AUTOR

Monday, June 1, 2015

Hawkwind-Warrior On The Edge Of Time (1975)

With their fifth album, Hawkwind continued their progressive and lysergic journey, which they had begun with their previous album, "Hall of the Mountain Grill". "Warrior on the Edge of Time" brought together everything that had captivated Hawkwind up to that point. It's all present here, brimming with pure (and perhaps even exaggerated) poetic lyrics, tracks overflowing with flutes, echoes, saxophones, sharp, lysergic guitars, hazy bass lines, and diverse electronica with overwhelming synthesizers and mellotrons everywhere. It's an astonishing concept album based on tales of wizards and space wars, all bathed in psychedelic music. But in addition to the band's ever-intricate style, there were their frequent lineup changes, and this album was no exception. Keyboardist Del Dettmar left, and a second drummer, Alan Powell, joined, a factor reflected in the powerful and varied percussion sounds throughout much of the album. The opening track, indebted to the best of krautrock, “Assault & Battery/ The Golden Void”, immerses us in a complex composition with a stormy barrage of mellotron sounds combined with a heavy rhythm featuring flutes, organs, and a powerful bass line. “The Wizard Blew His Horn” is essentially an introductory piece by science fiction writer Moorlock, set against a backdrop of strident, surreal sounds, and serves as a prelude to the hypnotic, spacey “Opa-Loka”. This is followed by the frenetic, progressive “Magnu”, with its excellent riffs and powerful percussion, leading into the more spacey and electronic “Spiral Galaxy 28948”. The album concludes with the more purely rock tracks “Dying Seas” and “Kings of Speed.” “Warrior on the Edge of Time” is considered one of Hawkwind’s greatest contributions to history and a minor masterpiece of space rock. From here on, and following the trail of continuous defections, bassist Lemmy Kilmister would leave the band (he was actually expelled for drug smuggling and for his clashes with the rest of the members over musical differences), to later found the iconic heavy metal band, Motorhead.