HW 40th Anniversary Show - Huw

Amphetamine Embalmer superskrull666 at YAHOO.CO.UK
Fri Apr 17 09:22:30 EDT 2009


I always thought Huws leads crawled all over the place and had an ear for him like with Brian May's work with Queen, though not being a musician I don't know if the two are similar in any way, they just do all the awesome leads.

Christian

NP: Combat 84 "Orders Of The Day"
ObCD: Queen + Paul Rodgers "The Cosmos Rocks"




________________________________
From: Jonathan Jarrett <jjarrett at CHIARK.GREENEND.ORG.UK>
To: BOC-L at LISTSERV.ISPNETINC.NET
Sent: Friday, 17 April, 2009 15:01:17
Subject: Re: HW 40th Anniversary Show - Huw

On Wed, Mar 18, 2009 at 08:15:26PM -0400, John Majka typed out:
> As a guitar player myself, I've always been hugely impressed with Huw.  He 
> does indeed have a unique signature style quite unlike that of anyone else 
> I've ever heard.  I am always completely mesmerized listening to his leads 
> in Hawkwind and on his solo albums.  Others may speak of Simon's skills, 
> but for me, Huw is definitely Hawkwind's most musically gifted member.  I'd 
> love for him to join up with the rest of the hawks for another musical 
> journey....

    I once made an ex of mine who didn't care much for the treble 
register listen to one of Huw's breaks, possibly the _Live '79_ 
`Brainstorm' or maybe even live with Litmus once, and she actually paid 
some attention and then said, "he's not even in the same key as the rest 
of them". And I listened and thought, he's not, is he? He's cutting 
across them in a minor key in some way that fits perfectly but sounds 
really affecting. And since I noticed that I've found that this is, for 
me, Huw's big trick, he's really good at playing across the band. This 
is why Jerry Richards, despite being very good too, never really 
replaced Huw as lead for me, because he just sounds like Brock on speed 
and without as chunky an amp set-up. Huw sounds like no-one else (much 
like Dave himself), but I'm not sure that it's particularly because of 
his technical skill, which does vary somewhat in performance these days, 
but because of his ear for the best route across the rest of the music. 
And of course, doing that makes him stand out in a way that Jerry 
doesn't.

    I don't know if that actually has much musical basis, but maybe 
someone who can speak to such things will tell me if I'm wrong. Yours,
                                    
Jon

-- 
"When fortune wanes, of what assistance are quantities of elephants?"
        (Juvaini, Afghan Muslim chronicler, c. 1206)
Jon Jarrett, Fitzwilliam Museum, jjarrett at chiark.greenend.org.uk



      



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