Welcome to Hippyland
Click to Chat
Search Hippy.com

Search the Web
Main Menu
· Home
· Login
· Register
· Chat
· Event Calendar
· Reviews
· Photo Galleries
· Hip Journals/Blogs
· Check Your Email
· HipMarket.com
· HipForums.com
· HipPlanet.com
· Hip Travel Guides
· Web Links
· Privacy Policy
Sections
· A Trip Thru the '60s
· Archives
· Ask The Old Hippy
· Columns
· Famous Hippy Quotes
· Hip Profiles
· Hippie Glossary
· Hippie Havens
· Hippies From A to Z
· Hippyland Tour
· Interviews
· Letters to Hippyland
· Links
· News
· Reviews
· Skip's Corner
Topics
· Activism
· Drugs
· Freedom
· Health
· Hippiedom
· Love
· Mind Expansion
· Mother Earth
· Music
· Peace
· Politics
· Spirituality
· The Arts
· The Sixties
· Vegetarianism
New Articles
· A Real Solution to the Economic Crisis
· Creating a new culture based on tribal values
· Weather Underground Fifth Communication (1970)
· Weather Underground Frees Timothy Leary! (1970)
· Marxism and Nonviolence (1966)
· The Weathermen (1969)
· Bill Ayers: Domestic Terrorist or American Hero?
· Free John Sinclair! (1970)
· Bill Ayers and the Children's Community (1968)
· Rediscovering the Past

Hawkwind: Palace Springs (1991)  
Reviewer: Ben Miler | See all reviews by Ben Miler
Section: Reviews | Category: Music | Area: UK | Topic: Music  
Printer Friendly Page Print this review  Send this Story to a Friend Email this review

I won't forget that day in 1996 I was in Rod's Second Hand Store which was in Port Orchard, Washington. Now this isn't the kind of store for the hippie in mind. Basically the store sold used Nintendo and Sega Genesis games and game machines, some crappy portable radios, and CDs and tapes. The CDs and tapes sold were Debbie Gibson, Tiffany, New Kids on the Block, Bon Jovi, Poison, Skid Row, Milli Vanilli, Mötley Crüe, that type of stuff (basically the crap from the 1980s and early 1990s people became really embarassed they ever liked).

In the cassette department, I was rather surprised to see a Hawkwind tape, Palace Springs, released in 1991. I was already familiar with some of their albums already: Hawkwind (1970), In Search of Space (1971), Doremi Fasol Latido (1972), Space Ritual (1973), and Hall of the Mountain Grill (1974). I usually assume a band's earlier material was the best and they eventually go downhill after several albums. I mostly bought Palace Springs to see how they sounded like in the early 1990s and I was utterly shocked the band did not sell themselves out whatsoever. This is the classic Hawkwind sound all over, but of course, with a few updates, like the use of digital synthesizers you expect from a 1991 release.

The opening cut is a brand new cut, "Back in the Box", with something very different from the usual Hawkwind: a female vocalist (Bridgett Wishart), and despite that, it sounds like classic Hawkwind. Dave Brock sticks with guitar here, with some great violin work from Simon House (one of the rare members who rejoined Hawkwind, he was previously with the band from 1974-1978).

The next cut is another brand new cut, "Treadmill". This time, Dave Brock handles the vocals, and it's an incredible piece. It sounds like classic '70s Hawkwind, although it's from 1991! Great violin solo, once again, and I really dig the synth solo at the end, sounds like they were using a Mini Moog (although they could've been using a digital facsimile).

The next two songs are "Void of Golden Light" and "Lives of Great Men" although I think they screwed up the track listing, because I'm pretty sure "Lives of Great Men" started first. Regardless, again, I am utterly shocked how much this one too sounds like classic Hawkwind (the digital synths are the only thing revealing that this isn't the 1970s).

"Time We Left" is actually a version of "Time We Left (This World Today)" from Doremi Fasol Latido, again, sounding so inspired, you might forget it's actually a remake of a song from an earlier album. The song then segues in to another remake, "Heads", which originally appeared on The Xenon Codex (1988). This version is obviously the result of the then-current lineup doing the song (the band witnessed a lineup change between The Xenon Codex and Palace Springs). Both the original version and this version are great.

The next cut, "Acid Trip" is left up to synthesizer player Harvey Bainbridge, here the band goes in to one of their odd, electronic techno experiments, of the style that you know right away this is from the early 1990s. The song then segues in to "Damnation Alley", another remake that originally appeared on their 1977 album Quark Strangess and Charm, only this time around, the band decided to experiment with reggae in the middle part (I just wondered if the band was thinking of the Ozric Tentacles, who also happened to experiment with reggae with songs like "Iscence", "Sorry Style", "The Dusty Pouch", "Crab Nebula", etc.).

Why Palace Springs had so many remakes was it was apparently recorded live. Some of the songs do end with the audience cheering, but I can't be sure if it's all live or not (it doesn't say on the liner notes). As I've said before, Hawkwind was notorious for giving us a lot of crap, thanks to all those non-official releases, bootlegs, badly recorded live albums and poorly selected compilation albums, but Palace Springs was an official release. That means it was done right, and the results is another wonderful album.

Hawkwind was one of the rare bands from the 1970s who continued on making great albums in the 1980s and 1990s, so that means be sure to add Palace Springs to your collection.

More Info

- Dave Brock: vocals, guitar, synthesizers
- Alan Davey: bass, synthesizers
- Harvey Bainbridge: synthesizer, spoken dialog
- Bridgett Wishart: vocals
- Simon House: violin
- Richard Chadwick: drums
   [ Back to Reviews Index | Post Comment ]

Visitor Comments about Hawkwind: Palace Springs (1991)
Posted by Floatyhead on 2003-07-24 05:54:57
My Score:

Comment: Lives of great men and void of golden light do indeed sound like classic hawkwind because they are - they''re from ''The warrior at the edge of time'' - the 4th studio album (it follows Doremi Fasolatido). Which makes them all old tracks except for Back in the box and Treadmill - This album was indeed live recorded in London and LA in 1990! A fine Album

400+ Free Speech Forums!
Related Links
 · Our Music Store!
 · Our Poster Store
 · Our Music Forum
 · Events & Festivals
 · Music with a Message
More Music Reviews by Ben Miler
· Warm Dust: And It Came to Pass (1970)
· Chicago: Chicago III (1971)
· Pulsar, French progressive rock band
· Manfred Mann's Earth Band: Solar Fire (1973)
· Organisation: Tone Float (1970)
· Jean Michel Jarre: Oxygene (1976)
· Harmonium: Si On Avait Besoin D'une Cinquième Saison (1975)
· FM: Head Room - Direct to Disc (1978)
· Brainticket: Celestial Ocean (1973)
· Quarteto 1111: Cantamos Pessoas Vivas (1975)
· Julian Jay Savarin: Waiters on the Dance (1971)
· Mad Curry: Mad Curry (1970)
· Klaus Schulze: Irrlicht (1972)
· Peter Hammill: In Camera (1974)
· Czeslaw Niemen: Niemen Vol. 2 (1972)
· Strawbs: Just a Collection of Antiques and Curios (1970)
· Peter Hammill: The Silent Corner and the Empty Stage (1974)
· Jerry Goodman & Jan Hammer: Like Children (1974)
· Canarios: Ciclos (1975)
· Machiavel: Jester (1977)
· The Pentangle: Sweet Child (1968)
· Samurai: Samurai (1971)
· Radio Massacre International: Emissaries (2005)
· Skin Alley: Skin Alley (1969)
· Nik Turner's Sphynx: Xitintoday (1978)
See all reviews
by Ben Miler
New Reviews
· Pearls Before Swine -Tom Rapp
· The Gothic Bram Stoker
· Leonard Cohen at the Master’s feet
· Tudor Lodge
· Elias Hulk
· Merrell Fankhauser & the H.M.S. Bounty
· Sharon Tandy - Five Day Rain
· T2 - England's foremost powerpack from the seventies

All content & images © 1997-2008 by Hip Inc. May not be reproduced or published in any form without permission.