IMPORTANT NEWS!

Gripsweat is shutting down. Starting on February 1st, 2025 the site will no longer be doing daily updates, adding any new items, or accepting new memberships. The site will continue to run in this "historical" mode until January 1st, 2026, when the site will go offline. More information is available here.

LP KHAN Space Shanty (Re) TAPESTRY Rec. TPT 232 STILL SEALED Steve Hillage

Sold Date: November 21, 2024
Start Date: May 22, 2024
Final Price: €24.99 (EUR)
Seller Feedback: 8884
Buyer Feedback: 0

This item is not for sale. Gripsweat is an archive of past sales and auctions, none of the items are available for purchase.


 

LP KHAN

Space Shanty

 

Country of release: Liechtenstein, 2006

Original released: 1972

Label: Tapestry

Catalogue number: TPT 232

Barcode: -

Klappcover/Gatefold Sleeve: Ja/Yes

 

 Condition Record: MINT

Condition Cover: MINT

  LP ist noch verschweißt / LP IS STILL SEALED !!!

(Photo von meiner eigenen LP / Photo taken from my own copy)

 

 

Tracks Side 1:

1. Space Shanty (Incl. The Cobalt Sequence And March Of The Sine Squadrons) (8:59)

2. Stranded (Incl. Effervescent Psycho Novelty No. 5) (6:35)

3. Mixed Up Man Of The Mountains (7:14)

 

Tracks Side 2:

1. Driving To Amsterdam (9:22)

2. Stargazers (5:32)

3. Hollow Stone (Including Escape Of The Space Pilots) (8:16)

 

Listen At YouTube:



Caravan, Soft Machine, Hatfield & the North, National Health, and Matching Mole are a few examples of the Canterbury rock scene. Many of these groups tended to be jazzy with bizarre experimentations thrown in.

Another example is Khan, who only released this one and only album, Space Shanty in 1972 on Deram Records (same label that gave us the Moody Blues, Camel, East of Eden, Keef Hartley Band, early Cat Stevens and many more). Well, unlike Soft Machine or Hatfield & the North, Khan's music tends to sound more like a standard early '70s prog rock band with heavy organ work and hard rock-influenced vocals. But still, if you like Gong or Hatfield & the North, you still need this album, as the band features Steve Hillage and Dave Stewart (not of the Eurythmics, of course). The band also featured bassist Nick Greenwood and drummer Eric Peachy. Greenwood had played with the Crazy World of Arthur Brown. Both Hillage and Stewart were in a band called Uriel (when both were still teenagers) in which the band quickly became Arzachel, and released a self-entitled album in 1969 (but due to contractual difficulties, all the members were not performing under their real names). The band quickly changed its name to Egg, and Hillage left, and that band released two albums, Egg (1970) and The Polite Force (1971), before breaking up (although Egg did reunite in 1974 and released an album called The Civil Surface). Then came Khan, which was to be circled around Hillage, and in fact the band didn't initally feature Dave Stewart, but someone by the name of Dick Henningham. But then he left, and Hillage found Dave Stewart, and this was the lineup that recorded Space Shanty. A lot of times this album reminds me a lot if Hatfield & the North was a heavy prog rock band, a lot of Dave Stewart's trademark fuzz organ can already be found here, although he also uses a more typical Hammond organ sound too. He doesn't use much electric piano, aside from "Stranded". Steve Hillage is still in search of his trademark lead guitar style, although you can hear it on parts of the opening cut, "Space Shanty". More often than not, Hillage's guitar style is pretty indistiguisible from countless other prog and jazz rock bands of the time (but of course, he'll be able to perfect his style after joining Gong). Of course the music is hardly bad at all, in fact I think this album is a classic. Often the music doesn't stick to one thing, as each song goes through several changes, never boring the listener. I really can't find a high point on this album as it's all of the same quality. A new version of Khan was to surface after Space Shanty was released, with a new bass player, but never recorded, as Hillage still didn't feel confident enough leading a band yet (that had to wait until he released Fish Rising in 1975, his first solo offering). So Hillage first joined Keven Ayers band for a short period, before joining Gong at the end of 1972. Khan, along with Caravan, is the closest to traditional prog rock in the world of Canterbury rock, although Khan's music is heavier and not so pop-oriented as Caravan's. So if you're a Gong or Hatfield & the North fan, or even if you're not, but you like that early '70s organ-dominated prog rock sound, then Space Shanty should be in your collection. (errny-progrockplazerna.blogspot.de)

Steve Hillage - Guitar, Vocals
Dave Stewart - Organ, Piano, Marimba, Celesta
Nick Greenwood - Bass Guitar, Vocals
Eric Peachey - Drums



Versicherter Versand innerhalb von  Deutschland (generell innerhalb von 24 Stunden)

 Keine weiteren Versandkosten ab der zweiten LP!!

ASK FOR COMBINED SHIPPING!! 

  

Weitere Infos oder Fotos? Bitte fragen

Need more infos or photos? Please ask