: You know there are a lot of dedicated Hawkwind
fans who would love to hear all the stuff that you have in
that room
DB: Yeah
I know, but you have really got to have
quality control, as some of that stuff is bad recording
I
don't like releasing stuff, as a musician, if I have a bad
day of playing or singing out of tune, or you know
you
wouldn't want these things released because they are embarrassments.
So, some of it might but a lot of it won't.
LC: One more question
36 years of Hawkwind,
where to next???
DB: The funny thing, I was talking to Thomas from
WE and they played in Delhi, as part of some cultural exchange
thing and he said it was absolutely unbelievable.. All the
guys just went bananas when they played and I said that sounds
absolutely fantastic as we would love to do things like that.
One thing about playing in a band is you do get around to
see different places and different countries. Ok.. you are
playing but sometimes you get a bit of a holiday afterwards.
It would be nice to go to India and do something like that.
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