Sonic Attack
Sonic Attack is the eleventh studio album by the English space rock band Hawkwind, released in October 1981 by RCA's Active Records imprint.[1] It marked the band's first release on the label after leaving Charisma Records and featured a new lineup following the departures of drummer Ginger Baker and keyboardist Keith Hale, with Martin Griffin joining on drums.[2] The album blends Hawkwind's signature psychedelic and space rock elements, with contributions from longtime collaborator Michael Moorcock on lyrics and vocals for tracks like "Sonic Attack" and "Coded Languages."[3] Recorded at Rockfield Studios between June and August 1981, it peaked at number 19 on the UK Albums Chart and spent five weeks in the top 75. The record has been reissued multiple times, including expanded editions with bonus tracks in 2010 and a 40th anniversary version in 2021.[4]Background
Band Context and Lineup
Hawkwind is an English space rock band formed in November 1969 in Notting Hill, London, by guitarist and vocalist Dave Brock, initially as Hawkwind Zoo. The group pioneered the space rock genre, blending psychedelic rock, progressive elements, and science fiction themes, achieving commercial success in the 1970s with albums such as In Search of Space (1971) and Warrior on the Edge of Time (1975). Brock has remained the band's sole constant member through over 50 years and numerous lineup shifts, serving as its creative anchor.[5] By the late 1970s, Hawkwind experienced significant turmoil, including the departure of vocalist Robert Calvert in 1979 and saxophonist Nik Turner amid internal conflicts and legal disputes over the band name. Brock reestablished the group following the 1978 dissolution of the related project Hawklords, recruiting familiar collaborators for a 1979 revival that included appearances at festivals like Futurama 3. The early 1980s marked a transitional period, with the band signing to RCA's Active imprint after leaving Charisma Records, aiming for a refreshed sound amid ongoing personnel flux.[6][7] For the recording of Sonic Attack in 1981, Hawkwind adopted a streamlined four-piece lineup, reflecting a shift to a heavier, more metal-influenced direction after the departure of drummer Ginger Baker and keyboardist Keith Hale from the prior album Levitation (1980). The core members were Dave Brock on vocals, guitar, keyboards, and synthesizer; Huw Lloyd-Langton on lead guitar and vocals; Harvey Bainbridge on bass, vocals, keyboards, and synthesizer; and Martin Griffin on drums. Author Michael Moorcock contributed guest vocals on select tracks, continuing his long-standing collaboration with the band on lyrics and concepts. This configuration supported a UK tour promoting the album and endured for subsequent releases, stabilizing the group's output during the early 1980s.[8][9][2]Thematic Inspirations
The thematic inspirations for Hawkwind's Sonic Attack album draw heavily from science fiction literature and the socio-political anxieties of the early 1980s, particularly the escalating Cold War tensions under Thatcher and Reagan administrations.[10] Michael Moorcock, a prolific science fiction author and long-time collaborator with the band, provided lyrics and vocals for key tracks such as the title song "Sonic Attack," "Psychosonia," and "Coded Languages," infusing the album with dystopian visions of societal collapse and authoritarian control.[10] His contributions reflect themes from his own works, including novels like The Black Corridor (1969), which explore isolation in space and psychological breakdown amid catastrophe, echoing the album's portrayal of existential threats.[11] A central motif is the parody of nuclear apocalypse, exemplified in "Sonic Attack," originally penned by Moorcock for the band's 1973 live album Space Ritual but re-recorded here as a studio piece. The track mimics official civil defense broadcasts, delivering ironic instructions like "Do not panic... Think only of yourself" to subvert the era's "four-minute warning" alerts for impending nuclear strikes, thereby critiquing collective trauma and governmental propaganda.[10] This aligns with Susan Sontag's concept of "the imagination of disaster" in science fiction, where apocalyptic scenarios serve as allegories for real-world fears of mutually assured destruction.[10] Tracks like "Living on a Knife Edge" extend this to warnings against state surveillance, with lyrics decrying "faceless people watching on a TV screen" and urging resistance to identity controls, evoking Orwellian dystopias amid Britain's rising police monitoring in the post-punk era.[12] The album also incorporates Moorcock's sword-and-sorcery fantasy elements blended with cyberpunk precursors, as seen in "Lost Chances," which laments lost opportunities in a controlled society, and "Virgin of the World," invoking undead celestial beings and android communication to blend horror with speculative futurism.[12] These inspirations stem from Moorcock's Jerry Cornelius series, which satirizes multiversal chaos and authoritarianism, influencing Hawkwind's broader space rock aesthetic of rebellion against technological and ideological oppression.[13] Overall, Sonic Attack channels the band's countercultural roots to process contemporary paranoia, using sci-fi as a lens for anti-establishment commentary.[10]Recording and Production
Studio Sessions
The recording sessions for Sonic Attack took place over the summer months of 1981 at Rockfield Studios in Monmouth, Wales, a facility known for hosting major rock acts and owned by Kingsley Ward, who facilitated the band's deal with RCA's Active label imprint.[14] The sessions spanned June through August, allowing the band to develop material in a focused environment that emphasized their signature space rock sound with heavier, more aggressive elements.[15] Hawkwind and Ashley Howe produced the album, with core members Dave Brock (vocals, guitar, keyboards, synthesizers), Harvey Bainbridge (bass, 12-string guitar), Martin Griffin (drums, percussion), and Tim Blake (keyboards, synthesizers, organ, announcer voice) handling primary instrumentation and arrangements.[16] Guest contributions included vocals from author Michael Moorcock on "Coded Languages." Griffin's participation was limited by illness with German measles during the sessions; his drum parts were overdubbed to complete the recordings.[17] Engineering duties were shared among Ashley Howe, Pat Moran, and Paul Cobbold, the latter of whom was specifically recruited by Ward to assist at Rockfield following his work on other projects.[18] Mastering was completed by Arun at The Town House in London.[16] The process involved Brock often arriving with pre-recorded eight-track demos, which were then expanded and layered by the group onto multitrack tapes, reflecting a collaborative yet Brock-led approach to capturing the album's dense, psychedelic textures.[19] This method contributed to the raw, energetic feel of tracks like the title song, a reworking of earlier Hawkwind material with new electronic backings and announcer voices delivered by Brock and Blake. Despite the illness-related hiccup, the sessions proceeded efficiently, resulting in an album that marked a return to the band's heavier roots amid lineup transitions.[20]Technical Aspects
The album Sonic Attack was recorded over three months, from June to August 1981, at Rockfield Studios in Monmouthshire, Wales, a facility renowned for its large live rooms and natural acoustics that facilitated organic sound capture during the era's analog recording processes.[1] The production was handled by Hawkwind and Ashley Howe, with engineering duties shared among Paul Cobbold, Pat Moran, and Ashley Howe, who employed multitrack analog tape recording to layer the space rock elements characteristic of Hawkwind's sound.[1][14] A key technical focus was on drum recording, where the studio's inherent room ambience reduced the need for additional microphones; close-miking techniques were prioritized instead, using Sennheiser MD 421 dynamic microphones on toms for their robust low-end response and a Shure Unidyne III on the snare to capture crisp transients.[18] Short plate reverb was applied sparingly to enhance depth without overwhelming the natural decay provided by Rockfield's spaces, contributing to the album's dense, immersive mix that echoed Hawkwind's earlier raw productions.[18] Synthesizers and electronic effects, integral to tracks like the title song's re-recorded backing, were integrated via the studio's available modular and keyboard rigs, emphasizing live improvisation captured in real-time to maintain the band's psychedelic energy.[21] The overall engineering approach favored separation between instruments while preserving a "muddy" cohesion typical of 1980s space rock, achieved through minimal post-production processing on the original 24-track masters before final mixing for RCA's vinyl release.[21] Later remasters, such as the 2019 Atomhenge edition, drew from these source tapes to restore stereo imaging without altering the analog warmth.[15]Composition and Lyrics
Musical Style
Sonic Attack exemplifies Hawkwind's evolution within the space rock genre, incorporating heavy metal influences that align with the New Wave of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM) era. The album features a keyboard-heavy sound driven by synthesizers from Dave Brock and Harvey Bainbridge, creating ambient electronic passages and twittering effects that evoke cosmic atmospheres, while crisp guitar riffs from Huw Lloyd-Langton add a rocky, hard-edged propulsion. This blend results in a style that merges psychedelic space rock with hard rock and prog elements, often likened to Pink Floyd's 1970s experimentalism but infused with punky aggression and techno flourishes.[12][22][23] Tracks like "Angels of Death" showcase the album's space metal leanings, with heavy, metallic riffs, zig-zagging synth lines, and driving drum beats from Martin Griffin that build high-energy momentum, making it a concert staple. In contrast, "Virgin of the World" adopts a slower synth rock ballad approach, emphasizing creepy, atmospheric keyboards and effects-laden vocals to heighten its dystopian themes. The title track "Sonic Attack" reworks spoken-word elements over a prog-hard rock foundation, highlighting the band's ability to fuse narrative audio with instrumental intensity. These variations underscore a cohesive yet diverse sound that prioritizes repetitive riffs and extended jams, avoiding overly complex structures in favor of immersive, riff-driven grooves.[22][23] Overall, Sonic Attack marks a departure from Hawkwind's earlier, more free-form psychedelia toward a tighter, metal-influenced framework, though it retains core space rock signatures like soaring synths and sci-fi soundscapes. The production emphasizes a "badly tuned machine" aesthetic—raw and experimental—where individual elements like Lloyd-Langton's sizzling solos and Brock's versatile vocals shine, but the whole occasionally feels uneven in its genre fusion. This style reflects the band's adaptation to 1980s rock trends while preserving their outsider ethos, influencing subsequent space metal acts.[23][12][22]Thematic Elements
Sonic Attack explores dystopian science fiction themes intertwined with social commentary on control, surveillance, and technological overreach, reflecting anxieties of the early 1980s amid Thatcher-era Britain and Cold War tensions. Science fiction author Michael Moorcock, a longtime Hawkwind collaborator, provides lyrics and vocals for key tracks like the title song and "Coded Languages," emphasizing manipulation through language as a tool for societal domination. This Orwellian undercurrent portrays a world where authority enforces conformity via propaganda and monitoring, blending speculative fiction with contemporary fears of authoritarianism. The opening track, "Sonic Attack," is a spoken-word satire recited by Michael Moorcock, parodying nuclear-era emergency broadcasts with absurd, hyperbolic survival directives such as "Do not panic... Survival means every man for himself" and instructions to achieve collective orgasm for unity during the assault. This piece mocks bureaucratic detachment and promotes selfish individualism in crisis, echoing Cold War paranoia while critiquing dehumanizing state directives. Similarly, "Coded Languages" delivers Moorcock's vehement rant against linguistic control, urging rebellion against coded messages that subjugate the masses, delivered with a punk-inflected urgency. Other songs expand on horror and existential dread within sci-fi frameworks. "Living on a Knife Edge" confronts state surveillance, with lyrics decrying "faceless people watching on a TV screen" and resistance to identity controls, prescient of modern privacy erosions. Tracks like "Virgin of the World" evoke undead celestial horror through ghostly vocals and imagery of eternal limbo, while "Angels of Death" channels nuclear apocalypse and space warfare with lines like "We are the warriors at the edge of time," underscoring themes of inevitable destruction and cosmic isolation. "Streets of Fear" amplifies urban paranoia with motifs of armed enforcement and nocturnal terror, fusing personal anxiety with broader societal breakdown. Overall, the album's lyrics prioritize conceptual warnings over narrative cohesion, using Hawkwind's space rock aesthetic to amplify motifs of alienation and resistance, drawing from Moorcock's literary influences like his Jerry Cornelius novels.Release and Promotion
Initial Release Details
Sonic Attack was initially released in October 1981 by RCA Records through their Active Records imprint, marking Hawkwind's first album with the label after departing from Charisma Records.[1][7] The original edition appeared as a stereo vinyl LP in the United Kingdom with catalog number RCALP 6004, featuring a gatefold sleeve and inner lyric booklet.[8] A cassette version was simultaneously issued under catalog number RCAK 6004, while international variants included a German pressing on RCA PL 25380.[1] Upon release, Sonic Attack entered the UK Albums Chart on 24 October 1981, where it peaked at number 19 and spent a total of five weeks in the top 100.[24]Marketing Efforts
The marketing efforts for Hawkwind's Sonic Attack centered on leveraging the band's established space rock fanbase through live performances and targeted media placements, aligning with the album's release in October 1981 via RCA Active Records. A key component was the "Sonic Attack Tour," an extensive UK outing that commenced on September 28, 1981, at the Reading Hexagon and encompassed approximately 38 shows throughout the year, including major venues like Hammersmith Odeon in London.[25][26] These concerts featured prominent performances of title track "Sonic Attack" (played 19 times) and other album cuts such as "Angels of Death" and "The Golden Void," serving as a primary vehicle to showcase the new material to audiences. Support acts like Mama's Boys accompanied the band on many dates, enhancing the tour's appeal and drawing larger crowds to promote the album's themes of psychedelic warfare and cosmic exploration.[25] To further drive sales, RCA released "Angels of Death" / "Trans-Dimensional Man" as a 7-inch vinyl single on October 18, 1981, coinciding closely with the album launch; the A-side, an energetic track from the record, was positioned to capture radio play and appeal to Hawkwind's core listeners interested in their evolving electronic sound.[27] Promotional materials included full-page print advertisements in UK music publications like Sounds and Melody Maker, which highlighted the album's artwork and tour dates to generate buzz, as well as a dedicated tour programme featuring liner notes, photos, and setlist previews distributed at venues.[28] Guest appearances, such as former member Robert Calvert joining for "Sonic Attack" at the October 21 Hammersmith Odeon show, added a layer of intrigue and nostalgia, capitalizing on the band's history to boost attendance and media coverage.[26] Overall, these efforts emphasized Hawkwind's live prowess over heavy radio pushes, reflecting the era's rock marketing norms for niche genres, though the album's chart performance (peaking at No. 19 in the UK) indicated moderate success amid lineup changes.Reception and Performance
Critical Response
Upon its release in 1981, Sonic Attack received generally positive attention from music critics, who praised its blend of space rock with harder-edged influences amid the New Wave of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM) era, though some noted it as a transitional work lacking the innovation of Hawkwind's 1970s output. The album peaked at number 19 on the UK Albums Chart, reflecting solid commercial interest and critical curiosity about the band's evolving sound under a reduced lineup featuring Dave Brock, Huw Lloyd-Langton, Harvey Bainbridge, and Martin Griffin. Reviewers highlighted the album's prescient lyrical themes of surveillance, mind control, and societal decay—often penned or contributed by Michael Moorcock—as particularly resonant in the context of Thatcher-era Britain, with tracks like "Living on a Knife Edge" and "Coded Languages" drawing comparisons to Orwellian dystopias.[12] Retrospective critiques have solidified Sonic Attack as an underrated entry in Hawkwind's discography, appreciated for its energetic guitar work from Lloyd-Langton and keyboard-driven atmospheres that foreshadowed later electronic and trance elements, despite criticisms of uneven cohesion and subdued synthesizers. In a 2013 analysis, the album was described as a "solid and good listen" with standout tracks like "Angels of Death" and "Rocky Paths" showcasing tight drumming and riff-heavy rock, though it falls short of the psychedelic highs of earlier works like Space Ritual. Prog Archives aggregates a 3.20/5 rating from 128 user reviews, emphasizing its enjoyable space rock/metal fusion without weak tracks but lacking truly remarkable moments. Similarly, Sputnikmusic's 2013 review rated it 3.0/5, commending the metal-influenced potential and Griffin's precise drums but faulting the failure to fully integrate elements into a unified whole.[2][9][23] More recent reissues, such as the 2022 40th Anniversary Edition, have prompted fresh acclaim for the album's enduring relevance, with critics noting how its warnings about technology and authoritarian control feel "scarily prescient" in the digital age of surveillance capitalism. The remastered version enhances the original's dense production, making keyboard layers and guitar solos more vivid, and positions Sonic Attack as part of Hawkwind's "industrial trilogy" alongside Levitation and Church of Hawkwind, blending punk rebellion with sci-fi fantasy. At The Barrier called it an "overlooked" gem worthy of re-evaluation, while Louder Than War lauded its NWOBHM appeal and thematic depth, suggesting it appeals to completists and newcomers alike for its rhythmic jams and social commentary. AllMusic user ratings average 6.6/10 from 55 votes, underscoring its steady, if not stellar, reputation among space rock enthusiasts.[21][12][29]Commercial Success
Sonic Attack achieved moderate commercial success upon its release, marking Hawkwind's return to the UK Albums Chart after a three-year absence. The album entered the chart on 24 October 1981 and peaked at number 19, spending a total of five weeks in the top 100.[24] Issued by RCA Records as the band's first album on the label following their departure from Charisma, Sonic Attack benefited from Hawkwind's established fanbase in the progressive and space rock scenes, though it did not replicate the higher chart peaks of earlier releases like the number 21 position of Levitation in 1980. No official sales figures have been publicly disclosed, but its chart performance reflected steady domestic interest amid the band's evolving lineup and stylistic shift toward a heavier sound.[24] Internationally, the album saw limited chart impact, with no notable entries on major European or North American charts documented. Subsequent reissues, such as the 2022 40th anniversary edition by Atomhenge, have sustained its visibility, reaching number 11 on the UK Rock & Metal Albums Chart and number 9 on the Official Progressive Albums Chart, underscoring enduring cult appeal rather than broad mainstream sales.[24]Track Listing
Original Vinyl Sides
The original vinyl edition of Sonic Attack, released in 1981 by RCA Records (catalog number RCALP 6004), divided the album into two sides containing five tracks each, totaling approximately 46 minutes of music.[8] Recorded at Rockfield Studios in Monmouth, Wales, from June to August 1981, the configuration emphasized Hawkwind's blend of space rock and psychedelic elements across the sides.[8] Side A| Track | Title | Duration | Writer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | Sonic Attack | 4:45 | Brock, Bainbridge, Lloyd-Langton, Moorcock |
| A2 | Rocky Paths | 3:38 | Huw Lloyd-Langton, Marion Lloyd-Langton |
| A3 | Psychosonia | 2:44 | Brock, Bainbridge, Lloyd-Langton |
| A4 | Virgin of the World | 4:22 | Bainbridge |
| A5 | Angels of Death | 6:02 | Brock |
| Track | Title | Duration | Writer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| B1 | Living on a Knife Edge | 4:49 | Brock |
| B2 | Coded Languages | 4:53 | Moorcock, Bainbridge |
| B3 | Disintegration | 1:07 | Brock |
| B4 | Streets of Fear | 4:12 | Brock |
| B5 | Lost Chances | 5:45 | Brock, Moorcock |