Hoping for a Jefferson Airplane-to-Starship-style transition between the two names, the Hawklords embarked on a 25-date autumn 1978 U.K. tour to push their 25 Years On album and Psi Power/Death Trap single. The classic Hawkwind sound still shone through the new material -- albeit with a rawer edge that also attracted younger, punk-era fans bemused by the band's reputation as unrepentant '60s-era holdovers. Psi Power's classic lyric about an unwilling recipient of extrasensory ability became the most enduring Hawklords song, at least for a while (it opens the 1984 live album This Is Hawkwind, Do Not Panic). But efforts to establish the new band grew complicated after the third reissue of Hawkwind's classic space rock anthem Silver Machine, which reached number 34 on the U.K. charts.
Predictably, Brock's and Calvert's ever-fractious alliance didn't survive intact for long, either; in January 1979, Calvert left to pursue his on-again, off-again solo career. Griffin also departed, enabling Simon King to retake the position that he'd held in both bands between 1975 and 1978.
Now pared down to a compact quartet, the Hawklords suffered a further blow when Swindells defected, too, leaving Brock and Bainbridge to carry the flag for a few more aimless months. Almost on cue, Charisma issued the PXR5 album in May 1979 -- which had been recorded by the last Hawkwind lineup, but shelved due to the confusion surrounding the parent band's future.
The inevitable happened when Brock reverted to using Hawkwind's name by the summer of 1979, which only made sense -- since several of the same people had played in both bands, anyway. With King back in the fold, guitarist Huw Lloyd-Langton and ex-Gong keyboardist Tim Blake joined the resurrected Hawkwind in time for the year's first gig at Leeds' so-called Futurama Festival. Brief as it was, the Hawklords' run became an exhibit of "business as usual" -- even if the principal players took an unusually circular route to get there. ~ Ralph Heibutzki, Rovi