Jefferson Airplane | Members, Albums, & Songs | Britannica (original) (raw)
Quick Facts
Later known as:
Jefferson Starship and Starship
Jefferson Airplane, was an American psychedelic rock band best known for its biting political lyrics, soaring harmonies, and hallucinogenic titles, such as Surrealistic Pillow and “White Rabbit.” Jefferson Airplane was an important standard-bearer for the counterculture in the 1960s, but in its later incarnations it had hits with more mainstream material in the 1970s and ’80s.
- Marty Balin (original name Martyn Jerel Buchwald; b. January 30, 1942, Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.—d. September 27, 2018, Tampa, Florida)
- Paul Kantner (b. March 17, 1941, San Francisco, California, U.S.—d. January 28, 2016, San Francisco)
- Signe Anderson (b. September 15, 1941, Seattle, Washington, U.S.—d. January 28, 2016, Beaverton, Oregon)
- Skip Spence (b. April 18, 1946, Ontario, Canada—d. April 16, 1999, Santa Cruz, California, U.S.)
- Jack Casady (b. April 13, 1944, Washington, D.C.)
- Bob Harvey
- Grace Slick (original name Grace Barnett Wing; b. October 30, 1939, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.)
- Spencer Dryden (b. April 7, 1938, New York, New York, U.S.—d. January 10, 2005, Penngrove, California)
- Papa John Creach (b. May 28, 1917, Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania, U.S.—d. February 22, 1994, Los Angeles, California)
- David Freiberg (b. August 24, 1938, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.)
- Craig Chaquico (b. September 26, 1954, Sacramento, California)
- Aynsley Dunbar (b. January 10, 1946, Liverpool, Merseyside, England)
The band was started in the mid-1960s by former folk musicians; in late 1966, however, edgy-voiced ex-model Grace Slick and the harder, rumbling rhythms pouring from bassist Jack Casady and drummer Spencer Dryden transformed Jefferson Airplane into a dance band with a social conscience. It was the first San Francisco-based band to land a major label contract. Their second album, Surrealistic Pillow (1967), produced two Top Ten singles, “White Rabbit” and “Somebody to Love,” both cowritten by Slick for her previous band, the Great Society, and drew hordes of fans to San Francisco’s Summer of Love pageantry. The city’s Haight-Ashbury neighborhood had become the center of the burgeoning hippie counterculture, but the commercialism and crime that rapidly overtook that bohemian enclave in the love fest’s wake were reflected in the bittersweet brilliance of Jefferson Airplane’s fourth album, Crown of Creation (1968).
Playing live at venues such as the Fillmore Auditorium, the band developed its crowd-pleasing version of the improvisational jamming that became the hallmark of the San Francisco sound pioneered by the Grateful Dead, Big Brother and the Holding Company (featuring Janis Joplin), and Santana, among others. Casady, Dryden, and guitarist Jorma Kaukonen slashed and soared through extended psychedelic blues while songwriters Paul Kantner, Slick, and Marty Balin did not so much harmonize on as cohabit melodies and lyrics. The best onstage document of their approach, Bless Its Pointed Little Head, was one of two albums released in 1969; the other, Volunteers, was a call for youth revolt, a reaction to the police riots of the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. In addition to its agitprop title song, the album included the postapocalyptic “Wooden Ships,” cowritten by Kantner, David Crosby, and Stephen Stills. Volunteers was Jefferson Airplane’s final creative peak.
More From Britannica Grace Slick: Jefferson Airplane
The band, its membership constantly shifting, released albums for 20 years as Jefferson Airplane, Jefferson Starship, and Starship. Although it experienced commercial success—most notably with 1975’s chart-topping Red Octopus and its Top Ten single “Miracles”—the band never recaptured the moment when its music stood for something more, when Jefferson Airplane spoke for change on behalf of the culture that produced it. In 1996 Jefferson Airplane was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In 2024 the U.S. Library of Congress added Surrealistic Pillow to the National Recording Registry, a list of audio recordings deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”