Monday 21 May 2012

Hawkwind - Silver Machine



It will come as no suprise to anybody who knows me, that I will post about Silver Machine early on. Hawkwind are easily one of my favourite bands, one which has shapped and inspired so many genres, and despite being pensioners, even now they push forward with their own ever-changing brand of spacerock. Hawkwind are a genre by themselves.
But... Enough of this gushing, time to talk about this classic single.

Silver Machine is not my favourite Hawkwind track by a longshot, however this is to it's benefit. It replaces their trademark pummeling riffs with a chugging rock'n'roll rhythm, allowing it a more commercial and traditional value. But this is no ordinary rocker, the spacey sound effects take us off to Jupiter and beyond, and as the track plays out, we just go further and further. Robert Calvert's lyrics about his childhood bicycle become an adreneline filled description of a mysterious 'Silver Machine' which describes what seems to be a spaceship, but with an overly sexual tone. Most famously, here the world is shown Lemmy unleashed, for the first real time. And the world loved him. His greasy biker shouting jack daniels vocals really work well with the rock'n'roll vibe. This is outer space pubrock.

The B-Side is another Hawkwind Classic, Seven By Seven. Whilst Silver Machine was the high of the trip, this is the crushing downer. True dark psychedelia describes a journey, being lost in the dark world, your soul lost for all eternity. The classic Hawkwind pummeling riffage is on force here, complimented by a softer verse section, reflective. The chorus however is shrieked at us through a vast echo, we get the desperation, it brings us down. Though for whatever reason, there is a sense of restrain here, I'd assume from the production side as the playing is brutal. The track is utterly spacey and cosmic and not at all unlike Jack Kirby's Fourth World comics which were being published around the same time (and I really would recommend reading them!).

This 7" represents a trip, and it doesn't let us down. While Seven By Seven would truely find it's real sound on Hawkwind's epic Space Ritual live album, Silver Machine here is the best version around. Noticably the mix on Vinyl has far more depth of sound than the version on CD reissues, and the dance remix is pretty... terrible. So yeah, here we have the definitive version of Hawkwind's most well known song, and a somewhat controlled rendition of a great song. Naturally I would recommend everybody purchase this, it serves as the perfect introduction to one of rock's most explorative bands, the introduction to the majesty of Lemmy, and most importantly of all, two kick-ass tracks containing a heavyness unheard of at the time.

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