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At Golden Gate Park

Jefferson Airplane
Release Date: 10/21/2006
Original Release:  2006
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 958522_CD
UPC # 803415128327
Label: Charly Records (UK)
Buying Info
 
Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Other Side of This Life
2. Somebody to Love
3. Farm
4. Greasy Heart
5. Good Shepherd
6. Plastic Fantastic Lover
7. Uncle Sam's Blues
8. Volunteers
9. White Rabbit
10. Won't You Try/Saturday Afternoon
11. Jam (Bonus Track)
12. We Can Be Together (Bonus Track)
13. Mexico (Bonus Track)

Performer: Jefferson Airplane
Distributor: Phantom Import Distributi

Notes: British archival label Charly Records' Jefferson Airplane release At Golden Gate Park is billed on its back cover as the "first authorized release" of what annotator Jon "Mojo" Mills calls the band's "oft-bootlegged 7th May 1969 Golden Gate Park performance." Mills also calls this "the first official release" of the recording, but one must question what makes it official, much less authorized, as opposed to, say, "technically legal" in the sense that Charly has licensed it from Licensemusic.comAPS, "courtesy of ABC Entertainment Gmbh." Just as money can be laundered, it appears that illicit concert recordings can, too. It is hard to imagine that Jefferson Airplane would have authorized the release of this recording. It has been mastered at a low volume, and the recording, although it may come from a soundboard, favors the drums, the lead guitar, and some of the vocals, resulting in a distinctly inferior sound. Jefferson Airplane fans may nevertheless be interested in hearing a show at which the band performs versions of several songs due for release five months later on Volunteers: the title song, "The Farm," "Good Shepherd," and "We Can Be Together." The disc does not, however, contain a performance of "Mexico," listed as the 13th and final track. That is the title that is announced from the stage, but the band then plays "3/5 of a Mile in 10 Seconds" instead. That's the kind of mistake you expect with a bootleg, which is what this is in all but name. ~ William Ruhlmann
One of the quintessential San Francisco psychedelic bands, the Jefferson Airplane brought together interests in acoustic blues, folk, and rock music. Add political topicality and modal improvisations, and you have an inspired, mind-bending sound that could have only sprung forth from the late '60s. In their initial, most beloved phase, they were powered by the powerful dual lead vocals of Grace Slick and Marty Balin and the serpentine guitar of Jorma Kaukonen. They went through a traumatic series of personnel and name changes over the decades (they ventured into commercial AOR in the late '70s and early '80s) but their early work retains its seminal power.
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Shipping or Dimension weight in pounds: 0.25

PID # 4147823


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