"Silver Machine" is a 1972 song by the UK rock group
Hawkwind. It was originally released as a single on 9 June 1972, reaching number three on the UK singles chart. The single was re-issued in 1976, again in 1978 reaching number 34 on the UK singles charts, and once again in 1983 reaching number 67 on the UK singles charts. The original mix has been re-released on the remasters version of ''
In Search of Space
''In Search of Space'' (also known as ''X in Search of Space'' or ''Xin Search of Space'') is the second studio album from Hawkwind, released in 1971. It reached No. 18 on the UK Albums Chart.
Background
Bass player John A Harrison left just ...
''.
The single
"Silver Machine" was recorded live at a Greasy Truckers benefit gig at
The Roundhouse, London on 13 February 1972 and this version was released on the various artists compilation album ''
Glastonbury Fayre'' and the 2007 box set of ''
Greasy Truckers Party''. Overdubs were applied and mixing took place at Morgan Studios with Douglas Smith and
Dave Robinson overseeing the process. Dave Brock took production credits using an alias of Dr Technical. The sleeve was designed by
Barney Bubbles (uncredited).
Stacia appears prominently in the music video.
Personnel
*
Robert Calvert
Robert Newton Calvert (9 March 1945 – 14 August 1988) was a South African-United Kingdom, British writer, poet, and musician. He is principally known for his role as lyricist, performance poet and lead vocalist of the space rock band Hawkwind ...
– vocals
*
Dave Brock – guitar, vocals
*
Nik Turner – saxophone,
flute
The flute is a member of a family of musical instruments in the woodwind group. Like all woodwinds, flutes are aerophones, producing sound with a vibrating column of air. Flutes produce sound when the player's air flows across an opening. In th ...
, vocals
*
Lemmy Kilmister – bass guitar, lead vocals
*
Dik Mik (Michael Davies) – Synthesizer
*
Del Dettmar – Synthesizer
*
Simon King – drums
Music
The writing credit on the single is Robert Calvert and Sylvia MacManus. MacManus was Dave Brock’s then wife Sylvia whose name Brock used in order to put pressure on his publishing company to improve his deal. The verse is an eight-bar
rock and roll
Rock and roll (often written as rock & roll, rock-n-roll, and rock 'n' roll) is a Genre (music), genre of popular music that evolved in the United States during the late 1940s and early 1950s. It Origins of rock and roll, originated from African ...
boogie whose riff is an adaption of the standard riff that can be heard on the likes of
Johnny and the Hurricanes' "
Red River Rock" ().
he Greasy Truckerswas about my third gig, and I didn't know what I was doing. I hadn't done any rehearsals and I thought that Silver Machine was a Chuck Berry number – really. – Simon King
Vocals and lyrics
The lyrics were written by Robert Calvert and he sang the lead vocal on the original live recording. However, the vocals were considered too weak () for the single release so they were re-recorded in the studio. Calvert, who suffered from
bi-polar disorder, had been
sectioned at the time so was unavailable to attempt another version, and the lead vocals were eventually recorded by Lemmy:
alvert'svocal was fucking hopeless, but he never realised it. That's how mad he was. It sounded like Captain Kirk reading 'Blowing in the Wind'. They tried everybody singing it except me. Then, as a last shot, Douglas said, 'Try Lemmy'. And I did it in one take or two.
Lemmy just had the best voice for it. Of course, Bob was not pleased when he found out. – Douglas Smith
The lyrics are a send-up of space travel, inspired by the
Alfred Jarry essay ''How to Construct a Time Machine'' which Calvert interpreted as a description of how to build a bicycle:
I read this essay by Alfred Jarrey called, "How to Construct a Time Machine", and I noticed something which I don't think anyone else has thought of because I've never seen any criticism of the piece to suggest this. I seemed to suss out immediately that what he was describing was his bicycle. He did have that turn of mind. He was the kind of bloke who'd think it was a good joke to write this very informed sounding piece, full of really good physics (and it has got some proper physics in it), describing how to build a time machine, which is actually about how to build a bicycle, buried under this smoke-screen of physics that sounds authentic. Jarrey got into doing this thing called ' Petaphysics' , which is a sort of French joke science. A lot of notable French intellectuals formed an academy around the basic idea of coming up with theories to explain the exceptions to the Laws of the Universe, people like Ionesco the playwright. The College of Metaphysics. I thought it was a great idea for a song. At that time there were a lot of songs about space travel, and it was the time when NASA was actually, really doing it. They'd put a man on the moon and were planning to put parking lots and hamburger stalls and everything up there. I thought that it was about time to come up with a song that actually sent this all up, which was 'Silver Machine'. 'Silver Machine' was just to say, I've got a silver bicycle, and nobody got it. I didn't think they would. I thought that what they would think we were singing about some sort of cosmic space travel machine. I did actually have a silver racing bike when I was a boy. I've got one now, in fact. – Robert Calvert
''Top of the Pops''
Hawkwind have very rarely appeared on television, but the success of the single necessitated an appearance on the BBC chart show ''
Top of the Pops
''Top of the Pops'' (''TOTP'') is a British record chart television programme, made by the BBC and broadcast weekly between 1January 1964 and 30 July 2006. The programme was the world's longest-running weekly music show. For most of its histo ...
''. However, the group felt ill at ease at the prospect of miming a performance in front of a studio audience who didn't represent their following, so a compromise was reached with the BBC recording the band performing live at Dunstable Civic Hall on 7 July 1972, this clip being shown with the single version dubbed over it.
Discography
Chart performance
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
Other versions
BBC sessions
A version was recorded at Maida Vale Studios, London on 2 August 1972 for broadcast on the
Johnnie Walker
Johnnie Walker is a brand of Scotch whisky produced by Diageo in Scotland. It was established in the Scottish burgh of Kilmarnock, East Ayrshire in 1820, and continued to be produced and bottled at the town's Hill Street plant, once the world's ...
show on the 14th, "Brainstorm" also being part of the session. These two recordings have subsequently been included on the 2010 EMI release ''
Hawkwind: At the BBC – 1972''.
The song was also recorded live at the Paris Cinema, London on 28 September 1972 as part of the hour-long ''In Concert'' series broadcast. This full concert was released in mono in 1991 as ''
BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert'', and in mono and stereo in 2010 as ''Hawkwind: At the BBC – 1972''.
On 3 December 2007,
Cleopatra Records in the USA issued a limited edition of 500 10-inch vinyl EPs consisting of both BBC versions of "Silver Machine", the live version as the A-side and the session version as the B-side.
On 14 November 2019, the group recorded a session for
Marc Riley's
BBC Radio
BBC Radio is an operational business division and service of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) which has operated in the United Kingdom under the terms of a royal charter since 1927. The service provides national radio stations cove ...
6 Music show, playing "65 Million Years Ago", "Last Man on Earth", "
Spirit of the Age" and "Silver Machine".
Live versions
The song has sporadically been played live by the band. Its first re-appearance is on the 1980 live album ''
Live Seventy Nine'', but it explodes after a minute and is suffixed with "(requiem)" in Brock's attempt at laying the song to rest, sick of having to play their "hit single". Further live versions have been released, most notably a version on the 2002 live album ''
Canterbury Fayre 2001'' with vocals by
Arthur Brown.
Lemmy continued to make guests appearances with the band when their paths crossed. Some live versions of the song on which Lemmy appeared include ''
The Friday Rock Show Sessions'' from the
Reading Festival
The Reading and Leeds Festivals are a pair of annual music festivals that take place in Reading, Berkshire, Reading and Leeds in England. The events take place simultaneously on the Friday, Saturday and Sunday of the August bank holiday weekend ...
24 August 1986 and
Motörhead's ''
Stone Deaf Forever!'' boxset from
Wembley Arena
Wembley Arena () (originally the Empire Pool, currently known as OVO Energy, OVO Arena Wembley for sponsorship reasons) is an indoor arena next to Wembley Stadium in Wembley, Greater London, England. The 12,500-seat facility is Greater Lond ...
19 October 2002.
10th anniversary
In 1982, the band recorded a new studio version of the song which received general release on 7-inch record and 7-inch picture disk by
RCA/Active (RCA267, 27 August 1982). The B-side was a 33 RPM
extended play
An extended play (EP) is a Sound recording and reproduction, musical recording that contains more tracks than a Single (music), single but fewer than an album. Contemporary EPs generally contain up to eight tracks and have a playing time of 1 ...
featuring the full 7:25 version and a new version of "
Psychedelic Warlords" with a
Huw Lloyd-Langton vocal.
Receiving criticism over the release, Brock defended their actions: "It was only done as a tenth anniversary thing, and wasn't supposed to come out just as a picture disc. That was RCA's decision, and I didn't like it one bit. The only reason we cut it was as a special souvenir."
In addition to the single release, the record company included it on the ''
Choose Your Masques'' album, leaving Marion Lloyd-Langton to complain: "
uw and Iactually had three tracks for the Masques album, but RCA insisted that Silver Machine went on, so the third track was dropped; pity about that."
[Orbit 4, June 1983: Huw Lloyd-Langton interview]
Remixes
*
Utah Saints version for the 1996 album ''
Future Reconstructions - Ritual of the Solstice''.
*
Jimi Cauty version for a single and the 1999 album ''
Epocheclipse – 30 Year Anthology''.
*Richard Chadwick version for the album ''
The Hawkwind Remix Project''.
*
Dave Brock version for the 2006 album ''
Take Me to Your Future''.
Uses
Joel Veitch has used it for his Stephen Hawkwind sketch on hi
''Rather Good Videos''Channel 4 show.
The song has been used for two different UK television advertising campaigns: Mazda cars in 2000 and Red Square alcopops in 2004
preview.
References
External links
Jon's Attic– Press reviews
{{Authority control
Hawkwind songs
1972 singles
1976 singles
1978 singles
1982 singles
United Artists Records singles
Number-one singles in Switzerland
Songs written by Robert Calvert
Songs about spaceflight
Songs about bicycles
Song recordings produced by Pat Moran
1972 songs