“White Rabbit” featured in new trailer for “The Matrix Resurrections” film
Check out the brand-new trailer that launched this morning for the new Matrix film that will be in theaters Dec. 22nd. Features “White Rabbit”!
Check out the brand-new trailer that launched this morning for the new Matrix film that will be in theaters Dec. 22nd. Features “White Rabbit”!
Jefferson Airplane/Hot Tuna guitarist Jorma Kaukonen will go live on Saturday, May 2 to serve up some music and “excellent acoustics from the Fur Peace Station Concert Hall.”
“It is our pleasure and honor to bring these free concerts to our friends all over the world. We wish you were here, but we’ll take the win any way we can,” said Kaukonen via press release.
This marks Kaukonen’s fifth show from quarantine, and the broadcast is set to kick off at 8 p.m. ET.
According to an announcement, “Jorma will perform, tell stories and talk about his songs, often playing them on the very guitar he wrote the song on.”
Tune in to Kaukonen’s Quarantine Concert on Saturday, May 2 at 8 p.m. ET at the Fur Peach Ranch YouTube.
Last summer Jefferson Airplane released their complete Woodstock set on vinyl for the first time ever. And fans were offered a little more…a pillbox emblazoned with a suitably psychedelic band logo free with any purchase. Well, both the LP package and the pillbox were gigantic hits, as they were sold out immediately with the first pressing…so we decided to offer them again! Except this time, the vinyl color on the WOODSTOCK SUNDAY AUGUST 17, 1969 3-LP set is “vibrating” violet, to commemorate Grace Slick’s comment from the stage that “everyone’s vibrating.” And, yup, the pillbox is free if you buy the vinyl! There are going to be lots of “Volunteers” for this package…so don’t wait too long because there are limited quantities! WOODSTOCK SUNDAY AUGUST 17, 1969 3-LP set will be available on 1.31.2020.
Pre-order your copy today:
https://shop.realgonemusic.com/products/jefferson-airplane-woodstock-3-lp-set?_pos=1&_sid=e30394584&_ss=r
Read the whole piece at Jambase.
“One generation got old, One generation got soul..
This generation got no dissertation to hold, Pick up the cry…”
Volunteers of America – it’s up to us to mobilize and change the world!
Honor a half-century of defying The Establishment by visiting the VOLUNTEERS mural and for your chance to WIN a Jefferson Airplane vintage-inspired Tee from Daydreamer.
How to Enter:
“Got to Revolution!”
In 1967, San Francisco rockers Jefferson Airplane released “Surrealistic Pillow,” an album that put the Haight-Ashbury hippie scene on the commercial map and featured the band’s two biggest hits, “Somebody to Love” and “White Rabbit.” An unprecedented and unmatched mix of Peter, Paul and Mary’s harmonious folk-revival music, Howlin’ Wolf’s overdriven guitar blues, Bo Diddley and Chuck Berry’s driving early rock and roll, and melodic pop-rock à la “Revolver”-era John Lennon, “Surrealistic Pillow” offers a spooky and intense vision of psychedelia that stands in striking contrast with the more carefree sounds of other psychedelic music, in its era and since. The Harvard Crimson spoke with Jorma Kaukonen, Jefferson Airplane’s lead guitarist and sometime singer-songwriter, about the making of the album and more.
The Harvard Crimson: Rick Jarrard produced “Surrealistic Pillow.” What did that mean, exactly?
Jorma Kaukonen: Rick really took an active role in how things were evolving in the studio. He had a lot to say. “We need a guitar accent here,” or “we need a solo there,” et cetera. We also had Jerry [Garcia, of the Grateful Dead] on board, and he helped us with arrangements and with band dynamics, because he had so much more familiarity with that stuff, but Rick Jarrard was the producer.
THC: Was there ever tension between Jarrard and the band over his creative input?
JK: We sort of bristled against some stuff, just ‘cause we liked to think we came up with everything ourselves. But at the same time, I think that everybody in the band, even Paul, Grace, and Marty [Kaukonen’s bandmates] recognized that we were in uncharted waters. When you go into the studio and record something, it’s a different ballgame from playing a live show. I don’t think the album would have had the same sonic quality had the members of the Airplane, myself included, been able to drive the bus more. So, did Rick make us do stuff that we probably wouldn’t have done if left on our own? The answer is yes, and after the fact, my personal opinion is that this was a good thing.
THC: What sorts of things did Jarrard push for?
JK: One example is that when he heard me playing “Embryonic Journey” in the lobby to the security guard, just for fun, he said “I want to put that on the record.” And I thought he’d lost his mind, to put a folky fingerpicking piece on a rock and roll record. He recorded that in one take, and all the echo on it is real room echo.
THC: I’ve always assumed that the echo was applied in post-production. Did he put the mic, like, fifteen feet away from you?
JK: The mic was probably pretty close to the guitar. I wish I could say I remember, but I don’t. But that’s something else, too: recording guys like Rick, these guys were masters of mic placement. RCA had two books out in the ‘50s about mic placement, more about recording classical music and orchestras, that are still kind of the Bibles for guys that are interested in that kind of stuff. And those guys, back in the old days, they had that stuff down.
THC: You’ve said that when you first joined Jefferson Airplane, you were asked to play a Rickenbacker twelve-string because Roger McGuinn [lead guitarist and singer of the Byrds] used one. When you were making “Pillow,” did you think about emulating your contemporaries, like “I’ll play a Hendrix-y lick here,” or avoiding sounding like them?
JK: The answer is no. First of all, I don’t think we’d heard Hendrix yet, although he went on to be so influential on so many levels. Second of all, I recognized early on that what McGuinn did with the Byrds was utterly alien. It was really cool, and he’d architected a guitar sound that was completely his own, but I just played like me; I wasn’t able to do what he did. I think Paul would have been happy if I’d been able to do that, but the twelve-string didn’t last long in the Airplane, because that just really wasn’t me.
THC: There’s a polyphonic approach to vocal arranging across the album there that I don’t really hear in any other ‘60s rock music. In the B section of “She Has Funny Cars,” for instance, Marty and Grace have dueling vocal lines, instead of harmonizing lines. Where did that come from? It seems like a classical idea.
JK: That call-and-answer thing, with Grace and Marty, it’s just the chemistry of these two people. Grace had some classical training, and she liked Erik Satie [fin-de-siècle French avant-garde composer] a lot, and I’m guessing that she was probably driving that. I mean, nobody would have told anybody what to do, ‘cause it didn’t work like that, but the vocal harmonies of the Jefferson Airplane were very idiosyncratic. From the beginning to the end of our thing as a band, there’s some really interesting stuff.
THC: Are there any bands around today that you think are doing the kind of work you were trying to do, carrying the torch?
JK: One of the bands that I’m extremely fond of for a number of reasons –– and I don’t think they’re influenced by us on any level, but they carry the same kind of spiritual torch — is [Lake Street Dive. I just love that band; they’re great. And no matter what Rachael Price [Lake Street Dive’s singer] and her pals are going for or how they see themselves, they’re not a typical rock and roll band. They’re not a typical jazz band. In my opinion, they really are their own thing, whatever that thing is. And if nothing else, in the era when the Airplane was young, the Airplane was absolutely its own thing.
—Staff writer Alasdair P. MacKenzie can be reached at [email protected].
Source:
https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2019/7/29/jorma-kaukonen-surrealistic-pillow-jefferson-airplanes/
The upcoming 50th anniversary of Woodstock has been somewhat complicated. There’s a high percentage that Michael Lang’s festival might not happen (if you’re David Crosby, you’re almost certain of it). Thankfully, the original festival’s 1970 documentary will hit theaters nationwide for one night only, where it’s possible to celebrate the anniversary in the comfort of a soda-soaked theater chair. Woodstock: The Director’s Cut will screen on August 15th at 7:00 pm local time.
Directed by Michael Wadleigh, this is the first nationwide screening since the film was originally released. The director’s cut stretches out to three hours and 44 minutes and includes legendary performances by Janis Joplin and the Jefferson Airplane that weren’t featured in the original. Other artists includes Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, the Who, Santana, Canned Heat and Jimi Hendrix — who famously closed the festival after a searing rendition of “The Star Spangled Banner.
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1970 Woodstock Documentary Will Head to Theaters for One Night Only
Two long out of print Jefferson Airplane titles will be back on vinyl in July as part of Rhino Records Summer of ’69: Peace, Love and Music campaign.
First up is Thirty Seconds Over Winterland, with its iconic “Flying Toaster” cover will be reissued for the first time in 35 years on 180g Sky Blue vinyl on July 16th. The album, originally released in 1973, was recorded at the Auditorium Theatre in Chicago and the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco and features live workouts of “Crown Of Creation,” “Milk Train,” and a ten minute plus version of “Feel So Good.”
Long John Silver, the bands final studio album from 1972, will be reissued for the very first time in the U.S. on July 23rd. The album features the original, foldable cigar box packaging and is pressed on 180 gram Smoky Green vinyl. The album contains “Twilight Double Header,” “Son Of Jesus,” and the studio version of “Milk Train”
Both releases are limited edition and contain painstakingly recreated album art, including the original printed inner sleeves, and will be available exclusively at participating brick and mortar retail outlets.
Thirty Seconds Over Winterland:
https://
Grace Slick is one of the most recognizable voices of 1960’s psychedelic rock. The lead singer for Jefferson Airplane, Jefferson Starship, and Starship, Slick left her mark on ’60s and ’70s music history. She’s hailed alongside rockstars Stevie Nicks, Patti Smith, and Janis Joplin as one of the most prolific female musicians of her time. Since she first appeared on the San Francisco music scene in her twenties, Slick was a force to be reckoned with– she never held back. Now 79-years-old, the rock icon has many stories to tell; including her biggest regret, why she doesn’t play music anymore, and what Slick never realized about herself, although everyone else did.
Slick’s parents were both college educated, and her father held a job as an investment banker in San Francisco. However, after attending college herself and starting a career in modeling, Slick didn’t see herself following the life path that was expected of her. Living in the suburbs bored her, and with Haight-Ashbury just a stone’s throw away, she was ready to take the leap.
She told The Wall Street Journal, “I was a product of ’50s America in Palo Alto, California, where women were housewives with short hair and everything was highly regulated. I went from the planned, bland ’50s to the world of being in a rock band without looking back.”
Grace Slick became an iconic vocalist and musician of rock and roll, not just for a female artist, but any artist. Audiences were drawn to her onstage aura. Mic in hand, Slick holds her space with limited movement compared to other lead singers of the rock genre. Gently swaying to the sound, as if entranced by the instrumentals for the first time, fans adore her live performances. So where does her style come from?
Slick told The Wall Street Journal, “People in the audience thought I moved around on stage like a panther. I’m actually a klutz. The reason I moved so carefully was to avoid tripping and breaking my neck.”
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