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P.X.R.5

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Download links and information about P.X.R.5 by Hawkwind. This album was released in 1979 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:14:40 minutes.

Artist: Hawkwind
Release date: 1979
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:14:40
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Death Trap 3:51
2. Jack of Shadows 3:27
3. Uncle Sam's On Mars 5:42
4. Infinity 4:18
5. Life Form 1:43
6. Robot 8:12
7. High Rise 4:41
8. P.X.R 5 5:16
9. Jack of Shadows (Bonus Track - Previously Unreleased Live Studio Version) 3:40
10. We Like to Be Frightened (Bonus Track - Previously Unreleased) 2:47
11. High Rise (Bonus Track - Previously Unreleased Live Studio Version) 4:44
12. Robot (Bonus Track - Previously Unreleased First Version) 9:27
13. Jack of Shadows (Bonus Track - Previously Unreleased Adrian Shaw Vocal Version) 3:54
14. High Rise (Bonus Track - Alternate Vocal Mix) 4:38
15. P.X.R 5 (Bonus Track - Alternate Intro Mix) 5:41
16. Quark, Strangeness & Charm (Bonus Track - Live) 2:39

Details

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Better remembered for the controversy that surrounded its original artwork than for either its contents or its genesis, PXR5 is historically one of the lesser-celebrated LPs in Hawkwind's canon. Not only was it their worst-selling new album since their debut nine years earlier, but the sheer confusion that surrounded its release, and (erroneous) reports that it was largely comprised of outtakes and off-cuts, lent it almost black-sheep status. But its original CD reissue remains a powerhouse collectible, and this remastered repackage restores it to the front line of Hawkish attractions. No less than eight bonus tracks double the running time of the original disc through the inclusion of two cuts mysteriously substituted on the earlier CD (a studio version of "High Rise" and a briefly extended take on the title track), plus a clutch of demos and alternate takes and a period live performance of "Quark, Strangeness and Charm." It's still a confusing and, in places, disheveled album, but the inclusion of such live favorites as "Uncle Sam's on Mars" and the breathless "Death Trap" establish it as a true Hawkwind classic.