Jefferson Airplane

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that would make sense -- they do sound like a different band. more physical, exactly. and urgent. is there anything properly released with him on it?

negotiable, Friday, 6 April 2007 00:00 (seventeen years ago) link

some airplane albums' production puts you at a distance cuz of its thinness. you don't really get the physical thing a lot of the time.

Surmounter, Friday, 6 April 2007 12:35 (seventeen years ago) link

Covington joined the band after the recording of Volunteers, so he's in the transition period where the Airplane was slowly falling apart but Jefferson Starship was yet to, uh, "take off." Then again, he didn't even stick around too long. On the J.A. DVD bio, Fly, the band talks about how Dryden (who replaced Spence on drums) had to bow out of the group around this time, because he couldn't play the heavier stuff. That DVD, which is on Netflix, has some great Covington footage. The dude is insane. Plus, he now has an insane tan, really. Also, I recently tracked down a bootleg collection of live Airplane, and it has some really hard-hitting numbers featuring Covington.

As for studio material from '70 to '71, it's real spotty. Covington can be heard on J.A.'s Bark and Long John Silver, but both are real spotty. I do endorse Blows Against the Empire by Paul Kantner and the Jefferson Starship, which isn't the Jefferson Starship of Red Octopus; it's more like a supergroup of Bay Area/L.A. freaks, including Covington -- a great space-rock album with hippie sci-fi concepts floating all about. Great guitars that sound kinda like the guitars on those early Pink Fairies records.

Then again, I think the hardest rocking J.A. album is After Bathing at Baxter's, which predates Covington. In my opinion, the production isn't thin at all. In fact, this thing is such an out there, acid-rock mindfuck -- heavy stuff. I think it's one of the great psych-rock albums, one that proves just how many other psych bands were copping ideas from the Airplane.

QuantumNoise, Friday, 6 April 2007 13:20 (seventeen years ago) link

he's got a website. rockin the gary busey look: http://members.aol.com/bandinusa/j/home.htm
i spent a bout a half-hour looking for the 3/5ths live, but it seems to have disappeared. will post it if it turns up.

negotiable, Friday, 6 April 2007 14:41 (seventeen years ago) link

i can burn it.

QuantumNoise, Friday, 6 April 2007 14:54 (seventeen years ago) link

oh right, i guess you would have it. the version i'm thinking of starts, iirc, with a few seconds of rapidfire snare fills, then everything kicks in.

negotiable, Friday, 6 April 2007 15:00 (seventeen years ago) link

I just realized that the rhythm of "White Rabbit" sounds really middle eastern. Is that pathetically obvious? Sometimes when you hear something at a very early age, it takes years for these things to occur to you.

-- RS £aRue (rockist_scientist), Sunday, 10 April 2005 10:53 (1 year ago)


Isn't it a bolero-based rhythm (just like the repetition-w/crescendo form is reminiscent of Bolero?)

Sundar, Friday, 6 April 2007 21:04 (seventeen years ago) link

Hey Fredrick

Surmounter, Friday, 6 April 2007 22:07 (seventeen years ago) link

yes, white rabbit is a re-interpretation [at least musically] of ravel's "bolero".

theoreticalgirl, Friday, 6 April 2007 23:38 (seventeen years ago) link

"Doesn't the sky look green today?"

Myonga Vön Bontee, Saturday, 7 April 2007 17:07 (seventeen years ago) link

=)

Surmounter, Saturday, 7 April 2007 19:36 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_-GspDWYt8

sexyDancer, Saturday, 7 April 2007 20:03 (seventeen years ago) link

two weeks pass...
I've had DCBA.—25 on infinite rotation in my head for 2 weeks now. BEAUTIFUL song.

I'm now desperately waiting to find out if the Bathing at Baxter's version is superior...

gnarly sceptre, Monday, 23 April 2007 16:10 (seventeen years ago) link

??

Rock Hardy, Monday, 23 April 2007 16:56 (seventeen years ago) link

Ohhkay. It's 3/5ths of mile in 10 seconds that's got a second version elsewhere, and it's actually on Bless Its Pointed Little Head.

But it is DCBA which I intended to single out as the killer song, regardless.

my facts = half straight

gnarly sceptre, Monday, 23 April 2007 18:08 (seventeen years ago) link

wait so do people like this band or not? so much hating on this thread.

a couple years ago one of my drama profs was telling me about living in new york in the late '60s. she said she paid $80/month for an entire apartment building on Thompson st. in SoHo because it had large holes in the walls and no plumbing (and no one wanted to live in SoHo anyway). i asked her if she saw the Velvet Underground play live and she said, "no, but jefferson airplane would play in my friend's house." i thought it was kind of lame at the time, but now..

poortheatre, Thursday, 3 May 2007 19:56 (seventeen years ago) link

JA are one of my all-time faves, which, I guess, is obvious after reading this thread

QuantumNoise, Thursday, 3 May 2007 20:05 (seventeen years ago) link

i LOOOOOOOOOVE this band :-)

Surmounter, Thursday, 3 May 2007 21:08 (seventeen years ago) link

the hating is WEIRd man

Surmounter, Thursday, 3 May 2007 21:09 (seventeen years ago) link

I didn't buy "Bark" second-hand this weekend. I heard it's "meh," but it does feature Joey Covington on drums. Should I go back and get it? 15$

negotiable, Thursday, 3 May 2007 21:26 (seventeen years ago) link

i wouldn't buy it for $15.

QuantumNoise, Thursday, 3 May 2007 21:35 (seventeen years ago) link

unless, some inflation has kicked in that i'm unaware of, that record can be obtained for $5.

QuantumNoise, Thursday, 3 May 2007 21:36 (seventeen years ago) link

...*with* the brown paper sack!

Stormy Davis, Thursday, 3 May 2007 22:05 (seventeen years ago) link

four months pass...

I recently got into "Takes Off" (the one I slept on) -- it's KICK ASS. I thought it would be good but sorta generic folk rock (there's a touch of that, like in their version of Dino Valenti's "Get Together"), but it's really this dynamite debut rock album! The original (Balin et al.) songs are terrific... I love the swaggering, self-actualized-rock-guy attitude. A must-hear is "Come Up the Years" - a hilarious tale of hipster chutzpah, embellished with cute bells that mock the narrator's pain (Google the lyrics for Marty & Paul's sad plight!).

morris pavilion, Friday, 14 September 2007 23:36 (sixteen years ago) link

I love these guys 90% of the time, but I went to listen to a concert of theirs at Wolfgang's Vault and thought it was the most horriblest shit in the world. I like them a lot better in the studio than live.

Rock Hardy, Saturday, 15 September 2007 01:52 (sixteen years ago) link

mebbe so but i recently (finally) watched monterey pop, and they're great in that.

tipsy mothra, Saturday, 15 September 2007 04:04 (sixteen years ago) link

"Volunteers" is a great song and great album.

And I'm not normally into West Coast hippie stuff. JA always seem to take several listens before they yield anything of value. But the value is definitely there.

PhilK, Saturday, 15 September 2007 08:30 (sixteen years ago) link

Grace Slick was fucking hot

President Evil, Saturday, 15 September 2007 10:18 (sixteen years ago) link

i love volunteers

SO FUCKING MUCH

at first i thought it could never compare to Crown of Creation -- too modernized and different -- but the piano, textures and melodies are FUCKING AMAZING. dammit what is that one song? number 4 i think? i always forget the name, where she goes

"how many [something something] before you

stop your believing?

and the [something something] down on you..."

i swear, that is one of the most beautiful bits of songwriting ever. it's so rallying.

Surmounter, Saturday, 15 September 2007 14:27 (sixteen years ago) link

and BTW morris Takes Off, i don't think i've ever heard but have you heard Early Flight? so good! Mexico is a killer song.

Surmounter, Saturday, 15 September 2007 14:30 (sixteen years ago) link

"Hey Frederick"?

I dunno, there's loads I love on this album - "We Can Be Together", "Good Shepherd", "Turn My Life Down", "Eskimo Blue Day".....

It's a very emotional non-BS album. It's got a feeling of persecution about it - that these people are standing for a political vision that's about to be erased. So the fervour is tinged (and oddly heightened) by the first murmurs of defeatism.

Is "Early Flight" a comp.?

PhilK, Saturday, 15 September 2007 16:38 (sixteen years ago) link

Yeah, "Hey Fredrick". Google says these are the lyrics

One more pair of
Wire wheels bear down on you
Gear stripping the willow
How many machine men will you see before you
Stop believing that speed
Will slide down on you
Like brakes in bad weather

Rock Hardy, Saturday, 15 September 2007 16:43 (sixteen years ago) link

Surmounter - "Mexico" IS a killer song! Especially when it kicks into that middle section - "I MEAN IT'S NOT AS IF YOU WERE ALOOOONE..." (I think it was the first post-"Volunteers" single, yeah? about a Nixon plot to poison marijunana coming up from Mexico...?)

"Volunteers" is my favorite album too, and I'm with you guys about "Hey Frederick"! Anyone who's into, like, heavy progressive rock and Dagmar Krause stuff (doesn't Grace kind of sound like her in that "Machine Men" part?) NEEDS to hear that song.

morris pavilion, Saturday, 15 September 2007 18:07 (sixteen years ago) link

<i>It's got a feeling of persecution about it - that these people are standing for a political vision that's about to be erased. So the fervour is tinged (and oddly heightened) by the first murmurs of defeatism.</i>

Yeah, and it's interesting how the "decay" of everything in the last few JA albums, after "Volunteers," sort of parallels the general "decay" of the "Sixties scene" in the early '70s... everything getting more self-indulgent, confused, self-destructive, into heavier drugs... (or at least that cliche; I wasn't there).

Plus, at the same time, you have the emerging space commune mentality of the Kantner/Slick albums, with the "get the government off our backs, we have shotguns, let's build our own world," in place of the tarnished idea of "changing" the wider world... which leads into big, new success with Jefferson Starship, and what that eventually becomes ("We Built This City")... it's all like a perfect microcosm of a certain idea of how the '60s/'70s/'80s progressed for a whole "generation"...

morris pavilion, Saturday, 15 September 2007 18:22 (sixteen years ago) link

...or more of an idealized, rock-star-sized, real-time "working out" of a generational "mythology"... even helping to provide the basis for the mythology (which may not apply in its entirety to too many "real" people at all), both in the progression of their "career" and the development of their lyrics/ideas, played out over the REAL '60s, '70s, '80s...

morris pavilion, Saturday, 15 September 2007 19:12 (sixteen years ago) link

"Hey Frederick" -- thank you! Stunning.

YES morris the middle section of Mexico is gold. Mexico was post-Volunteers?? Huh I guess so (just checked Wiki) but that's SO weird - I could have sworn it sounded like something much earlier.

WHOA actually this really confuses me! 1974 was when Early Flight came out, but it sounds like such a step back (in time, not quality) from Volunteers, no? Also it's fucking GREAT - i'm impressed it came out so late. wow.

Surmounter, Saturday, 15 September 2007 19:50 (sixteen years ago) link

yes and re: Early Flight i'm not sure what it was exactly, cuz i don't remember ever coming across it as an actual studio album -- i found it at a used place once

Surmounter, Saturday, 15 September 2007 19:58 (sixteen years ago) link

u know, i think it WAS a comp -- it must have been a comp of the early b-sides

Surmounter, Saturday, 15 September 2007 19:59 (sixteen years ago) link

Early Flight was oddities and rarities from '65 to around '70 or '71. Some of that stuff is pre-Volunteers and some of it is post-Volunteers.

QuantumNoise, Saturday, 15 September 2007 20:14 (sixteen years ago) link

It's funny how RCA didn't release one of those early singles (which ended up on "Early Flight") because the lyrics say, "Our nights together will be fantastic TRIPS," or something -- and by "Volunteers," they're singing "motherfucker" and "wouldn't mean shit to a tree"...

morris pavilion, Sunday, 16 September 2007 02:44 (sixteen years ago) link

I've heard at the end of the '60's there was a kind of "frontier" vibe amongst the counter culture. Like the psychedelic era was a new social/psychological frontier. And there were kind of unconscious parallels with the old frontier proper (i.e. it adopted victorian/edwardian modes of dress, typograhy + the interest in traditional/country musics)

Supposedly the closing of the old frontier was a traumatic time in American history - like the end of a vast potentiality.

"Volunteers" kind of mimics that feeling. A key lyric for me is "We are all outlaws in the eyes of America". Pioneers become outlaws once the frontier closes and the natural order is restored.

I'm sort of groping at this, but someone who's more expert in American history might be able to provide a sounder factual basis.

PhilK, Sunday, 16 September 2007 08:14 (sixteen years ago) link

the countercultural frontier vibe amounted to david crosby wearing a fringe jacket. at the same time an actual new frontier was being explored via astronauts and the moon landing tho the freeks greeted this mostly w/indifference or contempt. I remember the cool recordstore/headshop I used to frequent had a poster of Neil Armstrong taking "one giant step for mankind" w/the caption SO WHAT. but Paul Kanter and Grace Slick followed up Volunteers w/a concept album about rocketing off into space and setting up a new utopia: Blows{ Against The Empire, nominally the first Jeff Starship album. I listened to it a few months ago, wondering if it was another If I Could Only remember My Name but it wasn't that great. Some not bad jamming but the "political" lyrics were annoying and/or absurd in retrospect. in general I'd say JA haven't aged well because of the topical bent their songs took at the dawn of the 70s. real good singers, though.

m coleman, Sunday, 16 September 2007 12:11 (sixteen years ago) link

the countercultural frontier vibe amounted to david crosby wearing a fringe jacket.

The first band to really play the "frontier" role -- 19th century Wild West/gentleman look -- was the Charlatans. They nailed the look as early as '65. Quicksilver soon followed suit, as did the other groups, including Crosby, who actually never played the role nearly as over the top as the Charlatans. The cover art for the Deja Vu LP cover is totally behind the times in this respect.

via astronauts and the moon landing tho the freeks greeted this mostly w/indifference or contempt.

I don't think the counterculture held a consensus attitude towards mankind landing on the moon. "indifference or contempt" simply isn't accurate.

QuantumNoise, Sunday, 16 September 2007 13:24 (sixteen years ago) link

um by the way? the "bridge" in hey fredrick makes it like 9 minutes long? and it's amazing -- i all of a sudden thought i was in another fantastic song

Surmounter, Thursday, 20 September 2007 20:20 (sixteen years ago) link

ugh Eskimo Blue Day, we've prolly talked bout that one by now -- i know i saw the lyrics up there. really great

Surmounter, Thursday, 20 September 2007 20:31 (sixteen years ago) link

lov the waves of piano.

Surmounter, Thursday, 20 September 2007 20:33 (sixteen years ago) link

four months pass...

Finally getting around to the Jef

Takes Off is great, but this extended version of "And I Like It" is killing me in a good way.

Hopefully this isn't predictable to say, but I'm guessing Thinking Fellers Union Local 282 must have heard a lot of Jefferson Airplane? I just this as such a prototype for one major facet of the Fellers.

Mackro Mackro, Tuesday, 29 January 2008 00:16 (sixteen years ago) link

three months pass...

Listened to the first half of Crown of Creation this afternoon. Has really nice "Soundtrack for Spring turning to Summer" feel. "In Time"...woah.

C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 1 May 2008 23:39 (sixteen years ago) link

the countercultural frontier vibe amounted to david crosby wearing a fringe jacket. at the same time an actual new frontier was being explored via astronauts and the moon landing tho the freeks greeted this mostly w/indifference or contempt.

With maybe the exception of Roger McGuinn who was tinkering around with Moogs and songs about Apollo 11 while just before recording Sweetheart Of The Rodeo

Elvis Telecom, Friday, 2 May 2008 01:34 (sixteen years ago) link

Yeah, JA is excellent all the way up through Volunteers... then I got the fuck away.

Mackro Mackro, Friday, 2 May 2008 03:45 (sixteen years ago) link


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