In Search of Space

In Search of Space
Studio album by Hawkwind
Released 8 October 1971
Recorded Olympic Studios, 1971
Genre Space rock, progressive rock[1]
Length 42:17
Label United Artists (most of the world)
Liberty (Japan & South Africa)
Producer George Chkiantz and Hawkwind
Hawkwind chronology
Hawkwind
(1970)
In Search of Space
(1971)
Doremi Fasol Latido
(1972)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]
Head Heritage(Positive)[3]

In Search of Space is the second studio album from Hawkwind, released in 1971.[4] It reached No. 18 on the UK album charts.

Background

Bass player John A Harrison left just after recording the first album, replaced by Thomas Crimble who in turn was replaced by Dave Anderson from Amon Düül II for this album, and who in turn would be gone before its release. Electronics player Dik Mik Davies had also temporarily left[5] so the band's live sound engineer Del Dettmar was pulled in as a replacement, whilst Huw Lloyd-Langton had departed after a bad LSD experience at the Isle of Wight Festival.[6]

Songs

"You Shouldn't Do That" is an extended piece that they had been playing live from Crimble's time in the band, and he asserts that he should have received a writer's credit for the central bass line on which this is based.[7] It was recorded for a BBC Maida Vale session on 19 May 1971 for the Sounds of the Seventies show, a bootleg version of the session can be found on The Text of Festival. It was the encore for the Space Ritual show but omitted from that album, later appearing in 1976 on the compilation album Roadhawks. It has been part of the live set at various times throughout their career, versions of which can be found on The Business Trip (1994) and Spaced Out in London (2004).

"You Know You're Only Dreaming" uses the riff and feel from Steve Miller Band's "Jackson-Kent Blues" from Number 5, an artist Brock has acknowledged as being an influence upon him.[8] This too was recorded for the BBC Sounds of the Seventies session and has appeared in the live set at various times throughout their career, including The 1999 Party (1974) and The Business Trip (1994).

Hawkwind – "Master of the Universe"
30 seconds of 6.17

Problems playing this file? See media help.

"Master of the Universe" was written by Brock and Turner (who sings the lead vocal), although Anderson contends that he should also have received a writer's credit for writing the main riff.[7] It is the only track on the album that could be interpreted as lyrically having a space theme, but may also be viewed as being anthropocentric. This was also part of the Sounds of the Seventies session and quickly became a live favourite and almost ever present in the set, appearing on numerous live albums. The track was used by the Ford Motor company to advertise the Ford B-Max on television in 2012.

"We Took the Wrong Step Years Ago" is a 12 string acoustic number with a band jam in the middle section and its lyrics bemoan the direction of society.

"Adjust Me" is a band improvisation.

"Children of the Sun" is an acoustic guitar number, although after the vocal passage the repeated heavy riff is augmented by electric guitars and bass. The riff is a familiar one of the time.

The bonus track "Seven by Seven", originally the b-side to "Silver Machine", uses the riff from late 1960s English psychedelic band Leviathan's "Flames". The lyrics concern the seven rays.

Recording

The band originally started to record the album at George Martin's AIR Studios, but after a week with little to show for their effort, and the studio engineers reported to be reluctant to work with the band after reports that friends of the band broke "into George Martin's drinks cabinet, pinched all his booze and spiked the engineers with acid", the record company moved them to Olympic Studios to work with George Chkiantz to finish the recording quickly.[9]

Sleeve

The band had started working with a wider range of artists, many of whom were contributing to the underground press. Graphic artist Barney Bubbles titled the album and designed the cover and with space-age poet Robert Calvert produced the accompanying 24-page The Hawkwind Log with photos by Phil Franks.[10][11]

The front cover is a die-cut interlocking foldout. The back cover has a shot of a naked Stacia on stage under strobe lights and the phrase "TECHNICIÄNS ÖF SPÅCE SHIP EÅRTH THIS IS YÖÜR CÄPTÅIN SPEÄKING YÖÜR ØÅPTÅIN IS DEA̋D" which some people assert is a demonstration of the heavy metal umlaut. The inside panel features individual portraits of the band, however as Dik Mik had left the band his portrait was not taken, so on rejoining just before the album's release a hastily added image was included. Inside the foldout sleeve are various pictures of Hawkwind and the Pink Fairies playing together underneath the Westway in London.

There is no overall concept or theme to the songs on the album; the ideas that would culminate in the Space Ritual show are merely contained within the album package, principally The Hawkwind Log. It opens with:

The spacecraft Hawkwind was found by Captain RN Calvert of the Société Astronomæ (an international guild of creative artists dedicated in eternity to the discovery and demonstration of extra-terrestrial intelligence) on 8 July 1971 in the vicinity of Mare Librium near the South Pole. The discovery of the Hawkwind has led to more wild speculation than any of the mysteries of space that we have so far encountered. The facts surrounding the discovery of this drifting two-dimensional spaceship have been so distorted by guesswork and rumour that any further attempts at assessment would only increase the density of the fog.

Within, the journal entries are from various times and places, including a return to a burnt out Earth in November 1987. Themes explored include astrology and astronomy, ecology, science, occultism and mysticism, religion and philosophy. Some pieces would later be reused, such as the entries "0207 hrs 15 April 1572, Praesepe cluster" and "Countdown to Lift Off" which appeared on Space Ritual as "The Awakening" and "Ten Seconds of Forever" respectively, and Black Elk's "Offering of the Pipe" Hetchetu Aloh chant was later used on "Black Elk Speaks" from Space Bandits. One of the last entries, 1027 hrs. 5 May 1971, Ladbroke Grove, explains:

Space/time supply indicators near to zero. Our thoughts are losing depth, soon they will fold into each other, into flatness, into nothing but surface. Our ship will fold like a cardboard file and the noises of our minds compress into a disc of shining black, spinning in eternity...

Critical reaction

Melody Maker reviewed the album in the context of contemporary German acts, feeling that "their instrumental playing" did not reach the same heights but that "they yield precedence to no-one in their creative use of electronics."[12] Beat Instrumental assessed the album as "excellent", saying that the "music alternates between spaced out imagery and hard rock" as well as commenting that this is the start of the space trip leading to the "Space Opera".[13]

In the USA, Lester Bangs in Rolling Stone favourably appraised the album in the context of other musical works concerned with space, going on to describe the music as "monotone jammings with hypnotic rhythms and solos unravelling off into... well, space. The synthesizers warble, woof and scream and gurgle like barfing computers, the drums pound, and the singers chant Unknown Tongue rebops."[14] Billboard described the music as "forcefully compelling, electronic and repetitive" and the band "nearly brings to fruition its claim of being a truly 'mind-expanding' rock group"[15]

In April 2006 it made No. 83 in Classic Rock's "The 100 Greatest British Rock Albums", noting that "drummer Terry Ollis and bassist Dave Anderson could hit an awesome groove, allowing the rest of the band to cut loose on their acid-fuelled sonic adventures without fear of losing themselves or their listeners."[16] In the same issue, Porcupine Tree's Steven Wilson placed it at No. 2 in his top 5, adding "it's an extraordinary whirlpool of cosmic sound, the definitive space-rock statement. I love the album's repetitive, almost pagan feel. It dispensed with the idea of soloists and has a real sense of 'otherness'."[17]

Track listing

Side 1
  1. "You Shouldn't Do That" (Turner, Brock) – 15:42
  2. "You Know You're Only Dreaming" (Brock) – 6:38
Side 2
  1. "Master of the Universe" (Turner, Brock) – 6:17
  2. "We Took the Wrong Step Years Ago" (Brock) – 4:50
  3. "Adjust Me" (Hawkwind) – 5:45
  4. "Children of the Sun" (Turner, Anderson; Blue Mountain Music) – 3:21
1996 Remastered CD bonus tracks
  1. "Seven By Seven" (Original Single Version) (Brock) – 5:24
  2. "Silver Machine" (Original Single Version) (Live at the Roundhouse) (Calvert, Brock) – 4:40
  3. "Born to Go" (Live Single Version Edit) (Live at the Roundhouse) (Calvert/Brock) – 5:04

Personnel

Musicians on 1996 Remasters CD bonus tracks

Production

Release history

References

  1. "Hawkwind - In Search of Space". Allmusic. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
  2. In Search of Space at AllMusic
  3. Head Heritage review
  4. In Search of Space at Discogs (list of releases)
  5. Del Dettmar left his position at the mixing desk and joined the line-up on stage, initially to cover the departure of Dik Mik, who kept leaving and rejoining. Dik Mik played on in Search of Space (United Artists UAG 29202) which was recorded in the Summer of 1971 and released in October, and then left before the cover was made. He came back again after the cover was done which is why his picture appears on the sleeve as part of the background instead of in a 'frame' like the others. – Brian Tawn, May 1986, Approved History of Hawkwind
  6. The Saga of Hawkwind – Carol Clerk (pp 44)
  7. 1 2 The Saga of Hawkwind – Carol Clerk (pp 85)
  8. NME, 5 August 1972 – Whatever turned me on
  9. The Saga of Hawkwind – Carol Clerk (pp 74)
  10. Phil Franks – Philm Freax Digital Archive
  11. Collectable Records – Original foldout cover and booklet
  12. Melody Maker – album review, 23 October 1971
  13. Beat Instrumental issue 104, December 1971 – "In Search of Space" album review
  14. Rolling Stone 111 – 22 June 1972
  15. Billboard, 1972 – "In Search of Space" album review
  16. Classic Rock, April 2006 – The 100 Greatest British Rock Albums
  17. Classic Rock, April 2006 – The 100 Greatest British Rock Albums
  18. Mistitled reissue by One Way Records at Discogs
  19. Plastic Head Website (UK): Rock Classics reissue
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