we want to buy your Hawk collection - click here
sort
Page 1/1
 

You searched All Products for 'Hawk' catalogue

Click here for more info about 'Hawk - African Day'Click here for more info about 'Hawk - African Day'

HAWK African Day (Progressive Psych Rock 1971 South African-only 6-track LP, the debut album by the mysterious South African band, featuring guitarist Julian Laxton of fellow cult act, Freedom's Children. Opens with the side-length title piece, a magical journey across the motherland, taking in tribal rhythms, primeval sounds & conjuring up witch doctors along the way. Other tracks remind us of Black Widow, Edgar Broughton Band & bits of John Kongos & Arthur Brown's Kingdom Come. The album ends on 'Kissed By The Sun' & a super crazy cover of George Harrison's 'Here Comes The Sun' with revved up jazz-breaks at the end. Comes housed in a fully textured gatefold sleeve with unique sunkissed photography & internal flipbacks, complete with the original catalogue inner & a vintage shop price sticker on the back. The cover [VG+] shows some light edge scuffing & minor ring wear, with all text clearly legible. The vinyl easily grades Excellent with a deep sheen both sides, great sound & very few signs of play. A near lost Afro-Rock treasure that should appeal to anyone that collects the strange & obscure or Hans Pokora recommended albums! PCSJ(D)12080) more...
Last copy in stock. Order now for shipping on Friday 22nd November

$158.75
£125.00

sort
Page 1/1
 

Genres: Rock

Alternative artists: Hawk (South African)

Hawk Vinyl LP Records & Albums And Hawk CD Albums & CD Singles

991.com accept a range of card payments!

Close X

 

To get 10% off, visit our new mobile friendly site RareVinyl.com (by clicking the logo below)

var ju_num="1CD30569-E7C3-4F7F-A9C4-CCCE1CB102AE";var asset_host=(("https:"==document.location.protocol)?"https":"http")+'://d2j3qa5nc37287.cloudfront.net/';(function() {var s=document.createElement('script');s.type='text/javascript';s.async=true;s.src=asset_host+'coupon_code1.js';var x=document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0];x.parentNode.insertBefore(s,x);})();