Huw Lloyd-Langton Explained

Huw Lloyd-Langton
Birth Name:Richard Hugh Lloyd-Langton
Birth Date:6 February 1951
Birth Place:Harlesden, London, England
Genre:Hard rock, Progressive rock, Heavy metal, Space rock
Occupations:Guitarist
Years Active:1960sā€“2012
Associated Acts:Hawkwind, Budgie, The Lloyd Langton Group, The Meads of Asphodel

Richard Hugh "Huw" Lloyd-Langton (6 February 1951 ā€“ 6 December 2012) was an English musician, best known as the guitarist for the rock band Hawkwind[1] at various times. He also had his own band, The Lloyd Langton Group, and was the session lead guitarist for UK band The Meads of Asphodel.

Biography

Lloyd-Langton was born in Harlesden, north west London. As a member of Hawkwind he appeared on their first album, Hawkwind, before leaving the band. He played guitar for Widowmaker, Budgie,[2] and Leo Sayer during the 1970s, then rejoined Hawkwind in 1979, appearing on the Live Seventy Nine album release from that year and the subsequent Levitation album.[1]

He continued performing with Hawkwind until 1988, after which he made occasional guest appearances, then rejoined for a brief spell in 2001-2002 until ill health (Legionnaires' disease) forced him to leave once more. He sometimes played solo as an acoustic support act for Hawkwind, including at The Brook in Southampton in December 2009. Acoustic slots at English charity (playing for free) and space rock events were also common throughout this decade.

Lloyd-Langton's health had been generally poor for a decade and he was quite frail, with several broken bones and minor injuries (rarely letting fans down though - he once played a gig with a broken arm, reworking his solos on the fly so that he could play them in one area of the guitar neck). He died at his home on 6 December 2012, aged 61 years old, after a two-year fight with cancer.[3] His final recording with Hawkwind was a re-recording of Master of the Universe for the compilation album Spacehawks.

Discography

Hawkwind

Widowmaker

Lloyd-Langton Group

Contributions

External links

Notes and References

  1. Strong, Martin C. (2003) The Great Rock Discography, Canongate,, p. 466
  2. Web site: Budgie. Nostalgia Central. July 2014 .
  3. Web site: Huw Lloyd-Langton Dies Aged 61. The Quietus. 2012-12-07.
  4. http://www.huwlloyd-langton.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=78&Itemid=98 Lloyd Langton Group (LLG) History ā€“ Synthesized Version