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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Del Dettmar
Born (1947-04-20) 20 April 1947 (age 76)
Thornton Heath, England, UK
Genresspace rock
Instrument(s)keyboard
Formerly ofHawkwind

Del Dettmar (born 20 April 1947 in Thornton Heath, Surrey, England) is an English musician, best known as synthesizer and keyboard player with the English space rock band Hawkwind from 1971 to 1974.

After leaving school he had a number of jobs including working in a bank, digging potatoes on Jersey, and punting tourists up and down the river in Cambridge. Eventually he got a job as roadie with The Pretty Things and subsequently worked as road manager for Edgar Broughton Band, Arthur Brown, Juicy Lucy, Pete Brown, and then Cochise.[1]

He was recruited as road manager for Hawkwind by their manager Doug Smith. While attending to his road manager duties, he also sat out front at gigs operating a synthesizer and mixing the band.[2] He was brought into the band proper to replace a temporarily absent Dik Mik in May 1971. He co-produced (with Dave Brock) the album Doremi Fasol Latido and is credited as composer of the tracks "One Change" (Doremi Fasol Latido), "Electronic No. 1" (Space Ritual), and "Goat Willow" (Hall of the Mountain Grill).[3]

He left Hawkwind in June 1974[4] to emigrate to the East Shore of Kootenay Lake, in B.C. Canada, where he still lives. He recorded two albums with the Vancouver-based experimental group Melodic Energy Commission in 1979 and 1980 (with help from fellow ex-Hawkwinder Paul Rudolph).[5] He is an occasional contributor to the band Space Ritual.

References

  1. ^ The Saga of Hawkwind (p64) - Carol Clerk
  2. ^ The Saga of Hawkwind (p63) - Carol Clerk
  3. ^ Allmusic credits for Del Dettmar
  4. ^ NME; 29 June 1974 - Del quits Hawkwind
  5. ^ Aural Innovations #5 - Melodic Energy Commission (Review/Interview)

External links


This page was last edited on 13 March 2024, at 19:25
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