It Is the Business of the Future to Be Dangerous explained

It Is the Business of the Future to Be Dangerous
Type:Album
Artist:Hawkwind
Cover:It Is the Business of the Future to Be Dangerous - Hawkwind.jpg
Released:25 October 1993
Recorded:1993
Studio:Barking Dog Studios, Devon
Length:63:17
Label:Essential Records
Producer:Hawkwind
Prev Title:Electric Tepee
Prev Year:1992
Next Title:The Business Trip
Next Year:1994

It Is the Business of the Future to Be Dangerous is the eighteenth studio album by the English space rock group Hawkwind, released in 1993. It spent one week on the UK albums chart at #75.[1]

As with the previous album, Electric Tepee, the group remained a three-piece of guitarist Dave Brock, bassist Alan Davey and drummer Richard Chadwick. The album was recorded in 1993 at Brock's own Barking Dog Studios, produced with Paul Cobbold.

The title track "It Is the Business of the Future to Be Dangerous" is a quote from the mathematician/philosopher Alfred Whitehead's Science and the Modern World, which had originally been used on the sleeve notes to the Space Ritual album ("It is the business of the future to be dangerous; and it is among the merits of science that it equips the future for its duties"[2]). The Arabic-influenced "Space Is Their (Palestine)" would be worked into the middle section of the live version of "Hassan I Sabbah", retitled "Assassins of Allah". "Letting in the Past" is a re-recording of "Looking in the Future" from the 1982 album Church of Hawkwind. "The Camera That Could Lie" is a reggae-influenced piece that fused music which had previously been used in the middle section of the live version of "Damnation Alley" on the 1992 album Palace Springs with lyrics from the song "Living on a Knife Edge" from the 1981 album Sonic Attack. "Gimme Shelter" is a cover version of the Rolling Stones song that the group had recorded with Samantha Fox for the Shelter benefit single "Putting Our House in Order", although this album version removes Fox's vocal. Drummer Richard Chadwick performs vocals instead.

The cover is by Alan Arthurs (credited as Alan The Ghost) who was part of the band's crew and also worked on Brock's Devon farm, and was responsible for covers from Electric Tepee to Love in Space.Web site: Alan Arthurs Art - About . Alan Arthurs . 25 April 2023. On-stage photographs were by John Chase. It was the group's second of two for Essential Records, a subsidiary of Castle Communications.

The group undertook a 21-date UK tour in November to promote the album.[3] This was followed by a 12 date Germany/Netherlands tour in December. Some shows were recorded and were released as The Business Trip and the mistitled Treworgey 1989 CD.

Notes

Personnel

Hawkwind

Credits

"The Solstice Remixes" EP

The "Decide Your Future" EP

Release history

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hawkwind . . 2009-08-20 .
  2. Web site: Alfred North Whitehead - Wikiquote . Wikiquote. 26 February 2017.
  3. Web site: Steve. Youles. Gig and Set Lists 1993. Starfarer's hawkwind Page. self-published. 2009-08-20.