Hurry On Sundown Explained

Hurry On Sundown
Type:single
Artist:Hawkwind
Album:Hawkwind
B-Side:Mirror of Illusion
Released:26 June 1970
Recorded:March 1970 at Trident Studios
Genre:Blues rock, psychedelic rock
Length:4:50
Label:Liberty
Producer:Dick Taylor
Next Title:Silver Machine
Next Year:1972
Hawkwind Zoo EP
Type:EP
Artist:Hawkwind
Released:1 May 1981
Recorded:Abbey Road Studios, 1969; Olympic Studios, January 1975
Label:Flicknife
Producer:Don Paul
Chronology:Hawkwind EPs
Next Title:Sonic Assassins EP
Next Year:1981

"Hurry On Sundown" is a 1970 song by the UK rock group Hawkwind. It was the band's first record release, issued as a single in the UK on 26 June 1970, being an edit of the version that appeared two months later on the debut album Hawkwind. The song is inspired by Leroy Carr and Scrapper Blackwell's version of "Hurry Down Sunshine (See What Tomorrow Brings)", written by Mary Fix and Will Shade, originally recorded in 1934 and issued on the album Blues Before Sunrise (Columbia, BPG 62206, 1962).

The song is a defining and distinctive piece from the group's canon, appearing on the first collection album Roadhawks in 1976, and included on most official compilations covering the era. After the first album, the band ceased performing the number live until very rare appearances from 2000 onwards. It has been covered by a handful of artists including Kula Shaker, Vetiver, Moon Duo and Psychic TV.

Other versions

Hawkwind Zoo EP

Towards the end of 1969, still using the name Hawkwind Zoo and with Mick Slattery as the lead guitarist, the band were given studio time by Don Paul to record some demos. Paul had known Brock from working with him earlier in the year on The Buskers album (Columbia, SX6356), British tour and Royal Albert Hall concert.[1] [2] "Hurry On Sundown" was one of the tracks recorded, this version being more electric and psychedelic than the acoustic folky feel of the later debut album version.

The recording was eventually released in 1981 as the first of a host of archive material issued through Flicknife Records. Another previously unheard track recorded at the same session, "Sweet Mistress of Pain" (also known as "Kiss of the Velvet Whip"), was included on the B-side, as was an alternate version of the 1975 single "Kings of Speed".

The two Hawkwind Zoo demos were eventually included on the remasters version of the Hawkwind debut album, with a third, a cover of Pink Floyd's "Cymbaline".

Radio Session

The band recorded a version at Maida Vale Studios on 18 August 1970 for broadcast on John Peel's BBC Radio programme Top Gear on 19 September 1970, along with "Some of That Stuff" and "Seeing It As You Really Are".[3] Poor quality off-air recordings of this session were first released, without the BBC's permission, on The Text of Festival in 1983, then on various subsequent compilations. No official clean version of these tracks have ever been released.

Live

As the band pursued a more experimental electronic and rock direction, the acoustic folk of the song did not sit well in the set and was soon dropped, rarely to be performed. It has, in the band's latter years, been returned to the set for odd occasions, and live versions can be heard on the albums Yule Ritual (2001) and Hawkwind 50 Live (2020).

In 2021 they performed the song during their Hawkfest festival with guest violinist Athene Roberts of 3 Daft Monkeys fame.

Covers

Personnel

References

Footnotes

Citations

Notes and References

  1. Book: Abrahams, Ian . Hawkwind: Sonic Assassins . SAF Publishing . 0-306-80897-8 . 2004. 22 .
  2. Book: Clerk, Carol . The Saga of Hawkwind . Omnibus Press . 1-84449-101-3 . 2004 . 40 .
  3. Book: Garner, Ken . In Session Tonight: The Complete Radio 1 Recordings . BBC Books . 0563364521 . 1993.