Manson Family Pep Rally Revisited!
By Mr. Moderator on Dec 1, 2008
No offense, but does anyone know if a member of Jefferson Airplane was a lapsed fundamentalist of some faith or another? The composition and performance of this song seem to be an attempt at filling some tremendous spiritual void. Please discuss.
15 comments
I can't help you, Mod, on any possible spiritual void the band members might have been trying to fill, but I'm in need of some old-time religion after seeing that clip.
http://www.southstreet.com/index.php?option=com_mtree&task=viewlink&link_id=168&Itemid=12
Thanks for confronting the HARD TRUTHS. Who's next?
"Life is change
How it differs from the rocks"
Dig it!
Thanks, BigSteve. You strike me as a peaceful guy. When you play this song do you ever want to get together with friends and raid the homes of wealthy strangers living high in the hills?To quote the lyrics of Crown of Creation again:
In loyalty to their kind
they cannot tolerate our minds.
In loyalty to our kind
we cannot tolerate their obstruction.
Of course there was never an operable plan. Remember these were the people who were stoned enough to think that they could solve their problems by hijacking a starship and live free of society's restrictions floating through space. Who would operate the starship and how they would feed themselves were never addressed.
Who would operate the starshipNo doubt they all just assumed Kantner would be able to figure it out. We're all in agreement that the Doobie Brothers were the band best equipped to survive on a starship, right?
We're all in agreement that the Doobie Brothers were the band best equipped to survive on a starship, right?
How about P-Funk or Kraftwerk?
Getting back to the Jefferson Airplane, another thing that I would like to point out is that Grace Slick came from a well to do background & attended the same school as Tricia Nixon & was actually invited to the White House to attend a alumni event. She was planning to do something outrageous like spike the punch w/LSD or something, but that didn't pan out.
Interesting tidbit about Slick, Diskojoe. This could contribute to the spiritual void represented by the band's music.
Plus, Parliament would totally crash their ship into a moon or accidentally drift into the sun while everyone was high, like, five minutes after taking off.
The Doobies, though, they have the manpower for a decent crew, and there is no figure in rock more capable of defending a starship from attack than US Department of Defense Missile Consultant Skunk Baxter.
However, I would caution you against writing off Steely Dan. If “Classic Albums: the Making of Aja” is any indication, they have the myopic obsessiveness needed to operate high tech equipment like a 48 track automated mixing board or a rocket ship. My only concern is that they would end up getting into a metaphysical debate with each other and lose control of the ship and crash into Uranus.
To guard against that, they could enlist the services of Bernard “Pretty” Purdie, who is certainly capable enough to handle the mission himself, but humble enough to give the credit to Becker and Fagan (and possibly Ringo).
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