| Welcome to an elaborate musical universe created by GAVIN
HARDKISS.
HAWKE characterizes the many collaborations
and original sound clashes executed by one of the world's most
renowned and mysterious DJ/Producers. In 1992 he recorded the
first single "3 Nudes
in a Purple Garden" which was featured on the classic Hardkiss
album DELUSIONS OF GRANDEUR. Out of print, this album is so coveted
that used copies sell for $200 on E-bay. Over the past decade, he has remixed the likes of Elton John
and The Beatles, performed alongside Snoop Dogg and The Buena Vista
Social Club and released original recordings in Spain, France,
Italy, the United Kingdom and the United States. Gavin’s
focus, however, has consistently been on the artist albums released
under the guise HAWKE. NAMAQUADISCO was released on Sunburn Recordings
in 1998 and HEATSTROKE released on Six Degrees Records in 2002.
Now,
Hawke presents the third original album called LOVE
WON ANOTHER.
Recorded in the hills above Calistoga California in the Napa Valley,
amongst the olive trees, vineyards and wild life, this album
resounds in youthful authenticity. Earmarked with an organic blend
of electronic music and indie influences, LOVE WON ANOTHER marks
the height of a creative arc of a man possessed with the courage
to create something we've never heard before. The album is a dazzling collection of songs culled from sessions
with a variety of musicians, friends, lovers and artists who visited
the Calistoga retreat over a period of 2 years.
Between harvesting olives and crushing grapes with bare feet, guests
to the farmhouse would contribute song. With traditional instruments,
household appliances and children’s musical toys alongside
the electronics and computer studio equipment, the album is irresistably
eclectic. The title song “Love Won Another” features vocals by
ex-mayor of San Francisco Willy Brown’s chauffeur. After
meeting Maestro playing dominos at a local Calistoga bar called
Suzie’s, Gavin persuaded him to join the studio sessions
back at the farmhouse. At first reluctant, Maestro succumbed with
an offering of shared publishing and a bottle of Piraat aged rum.
As it turned out, Maestro had recorded for a host of local Fillmore
labels during the ‘50s and had toured with Earth, Wind and
Fire in the ‘70s. The sessions produced a song that is compelling
and distinct, conjuring Curtis Mayfield stretched out in a smokey
future-funk lounge.
“The Monkey’s Wedding” and “Garden
of Your Mind” feature the eloquent and versatile violin of Fernie
Apodaca. Only an African would know that a monkey’s wedding
is a term used to describe the phenomenon of sunshine during a
rainstorm. Fernie, having returned from Kenya where he was filming
a surrealist movie about a resurrected vampire tormenting the local
tribe’s men, titled Majini, brought the rain into the studio.
While recording, the studio sprung a dozen leaks and the equipment
had to be strategically placed between streams and droplets in
order to complete the session. Yes, the monkeys are real and they
played instruments we'd never seen before and wouldn't know how
to describe. “Garden of Your Mind” was conceived in the village
of Caraques on the Spanish Riviera where Hawke was billed to play
live at the unique Discoteque Rachdingue. The club was originally
opened by Salvador Dali and his muse Miette in 1968 and continues
to be a cutting edge venue over 35 years later. Club goes drive
hours to this venue to party to a flood of world famous electronic
talent under the stars amongst the giant cactuses and surrealist
sculptures. Locked inside the inner courtyard of the stone fortress
(the staff had left for dinner leaving the band alone to do a sound
check), Gavin and guitarist Jay Bowman the spitits into impromptu
live performance which became the basis for the song. “Juanita Cabana” is a stream of conscious hallucination
mesmorized in a Jacuzzi in a small beach town called Miami after
an unforgetable sunrise party. Vocal performance courtesy of graffiti
artist and latino troubadour Briejock, horns by a Cuban defector
known simply as Ben and guitars by ex-Steve Miller guitarist David
Denny. This song a is a hazy memory that is transparent like frosted
glass. Who is this woman with canary feathers in her hair? “Can You See the Love?” was
written with Rahmeen Matthew who provides vocals and flamenco and
electric guitars. This song sounds like a ray of sunlight cutting
through a tense atmosphere. It is a voyage of sonic discovery that
was recorded and re-recorded a dozen times to get the perfect balance
of mood and pace. Remixed by David Christopher of Rabbit-in-the–Moon and Fluke’s
King of Cool Mr. Hugh Bryder, “Can You See the Love?” is
the dance anthem of the album. “The Hardest Kiss” began life as a 12 minute Latin
dance track full of gypsies, shooting stars and flamenco guitar,
but was eventually resolved into a three minute pop song that is
vital and cutting in its honesty and echoing truth. With guitars
by shoe-gazing Sunburn co-hort Lovesky and vocals by Bay Area pop
phenomenon Kenon Chen, the lyrics, written by Gavin Hardkiss, cut
deep. Listen closely and you might hear a lifetime slip away. Listen
too closely and we may have to call in the mermaids. "Remember Tomorrow" and "Positive
Subtracting" are
collaborations with guitarist and vocalist David Denny. David was
a member of The Steve Miller Band with whom he toured during the
'70s and co-wrote the song "The Stand." Gavin and David
began working together in the late 1990s when they occupied ajoining
studio spaces at Hyde Street Studios deep in the Tenderloin. These
songs are vivid like wild flowers that sprout messages of life
from deep within. Dim and dark then bright and young. Life is full
of contradictions.
"Flower
Girl" is pop perfection. Fast and energetic
like the little girls at your sister's wedding. It started as a
bare breasted nymph and dovetailed into becoming a hot punk rocking
adolescent. Daniel Lippencott, who is the drunken monkey, would
visit the farm house in Calistoga in his white van crammed with
Marshall stacks and various instruments. But it was the children's
xylaphone and other plastic toys that were the most fun to play
with. Together they all sound charming. Watch
the Flower Girl Video.
(quicktime) Daniel also collaborated on the intro song "We
Come From Far" before
returning to the travelling circus where he earns his living.
myspace.com/hawke
gavinhardkiss.com
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