Jefferson Airplane - Volunteers
Facts
| Artist(s) | Jefferson Airplane |
| Studio | RCA |
| Release Date | June 22, 2004 |
| UPC Code | 828766164220 |
| Buy this item | $10.99 at Amazon.com As of Jul 24 14:23 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Extra tracks, Original recording remastered |
Tracks
- We Can Be Together
- Good Shepherd
- Farm
- Hey Fredrick
- Turn My Life Down
- Wooden Ships
- Eskimo Blue Day
- Song for All Seasons
- Meadowlands
- Volunteers
- Good Shepherd [Live][#][*]
- Somebody to Love [Live][#][*]
- Plastic Fantastic Lover [Live][#][*]
- Wooden Ships [Live][#][*]
- Volunteers [Live][#][*]
Similar CDs
| Surrealistic Pillow | Crown of Creation | After Bathing at Baxter's | Bless Its Pointed Little Head | Jefferson Airplane Takes Off |
User Reviews
Average user review:| oops I quoted Grace singing "@#$%" in my first review submission |
A case in point is "Turn My Life Down," a concise track that starts with a fairly standard coffee-shoppish slide guitar before nimbly slipping into Laurel Canyon-style guitars and Hammonds. Then, suddenly at about 1-and-a-half minutes, the song tranforms into a romping pop melody and searing guitar counterpoint, nearly lifting the track right out of the stereo.
The title track "Volunteers," "The Farm," and "Good Shepherd" all espouse a back-to-nature agenda while simultaneously pointing an accusatory finger at religious zealots and political opportunists. But rather than being soap-boxy, these come off as beautifully constructed songs, scintillating in a raggedy way that is most often attributed to early Neil Young.
If you were concerned things were going to be a bit treacly and trapped in dated politics, Grace Slick delivers two songs that make it clear she was the Kim Gordon of her day. "Hey Fredrick" and "Eskimo Blue Day" are unflinching and raw -- "Either go away, or go all the way in" snarls Slick in the former tune. He voice soars over ambiguous lyrics that seem to search out some sort of meaning in religious and interpersonal dynamics. It could have been a boring graduate-level lecture... or it could be the dynamic and provocative polemic that she delivers here. You don't even notice nearly 9 minutes have passed. She is equally demanding in "Eskimo Blue Day," reminding us in no uncertain terms that "the human name doesn't mean @#$% to a tree."
As if to rub salt into the wide eyes of stupefied right-wingers who may have heard the album in its day, one of the closing songs is a tremulous organ reading of "Meadowlands," a communist-affiliated anthem much-reviled by the "Red Scare" set.
Another quote from the previously mentioned "We Can Be Together" is below. For as rewarding and generally uplifting as this album listens, the Airplane was out for blood -- striking a blow for the youth and pulling no punches in alienating apathists, poseurs, and opportunists. It's delivered with excellent musicianship and some thrilling left-turns too, making this album a real accomplishment from its era. One of my period favorites -- enjoy!
"We are forces of chaos and anarchy, everything they say we are we are, and we are very proud of ourselves."
July 22, 2008
| The first album I ever bought |
| My favorite JA |
| Essential. |
| Wrong Liner Notes! |
Opening the liner notes for some oral history about the making of Volunteers, gossip about Grace and the band, etc., I found that the notes for Surrealistic Pillow had been stapled inside the cover for Volunteers.
How on earth does that happen?
Now, it will cost me postage and time to return the CD. So, 1 star for the item I received.
Five stars for Volunteers with the *right* liner notes. May 29, 2007
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