| Fretplay : Hawkwind tabs : CD reviews : 1999 Party | Search or browse tablatures: | |||
Audio CD review:
Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all Hawkwind reviews here, or go back to the Hawkwind tabs.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Hawkwind - 1999 Party |
|
Band: Hawkwind Title: 1999 Party Rating: Release Date: 2001-11-06 Media: Audio CD Tracks: 1: Intro/Standing on the Edge - Hawkwind, Moorcock, Michael 2: Brain Box Pollution 3: It's So Easy 4: You Know You're Only Dreaming 5: Veterans of a Thousand Psychic Wars - Hawkwind, Moorcock, Michael 6: Brainstorm - Hawkwind, Turner, Nik 7: Seven by Seven 8: The Watcher - Hawkwind, Kilmister, Lemmy 9: The Awakening - Hawkwind, Calvert, Robert [1] 10: Paradox 11: You'd Better Believe It 12: The Psychedelic Warlords (Disappear in Smoke) 13: D-Rider - Hawkwind, Turner, Nik 14: Sonic Attack - Hawkwind, Bainbridge, Harvey 15: Master of the Universe 16: Welcome to the Future - Hawkwind, Calvert, Robert [1] |
|
The PEAK of the Hawkwind Trip!!! Pure Psych Magic... Yes, even better than "Space Ritual"!!! I think the reason for this is rather simple. Every time I listen to this mind-blowing concert I can't help but come to the conclusion that "The 1999 Party" is the GREATEST recorded HAWKWIND document. Whereas the "Space Ritual" album was a live celebration of tunes from the "Doremi Faso Latido" and "In Search of Space" studio LPs, "The 1999 Party" focuses on the "Hall of the Mountain Grill" LP, which for my money is the GREATEST Lemmy-era HAWKWIND studio album. The material on "Hall of the Mountain Grill" was just so emotionally powerful that it truly added another dimension to the music when performed live. If you don't believe me simply pop in "The 1999 Party" and check out the sheer emotional power of "It's So Easy". WOW!!! "The 1999 Party" documents the HAWKWIND machine running on FULL power and fueled by an obviously perfect concoction of chemicals. The recording quality of the show is AWESOME and easily as brilliant as the crystal clarity of "Space Ritual". If you are even a tentative Hawkfan this is an ESSENTIAL purchase. I guarantee you that if you drop a dose, put the headphones on, and listen to "The 1999 Party", you will enter the void!!! This may be the single greatest acid rock performance ever caught on tape. For the TOTAL "1999 Party" experience you should also pick up the MAN-"1999 Party Tour" CD which captures MAN's opening set from the Chicago Auditorium show from which the "1999 Party" was culled. HAWKWIND and MAN on the same bill. . . . I'd give a few fingers to have been there!!! Thank the psychedelic warlords that this mind-melting music was made available to the public!!! DOGSIDNIWKWAHHTIWDSL. . . . . . . . . . .
Also from EMI UK comes Live at the Chicago Auditorium (The 1999 Party), which was actually recorded in March 1974, and it is the first Hawkwind live album ever (official, semi-official, bootleg or just straight off the back of Dave Anderson's truck) that might be considered as in the same league as Space Ritual Alive. In short, this is it - the real thing! Hawkwind fans have long endured poorly recorded early live sets (endless re-packagings of Text of a Festival and Bring Me the Head of Yuri Gagarin), unimaginative alternate versions and re-mixes from the definitive tour (Space Ritual Vol 2, Ridicule) and numerous later era official live releases that are often very good, but always very different to the classic era of the band (Palace Springs, Live Chronicles, Live '79), all in the pursuit of the heady first rush of the Space Ritual - this landmark '73 amalgam of Bob Calvert's interstellar poetry and Dave Brock's grinding tunes was thankfully captured on a double album, which has recently been re-issued by EMI UK with the original encore restored, and it remains the band's most significant release. For a start, the band line-up remains largely unchanged from the earlier tour, with Lemmy contributing his trademark vocals, although Calvert has been replaced by Michael Moorcock as poet in residence. Several key elements of the actual Space Ritual remain (The Awakening, Sonic Attack, Welcome to the Future), however it is no mistake that the title features the word 'party', and while Space Ritual Alive fully captured the reverential awe of that particular event, the 1999 Party is a wonderful document of the band at their most playful, with even Sonic Attack rendered slapstick by the addition of 'boom-tish' drum fills to punctuate the dire warnings. Whereas the Space Ritual tour had largely utilised songs from the Doremi Fasol Latido album to fill the musical gaps in Calvert's original vision, the 1999 Party showcases tunes from the Hall of the Mountain Grill and features the first live version of D-Rider on record anywhere, while You'd Better Believe It and Paradox, which were actually live versions when first issued on the Hall of the Mountain Grill, get their first outing on an official concert album. You get yet another version of Brainstorm, albeit a particularly good one, the first live recording of single Brainbox Pollution, which is an absolute gem, and while this set was purged of all other Doremi material, the 1999 Party paradoxically features the first live recording of Lemmy's menacing The Watcher - and what an incredible bass-driven rendering it is! Lemmy would be busted for possession of amphetamines on the next North American tour and sacked from the band, dancer Miss Stacia and kinky saxophonist Nik Turner both left during the next couple of years, and although Robert Calvert later returned in an expanded role as genuine frontman of the band throughout the second half of the seventies, as the band surprisingly trailblazed their way through the landscape of punk/new wave, Hawkwind would never again be the same band that they were during '73/'74 - if you were weaned on Space Ritual Alive, then Hawkwind Live at the Chicago Auditorium (The 1999 Party) is the only alternate source of the sustenance to which you have become accustomed.
|
| Navigation: |
|
-Fretplay home -Guitar tabs -Bass tabs -Fresh tabs Guitar lessons -How to read tabs -How to write tabs -Submit tabs -Link to us |
| Message forums: |
|
-The pit, General forum -Gear and accessories -Bands and artists -Guitar forum -Bass forum |
| Hawkwind menu: |
|
-Hawkwind tabs -Hawkwind discography -Hawkwind lyrics |