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Jefferson Airplane Live Base
Concert Reviews and Song played index

A Hedonic Engineering Archive Division
transcription.
Used and improved without
permission.
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May 22 1966 - Cabana Hotel, Palo Alto CA
The Airplane played around the pool no less! I was there it was the
first time I saw the Airplane live (but not the last). The band that
I was in at the time ended up loaning the Airplane our humble PA, cause
the hotel had provided two little wimpy speakers for the PA. I will
never forget that afternoon having Marty Balin staring down on me as I
tried to control the mics that were all stuffed into the inputs of a
Fender Bassman Amp head!
-- contributed by Dean Coy (satch@blueneptune.com)
Oct 6 1966 - Basketball Pavilion, Stanford University, Stanford CA
Another show where I was there. After the Cabana gig we (the drummer
and I) saw the band down in San Jose when they played at Losers South,
it was there that Signe's husband, Jerry, [ed. note - Jerry Slick was
not married to Signe Anderson] befriended us, so when they played this
gig at Stanford we were able to go back stage and hang with the group.
I spent a lot time that night talking to Signe and watching Mike
Bloomfield play Jorma's Guild Thunderbird guitar on stage that night.
-- contributed by Dean Coy (satch@blueneptune.com)
May 3 1968 - Fillmore East, New York NY
Went with a friend of mine, we were both tripping, so everything was
very exaggerated. Arthur Brown opened, first his band came out and
played for about 5 - 10 minutes. Then from the back of the theater
burst out 6 black guys in leopard skin underwear, carrying a throne on
a long board, and in the throne wearing a crown with flames shooting
out of it came Arthur Brown! Well you could imagine - our minds were
blown. They rushed him down to the stage, where he jumped off and began
to sing. After the that, the Airplane was practically anti-climactic,
I can't remember much.
-- contributed by Larry Fradin <larryx@well.com>
#Aug 4 1968 - Newport Pop Festival, Costa Mesa CA
I remember going to one Newport Pop Festival - I'm fairly sure it was
that show. The Airplane closed the show. Late in their set - it was
getting dark and finally cooling off - they (JA) had hundreds of pies
delivered to the crowd. Some people ate them some threw them. It was
quite a scene.
After the show as we were driving back to LA, listening to the radio, we
heard Crown of Creation - just released - for the first time.
Thanks to JA it was a great experience. Better than one would have
expected to have in a big, hot, crowded field somewhere in Orange County.
-- contributed by Steve G. (bsinc@PACBELL.NET)
Aug 30 1968 - Isle of Wight
Despite all of this homegrown talent, it was the Jefferson Airplane who
provided the real highlight of the festivities. They ambled on stage and
immediately began to rock.
Lead singers Grace Slick and Marty Balin prowled the stage, their searing
harmonies like twin headlights. With additional vocals from guitarist
Paul Kantner, their vocal attack remains unparalleled in rock music
to this day. Meanwhile, lead guitarist Jorma Kaukonen and bassist Jack
Casady - later to form the independent band Hot Tuna - wove instrumental
lines of angular virtuosity. The sheer ferocity of the Airplane at this
time was almost a physical threat.
It was quite different from anything even hardcore fans had expected. The
folky love ballads of Jefferson Airplane Takes Off and Surrealistic Pillow
had been replaced by harder hitting material from the then unreleased Crown
Of Creation LP. Geoff Wall distictly remembers being shocked by the vastly
revamped version of "Somebody To Love"
"Gone was the fast, frantic, driving pace (that I loved on Surrealistic
Pillow) and in its place we were presented with a slower version that I
later came to love on Bless Its Pointed Little Head. Songs such as
"Watch Her Ride" demonstrated just what a brilliant rhythm guitarist
Paul Kantner was. As for Grace Slick, she was beautiful! I felt she was
probably the most splendid creature in the world - and she could sing too!"
On the huge screen next to the stage, the Airplane's "lite-show", which
they had brought over from San Francisco, displayed ever-changing liquid
slides that matched both the mood and the moment. They had brought an
entourage of thirty lighting technicians and sound experts and five tons
of electrical equipment, a revelation for English audiences. As Dick
Taylor remembers, "they used lots of slides, The set looked like a
Viking ship".
Neverthelesss, the Airplane's drummer Spenser Dryden - wearing a cowboy
hat to combat the cold - was none too happy with the Festival. During
their ninety-minute set, none of the group could hear each other and they
were constantly forced to stop and re-tune in an attempt to get a uniform
sound. Coupled with this, the group's psychadelic screen show had to be
cut right down in case the field's thick covering of dust damaged valuable
lens. Despite this, they continued with a static light show - which
the Record Mirror described as "their reversed optical illusion
projections" - and got easily the best reception of any of the fourteen
groups to appear.
The Airplane had already played Brussels and Stockholm on their short
European tour, and were to play a few days later at Parliament Hill
Fields, another concert to enter the realms of legend. This lineup
reformed in 1989, and made a comeback LP, but the paraphrase BB King,
the thrill was definitely gone.
Ron Smith remembers paying them 1000 pounds for their performance
which seems the bargain of the century until he mentions that Fairport
cost only 80 pounds.
-- from "Message to Love" by Brian Hinton
May 2 or 3 1969 - Winterland, San Francisco CA
First time I saw them still remains the best when they played with the Dead
at Winterland. Must have been early '69. The first set consisted mostly
of material from their current album Pointed Head and was very exciting
but Go To Her and Pooneil were highlights. At some point during this set
some stoned out nude hippie climbed onto the stage while the Airplane were
performing and walked over to Grace. She smiled and said something to him
while pointing to the audience. With that he calmly walked over to the
edge of the stage and proceeded to walk off like it was solid ground,
flipping over and landing on someone's lap! Got a rousing cheer from the
crowd as well as a concerned inquiry later from an amused Grace.
But the second set was by far the best I've seen them. The doors were open
and people wandered in from the street and there was a sense of freedom
and clear light in the room after the initial rush and mayhem of the first
set. With the classic line up, the relatively happy Airplane performed
'till the early morning hours from their studio album Crown to the
remaining jubilant fans that converged around the stage. I'll never
forget the image of seeing Marty singing Pooneil Corners, his romantic
balladeer get up and his clear tenor voice riding high over Jack's
thunderous bass with the light show behind him consisting of this immense
colorful picture of the earth exploding with fire. Beautiful.
-- Contributed by Robert Piercy (RobertPy@aol.com)
#Aug 2 1969 - Atlantic City Pop Festival, Atlantic City NJ
Atlantic City Pop Festival. First weekend in August, 1969. Three days.
Saturday headliner, Jefferson Airplane.
The show began Friday afternoon with Procol Harum and then Joni Mitchell.
Notwithstanding the fact that it was total bad scheduling for Joni to be
out there when the gig was just beginning and everyone was just arriving,
and all that socializing, greeting chit-chat was going on, Joni was
singing her second tune - I don't remember what because though I was/am
a great fan of Joni's music, I was socializing at the time and not really
paying attention, and she stopped playing all of a sudden, in the middle
of the song, and announced that she had just sung the wrong lyrics, and
nobody even noticed because nobody was listening and she stopped singing
and walked off the stage. Other than that, Friday was fun.
Saturday. Airplane headlines. The story, as I've gotten it, was that
they oversold the capacity of the racetrack (this is at the Atlantic
City Racetrack - oval track, stage in the center of the oval. Big four
corner stage piping with light platforms about 2/3rds up, entire structure
covered with a big tarp with a huge peace sign in the middle), and that
the crowd for Saturday's show was over 70,000. That made this show
bigger than Monterey, and until two weeks later, the biggest rock and
roll show to date. All I know was that I took the teeniest little orange
barrel I ever had, and it turned out to be the strongest trip. After about
ten minutes of tongue melt, I was in total body melt. I was lying on the
concrete, Creedence was playing, my face was smeared on the cement,
probable drool puddle, which may have been part of the feeling of swimming
through this fluid matrix, with many blobs of flashing ligths. I remember
really enjoying the Creedence set, and really thinking about how beautiful
the universe is. Well, we all know about how dangerous that thinking stuff
can be.
For the Airplane set I rallied to my usual position of maniac flailing in
front of the band. If I remember correctly, they opened with You Me and
Pooneil, which began with a near eternity-length feedback, with guitar
being slammed into the amplifier by Jorma, and from there it all went
straight up. I just remember the GOODness of it all. Now, for those who
may not psychedelisized along these lines (and I've got to say it's been
a real long time since I've run into anything strong like that), but when
buzzed on acid at that level, buzz is one of the keywords. You know that
stuff about tasting colors and hearing smells. With all those
neurotransmitters scuttling across those synapses, the normal perception
boxes are scrambled, and one may not be sure if you are hearing something,
or smelling it, or tasting it, or vice versa. Maybe the note is smelling
me. Overall, there is a buzz about. What it's about I'm not quite sure,
but it's all about. And standing in front of the stage listening to the
Airplane that night, pretty much everything was abuzz.
But a large chunk of troubling buzz had to do with hearing sounds from ?,
with sounds like too crowded, shut-down, police action. Finally, there was
a small bit of reality check (my last of the evening?) when Grace
announced that the place was too crowded, and that the cops were making
them stop, and this would have to be their last song. I can remember
flipping out, crying and wailing. I was in no shape for the Airplane to
stop playing. I needed more Airplane. I mean, I REALLY needed much more
Airplane (still do).
If I remember correctly, it was Other Side and they played and played that
tune for about thirty - forty minutes. As I recall, every time it seemed
like the tune was wrapping up, someone would start a jamout, and they just
kept pumping it out. I recall being nearly hysterical when the tune would
seem to be ending, and then lost in the jam again, until the next imagined
end brought on another wave of panic ... then more music ... then finally,
it was over. I was a wreck. Meanwhile the cops are lurking wanting the
gig over and the Airplane just kept on playing that one last song. That
was cool. That was the Airplane.
All that background buzz was now all there was to listen to. That and the
general internal noggin buzz, but I was in no shape to tell the difference,
at that point. I knew there was no more show, I knew people were doing
all this activity stuff and moving and walking and emptying out of the
track. And I knew that I had to move.
As I left the track I remember getting this idea that what was going on in
my head was very important (oh, ego man, where would I be without you?),
and as I sort of meandered along with others, I got this idea that I was
a central figure in something of importance, and I decided to go across
the highway to the gas station (I knew of the layout from having been
there before), to the phone booth and call my parents and ask them if
they were watching me on television. So I'm walking along, I have my hand
in my pocket, and I'm fingering change, getting ready for that phone booth.
I've got money. I've got money. Everything's OK I've got money. Crossing
the highway. No problem, of course, because I was invincible. So when the
car slammed on its brakes as I crossed the road, and it stopped with me
having my hand on the hood, I was not surprised at all. I mean, I couldn't
be killed. Not where I was. For all you kids watching at home, do NOT do
this. I have subsequently discovered that just because you get very high
and think you are invincible, a car can still run you over and cause great
bodily harm. This story is for demonstration purposes only.
So I made it across the road, and at the time, the car brake screeches
were an interesting soundtrack to that part of my walk. Then I got
confused (thank all forms of higher beings for that), and somehow took
a wrong turn and couldn't find the pay phone I was looking for on which I
was going to call my parents and ask them if they were watching me on
television. Like I said, thanks to all the forces that came together and
made me not make that phone call. But I was confused. I had now lost my
purpose. What was I doing here? So there's the gas station. Bathrooms on
the side. A bunch of cars parked there (my own car was by my tent across
the road, next to the track somewhere). I opened the door to a car and sat
in the drivers seat. I'm sitting there confused. It seemed so clear
before, and now it's so fuzzy. God, what am I suppossed to do now? I'm
sort of sitting there praying, spacing, meditating, and I'm watching a
steady stream of folks going in and out of the bathroom. The bathroom is a
pay toilet, there's a coin slip right on the door, you know, put a dime in
the slot, turn the handle, and voila, entrance obtained. Well, somebody
had placed a cardboard soda bottle holder in the door so it wouldn't close.
And people are streaming in and out, and I'm spaced, wondering what to do,
and then a voice comes to me. Go through the door. Go through the door
and on the other side is a lovely field and Grace Slick is waiting for me.
Yeah, now this is finally starting to make sense. So I get out of the car
and start to walk to the door, and as I get there the person coming out
kicks the cardboard and the door closes all the way, and there I am, on the
outside of a locked, coin-operated door, and Grace Slick is in a field on
the other side, waiting for me. Damn! Wait! Money. I have money. I have
coins in my pocket. I never was suppossed to call my folks anyway. That
was a stupid idea. Meeting Grace in a field, now that's where it's at.
So, I go for the coins. Still in my pocket, feel the round metal, some
smaller. Dime, that's what I need. Those small dimes I was fingering
on the way to the phone. Carefully take the coins out of my pocket. A
nickel and four pennies. I mean, what is going on here? Maybe God doesn't
love me. I was so psyched to go meet up with Grace in that field inside
the bathroom door, and now, here I am, back confused, not knowing what I'm
suppossed to be doing. So I went back into the car. Really spaced out
praying for guidance for a while. The car door opens and the car's owner
apologises for disturbing me (gee, those really were the good old days),
but say he's got to go, so out I go.
Now that I've covered the Grace part, I'll just zip thru the rest of the
evening. I made my way back across the highway, and back in the track.
I got this Messianic idea in my skull that the reason for the confusion
was my lack of purity, so I divested myself of my earthly possessions. I
threw away my shoes, and walked across the cut stone parking lot barefoot,
thinking the pain was cleansing. I ended up getting the idea that I was
suppossed to climb the top of the stage, somehow I would pop out of the
tarp and, while standing on top of the peace sign over the stage, world
peace would happen. Well, I did, and it didn't. I threw away everything
in my pockets - my comb, hankerchief, car keys (yeah, I know, STUPID), and
my wallet. My wallet which contained my Woodstock ticket for two weeks
hence. The funny thing is that the following week I got a manila envelope
in the mail with my wallet and cards and stuff, but not my Woodstock tic
and the few bucks I had were gone. But I always thought that it was nice
of somebody to have sent me back my wallet. So I threw away all my earthly
possessions and climbed the stage. That was tough. I'm afraid of heights,
and I was really praying a lot. Are you sure this is what I'm suppossed to
be doing? Finally, there I was crawling along the stage supports, over the
middle of the stage - pretty high up there - and right below the peace sign
there is a raised up triangle of the pipe /\ , so I grab hold, expecting
to be shot through the tarp somehow and be standing on top of the peace
sign, so I went for it, I mean I'm just following God's instructions,
right? So I grabbed the triangle pipe and ... I just dangled. Forty -
fifty feet above the stage, I'm dangling. Come on. I've done everything
you told me. I mean, if I let go, I'm dead. But I'm definitely not
popping through the peace sign. I'm just dangling. Which may be some
sort of metaphor for the psychedelic experience. As Dr. John sings,
"Such a Night".
To wrap this up, suffice to say, with much prayer I made it down (I'm
really afraid of heights, and once I sort of realized that God wasn't
guiding me in my climb, I got pretty scared). Eventually I found my
tent. My friends were really happy to see me - they had last seen me
during Creedence and had no idea. Somebody hotwired my car for me so I
could drive home. By the time I got to Woodstock, I didn't need the
ticket. And though I had a lot of orange barrels, that tiniest one for
Airplane at Atlantic City was the best. And the wierdest. And I've always
been kind of sorry that I never made it past that door, into the waiting
arms of Grace in that beautiful meadow in the bathroom at the gas station
across the road from the Atlantic City Pop Festival.
-- contributed by David Kreitzer (kreitze1@jeflin.tju.edu)
#Mar 20 1970 - Rhode Island College, Providence RI
The show was in a old gym at Rhode Island College 1970... spring I think.
I remember well.
I had a friend at my high school who was into the Airplane and as we
talked about them often enough he said he could get tickets and I gave
him $5 or something and didn't see him again until I was in line to get
into the show, the first show and he handed me a ticket for the second
show.
So the first show ends and I have worked my way into a good position
sitting on the floor and all the people leave. Except me 'cause I
figure I got a ticket, why not just stay here.
After all the people are gone a big guy with a beard comes out and
starts walking around the stage go I went up to him and told him my
situation and he said "fine... sit right here", and that is on the
steps to the stage. So now all the people have left and out comes Jack
Casady who goes on to the stage, plugs in and starts looking for a blown
speaker in the array. Then Marty came out looking dazed and confused.
Jack just honked away making rude sound until he was able to locate the
problem and then the roadies took over and Jack went away.
When they opened the doors to let the crown in, the first person I saw
was a girl I knew from my home town and she's working for the school
newspaper and it's her job to interview Jefferson Airplane and she knows
nothing at all. Except that I am a big fan and that she had just got
very lucky. She grabs me and we are let past a few burly fellows to
where the band is held up between shows.
John Hammond and his two sidemen are in the room too. We are warned
before we go in that there will be a time when this person will come
into the room and order everyone out and wanted us to understand that
there was no other way and we agreed and then were let into the room.
I talked to Paul first. I was very impressed with him as a person.
He was obviously very intelligent and very polite. Nice. I thought
that he had a lot of discipline, self-discipline. I remember thinking
that I was a little surprised because I thought he acted a little like
a military man. Officer.
Then I got to talk to Grace. I cannot remember a single thing that I
said to her. She was wearing a fishnet blouse and only big fish could
get caught in that net. For modesty's sake, two patches, about 3" square
were sewn on to protect Grace's privacy. We were sitting in school desks
across the aisle from each other and while my friend transcribed, Grace
was leaning over pretending to hang onto my every word while providing me
with a view to which my teenaged eyes dared not look. It still makes me
laugh to think how she scared me.
Then I spoke to Jorma. He was sitting wiping off a guitar and I asked
him "how do you come up with those riffs" or something equally cool and
he says "do you play?" and I nod, and he hands he the Stratocaster he was
polishing and picks up a Gibson and starts playing some blues in "A",
me strumming along.
Then the big guy yells "Everybody Out!!" That was pretty much the end of
the story.
-- contributed by Richard Baker (bakerrb@bc.edu)
May 7 1970 - Fillmore East, New York NY
This was a few days after the Kent State massacre, and the Airplane were
finishing a two day run, two shows per, at the Fillmore East. We saw the
late show - i.e. the fourth show of the run.
To say that things were tense at the time would be a megahyperbolic
understatement. After Kent State happened, it seemed as though the
revolution was no longer just a verbal exercise, but was reality. THEY
were killing us now. What was to come next was anybody's guess.
With this as the background to the show, my friends and I trucked off to
New York. The show was weird from the get-go. As I recall, tickets had
gone on sale a few days earlier for a week run by Crosby, Stills, Nash
and Young, and there had been no ticket limit policy and a very few
scalpers had bought up all the tickets, and the New York concert going
crowd were just super P.O'd at Bill Graham. I remember some major argument
Bill had with some folks before the show even began. There was definitely
hostility in the air. I think Manfred Mann opened and were not given much
attention. In those days, the Airplane would open the show with some
appropriate video - there was the scene from Disney's "Alice in
Wonderland" - ending with the cheshire cat telling Alice that "We're all
mad around here" as he fades away to just tail; there was the scene from
"North by Northwest" where Cary Grant is chased by the airplane in the
field; I think the show that night was the end of King Kong where after
Kong falls from the Empire State Bldg. someone says "Well the airplane's
done it", and then the movie dude says, "No, it wasn't the airplane, it
was beauty killed the beast". Well, these were always big-fun openings,
but that night it was different. People were booing the movie. I knew it
was going to be a strange night.
The Airplane started playing, and I recall they sounded pretty bad - which
was not all that unusual in those days because they played so loud, and
without tuning devices that are available today, they would often be very
loud very out of tune. I just remember they sounded bad, and with all
those weird vibes, the show couldn't get on track.
And Grace was in rare form. She was pretty wasted (projection? - I know
I was totally wasted), and she got into some discussions with some
members of the audience. Now there were invariably a few New York Aholes
at Fillmore shows, but this night there were a few extra. Anyway, I seem
to recall the discussion starting with Grace kind of innocently suggesting
that since it was such a groove out in California, that we all pack-up New
York and move out West. The response of some was f**k California, and
that turned into a pretty mean f**k you Grace conversation between Grace
and several aholes in the audience. Well, by now the audience is getting
pretty hostile among themselves, with the many berating the few. This went
on for a while. The band in the meantime had left the stage and Grace was
just having this tremendously horrendous verbal exhange with the idiots.
This went on for a time-distorted 'long' time, I'd say at least twenty
minutes to a half-hour with just Grace on the stage arguing with whomever
wanted to argue with her. Then she stopped cold on the stage, looked
around, and seeing she was alone, wondered where everybody else was. Marty
and I think Paul came out and led her off-stage. The audience was
restless. Things were pretty bleak in my mind. The Airplane were Love
and Revolution to me, and now there was just the Revolution. What the hell
was going on?
Jack and Jorma came out, Jorma with acoustic guitar in hand, and I was
stunned. This was something I had been dreaming about for years, to hear
Jorma play acoustic guitar. The first Tuna album had not yet been
released, and this was amazing. Thay started playing and the aholes were
booing and yelling to get off the stage. Jack started to walk off and
Jorma grabs him and says that they have to do this, and they did a nice
Hot Tuna set in the midst of audience bedlam.
Then the band came back on stage. Grace apologised, saying she had done
too much drugs and, besides, she was "on the rag", and all she was trying
to do was tell people how nice the scene was out west, and well, it kind
of started all over again. And Paul said something about the folks being
killed at Kent State, and that was maybe why things were so weird. And,
boy, were things weird. By the end of the show - it like seven in the
morning, the doors are all open, the sun's streaming into the theatre and
everyone's standing on their seats, cheering the band, not allowing them
to stop playing, screaming to put some meaning into the night's
happenings. I remember thinking that us "good" guys were victorious over
the ahole "bad" guys that had added so much negativity to an already
downer of a week. "Such a night".
Now some of this is straight memory, and some is from a copy of the tape
from the second set that I amazingly ran into a few years back. Some of
you may know this tape as the 'shrimp-shit' tape. During Grace's rap in
"Somebody to Love" she tells how she can just call up room service at the
hotel anytime, even ther middle of the night and get whatever she wants,
even some 'shrimp-shit' (I think she was referring to shrimp salad).
Anyway, what she says is not an ego boast that she's so special, but that
we're all special, that we all deserve the finer things, and it's up to
each one of us to make it happen in our own lives. It's a message that
I've always been grateful to Grace and Paul and the Airplane for.
-- contributed by David Kreitzer (kreitze1@JEFLIN.TJU.EDU)
Sept 14 or 15 1970 - Fillmore West, San Francisco CA
In 1970 I moved to San Francisco with some college friends. We went
to the Fillmore one night and did some drugs with Paul Kantner. We were
invited back to 2400 Fulton where we played pool with Graham Nash. My
friend and I decided to check the house out. We made our way upstairs -
and saw Grace Slick by herself, sitting in this chair with only a purple
light on. We both froze in our tracks. It was the most mystical
experience of my life. It was almost like a religious experience.
I saw JA approximately 15 times in the late 60's and early 70's.
-- contributed by Laura Cupo (CUPODIRECT@aol.com)
Nov 25 1970 - Fillmore East, New York NY
I had been to the Fillmore before, but never to see JA. This was a dream
show; I could swear that some of he photos in the JALY box set came from
this show. Great time for concerts; $7.50 seats, balcony; show starts at
8:00? but ended at 2:30AM. I was about 15; collapse in seats, overcoming
the reds from the afternoon to control the blue-dot-lunch; I wanted to
remember the show.
Opener: Buddy Guy & Junior Wells (Blues at its best, Junior Wells is now
deceased).
Hot Tuna opened (a 'new' concept, just a yearand a half since the first LP)
Played from 8:00 till almost 10:00; electric set) I remember some songs
from FPUTPD like Trimmed, Candy Man, but not much else, great jams.
Come Back Baby lasted about 20 min, I thunk* maybe Rock Me Baby as well.
JA comes out at about 10:30(?). A screaming 'Saucers' opens the first
set, that much I remember. In the breaks, someone throws a big stuffed
snake on the stage, Grace picks it up (she's pregnant, ya know) turns to
Paul, then to the crowd & says something like "Well, shit, this looks
like the thing that got me this way!" A roar from the crowd. They
shared some vocals on Marty/Grace songs; then they part company, Marty
offstage, Grace offstage. Wooden Ships comes to mind..
Can't detail the sets, (can't detail last week), but the CROWN was my
first CROWN - I was lifted; and in a haze of raw-music-power, first
CROWNS are like first Dark Stars to GD-folks. Long show; pour out onto
2nd Ave.: cold, clear all senses beaming. Never did I see *that kind* of
show from them again. I had the ticket stub till about '81, then lost it
in my life somewhere.
Later, in '89, I took my wife to see them on the reunion tour. No, it
wasn't the Fillmore but when they hit CROWN - I got a rush like you don't
get anywhere else. That '70 show for me was a dream, and reality. This
was after the Dead at SUNY Stony Brook some weeks before, there was no
comparing the two.
-- contributed by John Riccio (jric@ibmail.smst290.att.com)
Aug 18 1971 - Gaelic Park, Bronx NY
Gaelic Park, in the Bronx, is/was an outside venue; stage at one end of
the field, not big, the NYC subway system runs right next to the field,
hence the best way to get there was by subway from mid-town after the
LIRR from LI. Quite a freak show on the subway.
Opener: I have no fu*king idea, if there was one, and so it goes.
Jefferson Airplane, about dark (8:30?), the sound was lost in the air,
it was windy and fearing rain, not the most comfortable show, but not the
worst.
Highlights were Rock and Roll Island (a fav) and Feel So Good. Most of
the vocal songs (Grace) Law Man(?) were really lost in the sky; the sound
was not good. Alas, Marty was gone, of course.
I remember telling a friend "It sounds like they are screaming through
coffee cans". Jorma and Papa John stand out both in sound and in attack -
lots of energy. The guitars/fiddle were the only stand outs, even Jack
sounded muddy.
I know we (4) went because we knew what was coming, JA-disband, (I
remember tears on the photo on the Rolling Stone cover that confirmed
the rumor) but of course had no idea what JS was to do in 74. I had a
early CORNELL/JS poster, but lost it - AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!.
-- contributed by John Riccio (jric@ibmail.smst290.att.com)
Aug 12 1972 - Festival of Hope, Roosevelt Raceway, Westbury NY
The Airplane was flown in from NYC. I was not on the flight, my buddy was.
I was at the Festival of Hope turning the helicopters around and
loading/unloading - The Airplane marched off, right to the trailer.
I got off work an hour later for the show. Later, I find out that the
Airplane (Grace really) blew a fit when they were told that there was
food: hambugers. She (and others) wanted Italian Food - now. They
would not play without food, and they wanted Italian Food. A run was
made to the local joint, full buckets of everything you could imagine.
Papa John could care less; he's drinking with the truck drivers.
Now they were happy. A great set (no list, no memory left, lots of LJS
stuff) followed, preceeded by Stephen Stills & Manassas. They got a
dancer, (some female) on the side of the stage, inches her way on, during
Feel So Good (I think) and the crowd begs her to drop her top. She does
a flash, to keep em' happy and it's that Grace gives her the biggest hand.
I get back to the trailer w/ 4K other people now, fences down ... a good
time was had by all.
-- contributed by John Riccio (jric@ibmail.smst290.att.com)
Aug 16 1972 - Gaelic Park, New York NY
The concert that's clearest in my mind is the Gaelic Park concert, I
believe it must have been the summer of '72 in NYC. Two reasons it sticks
in my mind is that it was halted by rain, the band left the stage and
Grace came out to give a little talk about the dangers of rain and
electrical equitment, she made sure that she didn't step on any wires
as she walked across the stage, and talked from several feet away from
the microphone. When the concert resumed, a woman got out on stage
(I don't know if she was a volunteer or a pro) and took off her clothes
and danced topless through several numbers. Grace was the only one on
stage who seemed to pay any atention to her. Often looking at her as
she danced (especially when she just vibrated to a drum solo, Slick
appeared impressed). When she left the stage, Grace made some comment
like "That was for all you horny guys out there". That was the only
time I saw them outside of the Fillmore East. But by that time they had
pretty much outgrown it. That topless incident sticks in my mind because
it seemed so un-JA. It was also the last time I saw JA in concert. I
was too far back in the crowd to really enjoy it like the guys down front
did.
-- contributed by Joseph Strella (JOSEPH.F.STRELLA@hanover.valley.net)
Sep 22 1989 - Greek Theatre, Berkeley CA
Knew things were going smoothly when the people I had tickets for showed
up on time, no doubt a lingering aftereffect of the papal blessing, and
quite literally ran into Seastones in the rush out of the Tied House;
thence followed a chase through the BART system where the various groups
would recombine and lose themselves, only to wake up somewhere in Berkeley:
you know you've done well for yourself when the first phrase greeting you
out of Shattuck is "Die Yuppie Scum." Damn, overdressed, and the weather
contradicted the Jerry show by being clear and warm.
Hmmph, started on time, how dare they.
Only had time to dart into the Triple Rock and grab the fourth member of
our expedition, Kevin, and whipping Larry, Alan, Mark, and Seastones along,
we collided with the mob (heh, heh, with one puzzled-looking scalper
yelling "a dollar? how about a dollar, then?") as the crowd rushed by to
the opening strains of "She Has Funny Cars." The normal setlist progressed
into "Somebody to Love," which seemed rather arbitrary under the cir-
cumstances, with "Won't You Try/Saturday Afternoon" loosening the group up
as the crowd grew accustomed to the very concept of the Airplane playing.
What finally marked the evening as special: the early inclusion of "Good
Shepherd," the song that stood out at the Fillmore '88 concert, here done
with the group giving an indication that, yes, they had come home;
Jorma's guitar took on that crystalline quality, Marty and Grace hovered
in the wings, and the old Airplane sound suddenly appeared, not the
rehearsed, canned sound, but that of a group of comfortable musicians
playing with songs so old that they could improvise and even improve.
What I think I'll remember of this concert (besides the fantastic light
show!) is how they played so many songs that I detested and actually made
me like the live versions--even the loathsome "Miracles" gave a fine
moment for Marty, who was otherwise hoarse and holding back, but aided
by a conserved Grace and a Jorma who managed to be as quirky as the
singers, made a top ten song improvisatory. Which is why a "Wooden Ships"
really worked: a good stint on the road has made them rely on each other,
and, covering up the reluctance to overstrain the voices, the singers
twisted and insinuated around the guitars as it should be, instead of
grabbing for the spotlight.
"Lather" seemed to be a focusing point; after years of tongue-in-cheek
putdowns of those earlier dreams, here the band was really facing the
middle-aged blues belatedly, and with a shrug, acknowledging that this
was the peak long dreaded yet so fulfilling. Now a _real_ hippies are
dead party week!
Whatever the reported dump of Jorma in the mix was, it sounded here as if
it had been fixed (can't wait for the intimacy of the Fillmore). The
second set of Tuna into Airplane by way of "Third Week in Chelsea" flowed
with only a minimal amount of carping between the band members (Grace
saying of Paul's son, when he came on to strum during an early "Planes,"
was that he was sometimes a bit too much like his father in being loud:
the best bitchy line of the evening). Sorely missed was "Trial by Fire,"
but there will be time for that at any of the other five concerts this
week.
--"Oh," Grace blurted out early in the evening, "free concert next
Saturday? We wouldn't know anything about that!" What a surprise:
but okay guys, where _is_ the damn thing going to be?
The Panda song was an unexpected strong moment; Grace at the keyboards is
always tense, but when the sirens from traffic outside intruded, she sort
of went "what the hell" and managed to incorporate the sound into the song!
I know he's saving his voice, too, but Marty was clipped when he should
have soared; still a bit uncomfortable, he fell more into place on the
older songs like "3/5ths of a Mile in Ten Seconds"--"since we have time
for only two more songs." His "Solidarity" went nowhere, though, and I
guess deserves to be dropped; the group efforts were clearly the best
tunes tonight, except for Grace having the best moment, as expected, with
"White Rabbit," even to the point of adding a repeat verse. "Summer of
Love" was an embarrassment, saved only by the gorgeous lights which must
have the band singing, instead of "I believe in miracles," rather "I
believe in chemicals." [heard from the audience, ahem, when squeeks
disrupted this doomed little number: "equipment problems, how nostalgic"
8')]
Yeah, I think they pulled it off; even though the songs from SURREALISTIC
PILLOW were not the highlights, there was, in the better moments, the
same fresh glow that the album had which enveloped the whole evening.
And it makes me look forward to the endurance test of the next five
concerts here in the Bay, knowing that the band is actually _tooling
around_ with old stand-bys--even with a same setlist (and they seemed
to be feeling around for requests: wonder if I can get away with
"Alexander the Medium" 8')), these should all be quite different shows.
-- Contributed by Hal Broome (jupiter2@netcom.com)
Sep 23 1989 - Concord Pavilion, Concord CA
Much more of a rock-n-roll night. The pavilion, while soul-less, was well
designed for comfort, and the overhead stage brought the amplification
levels up: Marty's voice was better in this environment, and the sluggish
"True Love" of the night before really shone here, bringing the crowd to
its feet. Lots of folk came in late, including Doug and me, to a not very
noteworthy "Good Shepherd": it was "Wooden Ships" before the band took
off. The relatively low ceiling stunted the lights and gave more of a
discotheque effect, which translated into the dance feel of the evening.
Grace was wearing a white mini-skirt with go-go boots, in contrast with the
black outfit of the night before; her "Lather" was dedicated to Peter
Kaukonen, who was conveniently celebrating his 30th birthday (the night
of the Greek, Bill Graham had the dedication honor "because," Grace dead-
panned, "he's the only one here older than I am"). Efforts from the
audience to encourage her to doff the outfit failed after a short tease.
Jack and Jorma were in a goofy mood at the beginning of the Tuna set,
with a mock opening line of "Sunshine of Your Love," but really got down
to some serious picking; whereas the earlier night had the spacious quality
of the open air, the closed stage was more in keeping with the boozy
prohibition blues aura of the pair. "Third Week in Chelsea" was rather
straightforwardly thrown off, and, I hate to admit this, the band did
another excellent version of "Miracles" due to Marty's improved voice:
more in the acid-dance tradition of the earlier days than in 70's schlock.
I really hope I don't wind up liking the song after all these years.
Making it a bit more palatable was the trick opening of the "Somebody to
Love" riff, which stopped dead, whereupon the singers attacked "Miracles"
with relish.
Paul it was who rocked out more this night, flailing chords with Jorma,
and "Planes" sounded much better than the night before; it was something of
a shock to realize that to some in the audience, it was the only
recognizable single, and was eagerly greeted. Also stronger were
"3/5ths of a Mile" and "Crown of Creation," again rocked out, yet less
rushed than the previous evening. However, I somehow missed the spacy
aura of the Greek night and the disjointed, seat-of-the-pants feel of its
song versions.
Tomorrow the band is off to an LA date, and I'm off to bed at last, to
dream of the three-night run at the Fillmore starting Tuesday. Hope they
are brave enough to do at least one all-acoustic evening.
-- Contributed by Hal Broome (jupiter2@netcom.com)
Sep 26 1989 - Fillmore Auditorium, San Francisco CA
Pity the poor Stones and Who: they can't return in triumph to the Fillmore.
Bill Graham was waiting for his 'Plane, checking his watch, and proudly
acting the prodigal band's father, having raided the attic for all the
old lights and posters: the new optic fiber lights were truncated here,
looking like mean Daleks with fanged beams, but more eye-catching was
the right hand wall. On a third of either side of the sheet-draped wall,
three-dimensional mandalas (like 3-d posters without the glasses, except
that the red and blue flickered) framed alternating stills of old posters,
with the occasional moving image of old Trips festivals and scenes from
the Haight's heyday. The crowd was entirely psyched by the vision of the
old days, and I restlessly waited on the left side of the stage. Grace
was visible in the far balcony, smoking a cigarette with Paul, wearing
her chrome nun outfit and peering demurely down.
Finally, the lights dimmed, and Bill stepped on the stage behind Marty:
"When it's all said and done," he beamed, "there's only one way to fly
. . . ."
And fly they did; no holding back on the voices tonight, and from the start
they had complete control of the throttle. Grace was lavishly dispensing
her trademark, the sustaining of a note until every vibrato rang through
the soul, and Marty was reaching higher and higher, as if daring his
voice to crack. But the real star of the night was Jack, whose bass
rumbled up from the Nordic roots of Ygdrasil and shook the floor like
an earthquake. Maybe a bit muddy compared to the Greek, but in a way
evoking dear bootlegs of the old sound, a tidal wave pierced with lucid
screams.
"Thank God for technology," Grace smiled, "after all these years I can
finally hear myself in here!"
The band was in nostalgia mode, Marty reminiscing about how long it took to
take the bus to the Fillmore, and with each song the light display on the
wall grew more intense: their trademark oil lights splashed across the
hall like some psychedelic Exxon spill, and during "Embryonic Journey"
(which was absent during the Concord show) there were film clips of an
underwater swim, sponges and seaweeds of some earth mother's uterus.
The band was jumping around so much that Jack (I think, I was on the way
to the restroom) stumbled across a power cord on "America," knocking out
the sound. "We were going to take a break anyway," Grace laughed.
So the break lasted longer while it was fixed, with old cartoons being
flashed on the wall.
Whew! I could go on, but I think you get the picture. One nice addition:
yelling to Marty as he went backstage after a stomping, bring down the
rafters "Volunteers," I got my song request--"It's No Secret."
'bout time, too.
-- Contributed by Hal Broome (jupiter2@netcom.com)
Sep 27 1989 - Fillmore Auditorium, San Francisco CA
Was wondering when the old idiosyncratic 'Plane would emerge from the
hangers, and tonight was the night.
Bill Graham had to push them onto the stage, but once there they started
spot on, with a miraculously-close-to-the-album version of "Somebody to
Love"; then, in the middle of a fun "Plastic Fantastic Lover," Marty
yelled out "who's got the acid?" and things turned weird from there
on . . . "What were you thinkin' about when you wrote this one, Paul?"
Grace taunted Kantner at the start of "Won't You Try/Saturday Afternoon,"
a number they seem to be grooming for Saturday in the park, and whatever
it was, it was on their minds the whole evening.
Obviously tired, they laid back and put in dreamy versions of the slower
ballads, like "Lather" and "Today," slowing down more and more until you
thought they would stop like a record turned off; however, Grace pepped up
enough to put in a great "Freedom"--part of the magic was wondering if it
was going to crash out like the previous songs. By the time of the Tuna
set, Jorma and Jack were almost catatonic, playing the songs slooowwwlly.
The more ironic of the lyrics dealing with being tired and cynical came
across heartfelt.
The media were there with cameras (Grace making up rhymes like "I've almost
forgot this song" with "begun"), and there was a surprise entrance by the
acid clown Wavy Gravy, who announced a free concert in Washington DC for
the homeless, featuring the Airplane. "Right in Bush's back yard," he
boasted: somehow I don't expect that Bush'll drop in for a cup of tea with
Grace 8').
One addition: when Grace came in and joined Tuna, she sang a short but
vaudevillesque version of "Five foot two, eyes of blue," much like her
mother must have done in her cocktail lounge days.
The band recovered from there, with an excellent "Wheel" for once; the
highlight of the light show featured film clips from a black-n-white
Alice in Wonderland movie at the appropriate moment of "White Rabbit."
The scenes were well-timed to match the lyrics, with Alice eating the
'shroom and growing larger, then contracting with a drink from the bottle.
A strange night; Marty remarked that it was great to play before smaller
audiences: not that the Fillmore wasn't packed: I expect they felt looser
with the smaller venue.
-- Contributed by Hal Broome (jupiter2@netcom.com)
Sep 28 1989 - Fillmore Auditorium, San Francisco CA
Well, back in the hanger for the 'Plane as far as the Fillmore is
concerned; the upcoming benefits have pre-empted the added Monday and
Tuesday dates. "Pray for sunshine," Paul said (I would prefer for Grace
to bare her breasts, actually--wonder if it still works? 8')) about
Saturday's free concert: we have a 30% chance of rain, but given the
draught the past few years, nobody seems really worried.
They put in a solid last set, no real highs or lows, and had a lot of
physical fun, mugging with the microphones like they were periscopes,
Marty tootling his fingers on his like a recorder in front of Grace,
who had received a request "to play the flute" the night before. Again
they seemed to really take the meanings of the older songs seriously,
"you don't really need us anymore" and "what do you want from me?" Marty
chuckled and pointed to his dye-job on the line from "3/5ths of a Mile"
which went "people laugh at my hair," and changed the line in "Volunteers"
of "one generation got old" to "my generation got old." Sort of sad in
a way; seems as if they realize it might be the last tour.
"You know," Grace said at the end of "Today," "right before I sing a song
I think, 'I've been doing this for 25 years,' but when we sing it I feel
like it's now." The result of the touring: they do indeed seem the old
band now, with Marty and Grace really playing off of each other's vocal
posturings; will be a shame if they pack it all in after the October 7th
free concert in Washington--but what a grand exit, singing "White Rabbit"
on Bush's doorstep!
So they spent a little more time on the encore, three songs, which included
the mysterious "blues number" that a former reviewer on the right coast
mentioned: that was "Rock Me Baby," a real oldy which Jorma treated
righteously; for once, he did better on electric than acoustic, including
playing the opening organ line to "America" on his electric, smiling in
a "I can do that" manner. He did, too. For the last bit of "Crown of
Creation," where the guitars strum as the singers put in the last haunting
refrains, Jack, Jorma, and Peter had their back to the audience, swaying
in unison with each chord; the audience found it rather amusing.
[more _erratum_: e-mail from Sean which complained that I left out the
Grace fashion report yesterday; how could I? Okay, the theme the whole
tour has been short skirts and boots, with Wednesday night's outfit made in
mock leopard skin--an ironic touch to her "Panda" song. Last night's was
black with aircraft designs in circles: she wore large earrings with
silver monkeys, had a neat watch which wrapped only partially around the
wrist, and a large, chunky pottery bracelet on the other wrist. Eyes
this time around: blue. Catch her with the green contacts sometime: yeow!
And hey! China was there last night with her girlfriends--good-looking
young lady, but too bad that when it comes to singing, she takes after
her father.]
-- Contributed by Hal Broome (jupiter2@netcom.com)
Sep 30 1989 - Polo Field, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco CA
My mate Markster, from the the wilds of Pennsylvania, arrived early to
find me clutching the bedsheets with desperation; after whispering "Grace
Slick" a few times and noting with alarm that there was no response, he
nearly called an ambulance, but fortunately tried the old trick of brewing
a nice hot pot of coffee first, which he proceeded to dump over my head.
Hey, it works for me.
I drove us into the city, noting with disappointment that it was turning
into a gorgeous, warm, cloudless day; oh well, I don't suppose Grace does
her rain-turning trick anymore, anyway.
Even at that early hour there was already assembled the usual motley crew
of freeloaders that turn up at these events, some having camped the night
before; Markster honed into a chess board and promptly eliminated all
takers before my astonished eyes. Didn't know he played, heh, heh, so
like all amateurs who assume they're hot stuff, I protested that I hadn't
played in ages (generally true) and calmly sat down with the ulterior
motive of beating the pants off of him.
Meanwhile, the Bobby guy had started with "Blackbird," a set that matches
fairly closely the ones listed from the east coast, and the Robby guy was
scratching a huge bass (which the sound system was muddying horribly; or
maybe we were just too close). Twirlers, dancers, unsteady drunks, and
non-conformist WASPS on various substances merged around the board as
I filled with that particularly horrible alarm peculiar to chess players
which results from having underestimated my opponent; a line from "Throwing
Stones" about not winning came through the pandemonium, or maybe it was
just the white knight talking backwards. The crowd grew more and more
animated, and I wished for some ecstatic fool to come knock off the
pieces, that is, until I finally pinned Markster into one of those
awfully complicated positions which are my specialty (games imitate life,
no?); having thrown him into a funk, he made a move which made my day.
To add to the surrealism, just as I proclaimed "checkmate" a drunk came
through and scattered the pieces to the four winds; they were recovered,
only to be later stolen from the poor guy who was so proud of his set.
Downer.
We then stood, leaning slightly backwards as the Bob and Rob guys made an
exit to the cries of "see you tonight!" and the sound system blasted us
askew with all sorts of shrieks and belches. Someone looking like Carlos
Santana made a sound check, and, apparently throwing up his hands in
disgust, was not to be seen the rest of the concert. Damn, really wanted
to hear a "Pretty as You Feel" jam. When working, the donated sound
system was great, but to paraphrase David Ossman's HOW TIME FLIES, it was
"a little loud, though."
Bill Graham, whose people were mingling with those of KFOG (why oh why do
radio stations have to go through the embarrassing trick of parading out
DJ's, who are the negatives of silent screen stars, in that their looks
dissolve any gain from their voices?), gushed more than I did earlier
with some "what if" remarks: "What if," he shouted from his bully pulpit,
"both the A's and the Giants meet in our fair city? What if we closed
Angel Island down and filled it with this crowd and musicians?"
Yes, folks, there seems to be the possibility of the grand scion of all
free rock concerts in San Francisco if this sporting possibility comes
across; stay tuned!
Kantner, of course, was enjoying the hell out of the whole day, having
started the tradition of free concerts "from the back of a $40 rented
flat-bed truck." Explaining how the current concert came about, he
mocked that mayor "Art Agnos came up and kissed me on the cheek and said
'Paul, when are you going to do that free concert that you promised?'"
What had really transpired was that then-candidate Agnos had taken the
stage at the Summer of Love Reunion free concert two years ago and promised
more concerts; Kantner took him up on it, and various organizers had thrown
in lots of money to make it possible.
By the time the Airplane was in flight, some 50,000 people had assembled;
the concert itself was the same as always, only filled with a lot more
energy and boosted by the huge speaker system; gee guys, if you think I'm
gonna rehash everything, give me a day off (and believe me, it was a day,
um, OFF). The crowd ate it up. Grace was thrown a panda for a change,
and introduced "White Rabbit" as being about a species of which there were
plenty; white rabbit hand-puppets filled the happy crowd, and a silly
six-foot bunny jumped across the stage (oh, these radio promotions).
On hand was a frail gentleman taking pictures; Grace pointed him out as
father of two of the band members, the senior Mr. Kaukonen. Jorma did
a very hot "Rock Me Baby" in tribute, and "It's No Secret" was included
in the encore as being one of the first songs sung in the park. Wavy
Gravy must have come across my comment last year that the 300 pound trans-
vestite Sadie Sadie the Rabbi Lady had out-colored him; both were there,
but Gravy had outdone even Tammy Bakker.
Afterwards, feeling in the spirit, Markster and I walked into the Haight
and had a pint of the excellent Guinness at the Achilles Heel across from
the Free Medical Clinic [hi Flash! met some of your people in the
Szechuan Restaurant down the street]; playing on the sound system was
the Jefferson Airplane's greatest hits. If, as Paul promised, the Airplane
would be back soon (at another free concert), then we haven't seen the
last of them.
We drank a toast to the thought.
-- Contributed by Hal Broome (jupiter2@netcom.com)

Aerie (Gang of Eagles): 7-??-72, 8-12-72, 8-16-72, 9-3-72, 10-3-72
America: 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89,
8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89,
9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
And I Like It: 1-15-66, 7-22-66, 10-2-66, 10-7-66, 10-14-66, 10-15-66,
10-16-66, 11-26-66, 2-4-67, 5-19-67
Baby What You Want Me To Do: 1-15-66, 12-31-67, 5-6-70, 5-17-70, 8-25-89,
8-28-89, 8-29-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 10-7-89
Ballad of You and Me and Pooneil, The: 5-12-67, 5-19-67, 6-??-67a, 6-17-67,
6-20-67, 7-7-67, 7-27-67, 9-14-67, 10-14-67, 2-1-68, 5-18-68b, 8-28-68,
9-6-68, 9-10-68, 6-13-69, 6-14-69, 6-16-69, 7-19-69, 8-02-69, 8-10-69,
10-10-69, 10-31-69, 11-2-69, 11-30-69, 12-6-69, 2-4-70, 3-6-70, 3-24-70,
5-1-70, 5-6-70, 5-7-70, 5-15-70, 5-17-70, 6-7-70, 6-26-70, 6-29-70,
8-19-70, 9-14-70
Blind John: 7-??-72, 8-12-72, 8-16-72, 9-3-72, 10-3-72
Bludgeon of a Bluecoat: 10-4-70, 1-16-72
Blues from an Airplane: 2-1-68, 11-2-69
Bringing Me Down: 1-15-66, 7-22-66, 9-30-66, 10-14-66, 10-16-66, 11-26-66,
8-5-67
Chauffeur Blues: 9-30-66, 10-15-66
Chushingura: 7-19-69
Come Back Baby: 3-10-67, 5-19-67, 8-5-67, 8-10-69, 12-6-69, 3-24-70,
5-1-70, 6-26-70, 9-14-70, 11-25-70, 8-15-71, 8-18-71, 1-16-72, 10-3-72,
9-6-89, 9-8-89
Come Up the Years: 9-30-66, 10-2-66, 10-15-66
Comin' Back to Me: 5-29-67
Crown of Creation: 9-6-68, 9-10-68, 9-15-68, 9-28-68, 10-6-68, 11-10-68,
11-18-68, 6-9-69, 6-13-69, 10-10-69, 10-31-69, 5-1-70, 5-3-70, 5-7-70,
6-7-70, 8-19-70, 9-14-70, 10-4-70, 11-13-70, 7-??-72, 8-12-72, 8-16-72,
8-25-72, 10-3-72, 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89,
8-28-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89,
9-9-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-28-89, 10-7-89
Diana: 1-16-72, 7-??-72, 8-16-72, 9-3-72, 10-3-72
Don't Let Me Down: 3-10-67
Don't Slip Away: 9-30-66, 10-2-66, 10-7-66, 3-10-67
Eat Starch Mom: 7-??-72, 8-12-72, 8-16-72, 9-3-72
Eat Starch Mom Jam: 8-18-71, 10-3-72
Emergency: 2-23-70, 3-6-70, 3-26-70, 4-2-70, 5-6-70, 5-7-70, 9-14-70,
10-4-70, 11-25-70
Eskimo Blue Day: 6-14-69, 8-17-69, 10-31-69, 2-4-70
Farm, The: 6-9-69
Fat Angel: 7-22-66, 9-30-66, 10-7-66, 10-15-66, 10-16-66, 11-25-66,
11-26-66, 2-4-67, 2-5-67, 5-12-67, 6-??-67a, 7-27-67, 8-5-67, 2-1-68,
5-18-68a, 5-18-68b, 8-28-68, 10-6-68, 11-18-68, 4-26-69, 6-13-69, 7-19-69,
8-10-69, 10-10-69, 10-31-69, 11-29-69, 2-28-70, 3-24-70
Feel So Good: 8-10-69, 8-15-71, 8-18-71, 1-16-72, 8-12-72, 8-16-72,
9-22-72, 10-3-72
Freedom: 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89,
8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89,
9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
Go to Her: 1-15-66, 9-30-66, 10-7-66, 10-14-66, 10-15-66, 10-16-66,
11-26-66, 8-5-67, 1-30-68, 2-1-68, 11-2-69
Good Shepherd: 6-9-69, 6-13-69, 10-31-69, 11-29-69, 11-30-69, 2-23-70,
3-6-70, 3-24-70, 5-1-70, 5-3-70, 5-6-70, 6-7-70, 1-16-72, 8-12-72,
8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89,
8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89,
9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
Greasy Heart: 5-18-68a, 5-18-68b, 8-28-68, 9-6-68, 11-18-68, 4-26-69,
6-13-69, 10-10-69, 10-31-69, 11-2-69, 11-29-69, 11-30-69, 12-6-69,
2-23-70, 3-6-70, 5-3-70, 5-6-70, 5-17-70, 6-7-70, 9-14-70, 10-4-70,
11-25-70, 1-16-72
Have You Seen the Saucers: 2-23-70, 3-24-70, 5-1-70, 5-3-70, 5-6-70,
5-7-70, 9-14-70, 10-4-70, 11-13-70, 11-25-70, 7-??-72, 8-12-72, 8-16-72,
9-3-72, 9-21-72, 10-3-72
High Flyin' Bird: 1-14-66, 1-15-66, 7-22-66, 9-30-66, 10-7-66, 10-15-66,
5-29-67, 6-17-67, 8-5-67, 2-1-68
House at Pooneil Corners, The: 8-28-68, 9-6-68, 9-10-68, 11-1-68, 6-13-69,
10-31-69
I Can Tell: 10-31-69, 5-6-70, 5-17-70, 11-25-70
Ice Age: 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89,
8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89,
9-16-89, 9-26-89, 9-30-89
I'd Feel a Whole Lot Better: 1-15-66
If You Feel: 9-6-68, 9-10-68, 9-15-68, 11-29-69
In the Midnight Hour: 1-14-66
In the Morning: 10-16-66, 11-25-66
In Time: 9-6-68, 9-10-68
It's Alright: 10-2-66, 10-14-66
It's No Secret: 11-6-65, 1-14-66, 1-15-66, 7-22-66, 9-30-66, 10-2-66,
10-16-66, 3-10-67, 5-12-67, 5-19-67, 6-20-67, 7-7-67, 8-5-67, 10-14-67,
2-1-68, 8-28-68, 11-18-68, 4-26-69, 5-9-69, 11-2-69, 11-29-69,
8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89,
9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-26-89,
9-30-89
John's Other: 11-25-70, 8-18-71, 8-16-72, 10-3-72
J.P.P. McStep B. Blues: 11-25-66, 5-9-69, 6-16-69, 2-28-70
Kansas City: 1-14-66, 9-30-66, 10-2-66, 2-1-68
Lather: 10-6-68, 11-10-68, 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89,
8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89,
9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89,
9-28-89, 9-30-89
Law Man: 8-15-71, 8-18-71, 1-16-72, 7-??-72, 10-3-72
Lay Down Your Weary Tune: 1-15-66
Leave You Alone: 7-22-66, 3-10-67
Let Me In: 10-14-66, 10-16-66, 2-4-67, 3-10-67, 5-19-67, 8-5-67
Let's Get Together: 1-14-66, 7-22-66, 10-14-66, 11-25-66, 11-27-66,
2-4-67, 5-19-67, 5-29-67, 8-5-67
Long John Silver: 7-??-72, 8-12-72, 8-16-72, 10-3-72
Man, The: 5-17-70, 9-14-70, 8-15-71
Martha: 7-7-67, 12-??-67, 12-31-67, 1-30-68, 6-9-69, 10-31-69
Mau Mau: 8-10-69
Mexico: 2-23-70, 2-28-70, 3-6-70, 4-2-70, 5-1-70, 5-3-70, 5-6-70, 5-7-70,
5-17-70, 6-7-70, 8-19-70, 9-14-70, 10-4-70, 11-13-70, 11-25-70
Milk Train: 7-??-72, 8-12-72, 8-25-72, 10-3-72
Miracles: 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89,
8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89,
9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
My Best Friend: 10-16-66, 3-10-67
Nothing: 2-23-70, 2-28-70, 3-6-70, 11-13-70
Other Side of this Life, The: 1-14-66, 9-30-66, 10-14-66, 11-25-66,
11-26-66, 11-27-66, 3-10-67, 5-12-67, 5-19-67, 5-29-67, 6-??-67a, 6-17-67,
6-20-67, 8-5-67, 10-14-67, 12-31-67, 1-30-68, 2-1-68, 9-6-68, 10-6-68,
4-26-69, 6-9-69, 6-16-69, 8-2-69, 8-10-69, 8-17-69, 10-31-69, 11-30-69,
12-6-69, 2-23-70, 2-28-70, 3-6-70, 5-1-70, 5-3-70, 5-6-70, 6-7-70,
6-29-70, 8-19-70, 9-14-70, 11-13-70, 8-12-72, 8-18-89
Panda: 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89,
8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89,
9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
Papa John's Down Home Blues: 1-16-72, 7-??-72, 10-3-72
Planes: 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89,
8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89,
9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-30-89
Plastic Fantastic Lover: 7-22-66, 10-16-66, 11-25-66, 2-4-67, 7-7-67,
8-28-68, 9-15-68, 10-6-68, 11-18-68, 4-26-69, 8-10-69, 8-12-69, 8-17-69,
10-10-69, 10-31-69, 4-2-70, 5-3-70, 6-7-70, 6-26-70, 8-19-70, 8-18-89,
8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89,
9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-22-89,
9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
Pretty As You Feel: 11-13-70, 8-15-71, 1-16-72
Ride This Train: 12-31-67
Rock and Roll Island: 8-15-71, 8-18-71, 1-16-72
Rock Me Baby: 12-31-67, 2-1-68, 9-6-68, 7-19-69, 10-10-69, 5-15-70,
6-29-70, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
Run Around: 9-30-66, 10-16-66
Runnin' Round This World: 11-6-65, 1-15-66, 7-22-66, 9-30-66, 10-14-66,
10-15-66, 5-19-67, 5-29-67
Same Old Phony Handshake: 2-23-70, 5-7-70
Share a Little Joke: 2-1-68, 11-2-69
She Has Funny Cars: 7-22-66, 11-25-66, 2-4-67, 3-10-67, 5-19-67, 5-29-67,
6-17-67, 7-7-67, 8-5-67, 12-31-67, 1-30-68, 5-18-68b, 8-18-89, 8-19-89,
8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89,
9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89,
9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89, 10-7-89
Solidarity: 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89,
8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89,
9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
Somebody To Love: 11-25-66, 2-4-67, 3-10-67, 5-7-67b, 5-19-67, 6-??-67a,
6-??-67b, 6-3-67, 6-17-67, 7-7-67, 7-31-67, 8-5-67, 1-30-68, 2-1-68,
5-18-68a, 5-18-68b, 8-28-68, 8-31-68, 9-6-68, 9-15-68, 10-6-68, 4-26-69,
8-10-69, 8-17-69, 8-18-69, 10-10-69, 10-25-69, 11-2-69, 11-30-69,
2-23-70, 3-6-70, 4-2-70, 5-1-70, 5-3-70, 5-6-70, 5-7-70, 5-15-70,
5-17-70, 6-7-70, 6-29-70, 8-19-70, 9-14-70, 10-4-70, 11-13-70, 11-20-70,
11-25-70, 8-15-71, 8-18-71, 1-16-72, 8-16-72, 10-3-72, 8-18-89, 8-19-89,
8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89,
9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-22-89,
9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89, 10-7-89
Son of Jesus: 10-3-72
Spare Chaynge: 12-31-67 (as part of a jam)
Starship: 9-14-70, 8-15-71
Star Track: 5-18-68a, 5-18-68b, 8-28-68, 11-18-68, 6-9-69
Summer of Love: 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89,
8-28-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89,
9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-26-89, 9-30-89
Things are Better in the East: 7-22-66
Third Week in the Chelsea: 8-15-71, 8-18-71, 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89,
8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89,
9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89,
9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
This Old heart of Mine: 10-31-69
3/5 of a Mile in 10 Seconds: 9-30-66, 10-15-66, 11-25-66, 11-26-66, 2-4-67,
2-5-67, 3-10-67, 8-5-67, 2-1-68, 9-10-68, 10-6-68, 11-18-68, 4-26-69,
8-10-69, 10-10-69, 11-2-69, 12-6-69, 2-23-70, 3-6-70, 3-24-70, 5-1-70,
5-6-70, 5-7-70, 6-7-70, 6-29-70, 8-19-70, 9-14-70, 11-1-70, 11-25-70,
9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
Tobacco Road: 11-6-65, 1-15-66, 9-30-66, 10-15-66, 11-25-66, 5-19-67,
5-29-67
Today: 7-22-66, 11-26-66, 5-19-67, 6-17-67, 7-7-67, 8-5-67, 12-31-67,
1-30-68, 2-1-68, 5-18-68b, 8-28-68, 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89,
8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89,
9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89,
9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
Triad: 8-28-68, 9-6-68, 9-10-68
Trial By Fire: 7-??-72, 8-16-72, 8-24-72, 9-3-72, 10-3-72
True Love: 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89,
8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89,
9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-30-89
Twilight Double Leader: 1-16-72, 7-??-72, 8-16-72, 9-3-72, 9-21-72, 10-3-72
Two Heads: 7-7-67, 9-14-67, 12-31-67, 1-30-68
Uncle Sam Blues: 4-26-69, 8-17-69, 10-25-69, 10-31-69, 2-23-70, 3-6-70,
5-1-70, 5-3-70, 5-6-70, 5-7-70, 5-17-70, 6-7-70, 8-19-70, 11-13-70
Up or Down: 10-31-69, 3-24-70, 5-6-70, 5-7-70, 6-26-70, 8-19-70, 9-14-70,
10-4-70, 11-25-70
Volunteers: 4-26-69, 6-13-69, 8-10-69, 8-12-69, 8-17-69, 8-18-69, 10-10-69,
10-25-69, 10-31-69, 11-29-69, 11-30-69, 12-6-69, 2-23-70, 3-6-70, 3-24-70,
3-26-70, 4-2-70, 5-1-70, 5-3-70, 5-6-70, 5-7-70, 5-15-70, 5-17-70, 6-7-70,
6-26-70, 6-29-70, 8-19-70, 9-14-70, 10-4-70, 11-13-70, 11-25-70, 8-15-71,
8-18-71, 1-16-72, 7-??-72, 8-16-72, 9-3-72, 10-3-72, 8-18-89, 8-19-89,
8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89,
9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-26-89, 9-28-89,
9-30-89, 10-7-89
Walking the Tou Tou: 10-3-72
War Movie: 8-15-71
Watch Her Ride: 5-12-67, 6-20-67, 10-14-67, 12-??-67, 12-31-67,
2-1-68, 5-18-68b, 8-28-68, 8-31-68, 9-6-68, 9-10-68, 11-18-68, 6-9-69
We Can Be Together: 8-10-69, 8-18-69, 10-10-69, 10-31-69, 11-29-69,
11-30-69, 12-6-69, 2-23-70, 3-6-70, 3-24-70, 4-2-70, 5-1-70, 5-3-70,
5-6-70, 5-7-70, 5-15-70, 5-??-70, 6-7-70, 6-26-70, 8-19-70, 9-14-70,
10-4-70, 11-13-70, 11-20-70, 11-25-70
Whatever the Old Man Wants: 5-6-70, 5-7-70, 8-19-70, 9-14-70, 10-4-70
Wheel, The: 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89,
8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-3-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-26-89,
9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
When the Earth Moves Again: 8-15-71, 8-18-71, 1-16-72, 7-??-72, 8-12-72,
8-25-72, 9-3-72, 10-3-72
White Rabbit: 11-26-66, 2-4-67, 3-10-67, 5-7-67b, 5-12-67, 5-19-67,
5-29-67, 6-??-67b, 6-3-67, 6-17-67, 6-20-67, 8-5-67, 9-14-67, 10-14-67,
12-31-67, 2-1-68, 5-18-68b, 8-28-68, 9-6-68, 9-10-68, 10-6-68, 11-18-68,
4-26-69, 8-10-69, 8-12-69, 8-17-69, 10-31-69, 11-2-69, 11-29-69,
11-30-69, 12-6-69, 3-6-70, 3-24-70, 5-1-70, 5-3-70, 5-6-70, 5-15-70,
5-17-70, 6-7-70, 6-26-70, 8-19-70, 11-13-70, 8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89,
8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89,
9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-22-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-30-89
Wild Turkey: 8-15-71, 8-18-71, 7-??-72
Wild Tyme: 12-31-67, 2-1-68, 10-10-69
Won't You Try/Saturday Afternoon: 5-19-67, 5-29-67, 12-31-67, 1-30-68,
2-1-68, 5-18-68a, 5-18-68b, 8-28-68, 9-6-68, 9-28-68, 11-18-68, 4-26-69,
6-9-69, 7-19-69, 8-10-69, 8-17-69, 10-10-69, 10-25-69, 10-31-69, 11-2-69,
3-6-70, 5-6-70, 5-7-70, 6-26-70, 6-29-70, 8-19-70, 8-18-89, 8-19-89,
8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89, 8-30-89, 9-1-89,
9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89, 9-22-89, 9-23-89,
9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
Wooden Ships: 4-26-69, 6-9-69, 6-16-69, 8-10-69, 10-10-69, 10-25-69,
10-31-69, 2-28-70, 3-6-70, 3-24-70, 4-2-70, 5-3-70, 5-6-70, 5-7-70,
5-??-70, 6-7-70, 9-14-70, 10-4-70, 7-??-72, 8-12-72, 8-16-72, 10-3-72,
8-18-89, 8-19-89, 8-22-89, 8-23-89, 8-25-89, 8-26-89, 8-28-89, 8-29-89,
8-30-89, 9-1-89, 9-2-89, 9-3-89, 9-4-89, 9-6-89, 9-8-89, 9-9-89, 9-16-89,
9-22-89, 9-23-89, 9-26-89, 9-27-89, 9-28-89, 9-30-89
You Wear Your Dresses Too Short: 10-10-69, 10-31-69, 11-30-69, 3-24-70,
5-6-70, 9-14-70, 10-4-70, 11-13-70, 11-25-70, 9-22-72
Young Girl Sunday Blues: 5-19-67, 6-??-67a, 6-17-67, 7-7-67, 12-31-67,
1-30-68, 10-10-69, 10-25-69, 10-31-69
Song Index
title author album 1st live
Aerie (Gang of Eagles) Slick Long John Silver 7-??-72
Alexander the Medium Kantner Long John Silver -
America Kantner/Balin KBC Band 8-18-89
And I Like It Balin/Kaukonen Takes Off 1-15-66
Baby What You Want Me To Do Reed - 1-15-66
Ballad of You and Me and
Pooneil Kantner Baxter's 5-12-67
Bear Melt Kantner/Casady/ Bless Its Pointed Little Head ?
Kaukonen/Slick/
Dryden
Blind John ? - 7-??-72
Bludgeon of a Bluecoat Covington? - 10-4-70
Blues from an Airplane Balin/Spence Takes Off 1-30-68
Bringing Me Down Balin/Kantner Takes Off 1-15-66
Chauffeur Blues Melrose Takes Off 9-30-66
Chushingura Dryden Crown of Creation 7-19-69
Come Back Baby trad arr Loves You 3-10-67
Kaukonen
Come Up the Years Balin/Kantner Takes Off 9-30-66
Comin' Back To Me Balin Surrealistic Pillow 5-29-67
Common Market Madrigal Slick Jefferson Airplane -
Crazy Miranda Slick Bark -
Crown of Creation Kantner Crown of Creation 9-6-68
D.C.B.A.-25 Kantner Surrealistic Pillow -
Diana Slick/Kantner Sunfighter 1-16-72
Don't Let Me Down Balin Loves You 3-10-67
Don't Slip Away Balin/Spence Takes Off 9-30-66
Easter? Slick Long John Silver -
Eat Starch Mom Kaukonen/Slick Long John Silver 7-??-72
Embryonic Journey Kaukonen Surrealistic Pillow -
Emergency Balin Loves You 2-23-70
Eskimo Blue Day Slick/Kantner Volunteers 6-14-69
The Farm Kantner/
Blackman Volunteers 6-9-69
Fat Angel Donovan Leitch Bless Its Pointed Little Head 7-22-66
Feel So Good Kaukonen Bark 8-10-69
Freedom Slick Jefferson Airplane 8-18-89
Go To Her Kantner/Estes Early Flight 1-15-66
Good Shepherd trad arr
Kaukonen Volunteers 6-9-69
Greasy Heart Slick Crown of Creation 5-18-68a
Have You Seen The Saucers Kantner single/Early Flight 2-23-70
Hey Fredrick Slick Volunteers -
High Flyin' Bird Wheeler Early Flight 1-14-66
House at Pooneil Corners Kantner/Balin Crown of Creation 8-28-68
How Do You Feel Mastin Surrealistic Pillow -
I Can Tell ? - 10-31-69
Ice Age Kaukonen Jefferson Airplane 8-18-89
Ice Cream Phoenix Kaukonen/Cockey Crown of Creation -
I'd Feel a Whole Lot Gene Clark - 1-15-66
Better
If You Feel Blackman/Balin Crown of Creation 9-6-68
In the Midnight Hour ? - 1-14-66
In the Morning Kaukonen Early Flight 10-16-66
In Time Kantner/Balin Crown of Creation 9-6-68
It's Alright Kantner/Spence Early Flight 10-2-66
It's No Secret Balin Takes Off 11-6-65
John's Other Creach First Pull Up.. 11-25-70
J.P.P. McStep B. Blues Spence Early Flight 11-25-66
Kansas City ? - 1-14-66
The Last Wall of the
Castle Kaukonen Baxter's -
Lather Slick Crown of Creation 10-6-68
Law Man Slick Bark 8-15-71
Lay Down Your Weary Tune Dylan - 1-15-66
Leave You Alone Balin? - 7-22-66
Let Me In Balin/Kantner Takes Off 10-14-66
Let's Get Together Chet Powers Takes Off 1-14-66
Long John Silver Casady/Slick Long John Silver 7-??-72
Madeline Street Kantner/Balin Jefferson Airplane -
The Man ? - 5-17-70
Martha Kantner Baxter's 7-7-67
Mau Mau Kantner/Slick/ Blows Against the Empire 8-10-69
Covington
Meadowlands Kaukonen Volunteers -
Mexico Slick single/Early Flight 2-23-70
Milk Train Creack/Slick/ Long John Silver 7-??-72
Spotts
Miracles Balin Red Octopus 8-18-89
My Best Friend Spence Surrealistic Pillow 10-16-66
Never Argue With a German Slick Bark -
If You're Tired or
European Song
Nothing ? - 2-23-70
Now Is The Time Slick Jefferson Airplane -
The Other Side of This Fred Neil Bless Its Pointed Little Head
Life 1-14-66
Panda Slick Jefferson Airplane 8-18-89
Papa John's Down Home Blues Creach/Spotts Papa John Creach 1-16-72
Planes Kantner Jefferson Airplane 8-18-89
Plastic Fantastic Lover Balin Surrealistic Pillow 7-22-66
Pretty As You Feel Covington/ Bark 11-13-70
Casady/Kaukonen
rejoyce Slick Baxter's
Ribump Ba Bap Dum Dum Dryden/Goodwin Loves You
Ride This Train ? - 12-31-67
Rock and Roll Island Kantner Bark 8-15-71
Rock Me Baby trad arr JA Bless Its Pointed ... 12-31-67
Run Around Balin/Kantner Takes Off 9-30-66
Runnin' Round This World Kantner/Balin Takes Off/Early Flight 11-6-65
Same Old Phony Handshake ? - 2-23-70
Share a Little Joke Balin Crown of Creation 1-30-68
She Has Funny Cars Kaukonen/Balin Surrealistic Pillow 7-22-66
A Small Package of Value Dryden/ Baxter's -
Will Come to You, Blackman/
Shortly Thompson
Solidarity Brecht/Balin/ Jefferson Airplane 8-18-89
Cummings
Somebody To Love Darby Slick Surrealistic Pillow 11-25-66
The Son of Jesus Kantner Long John Silver 10-3-72
A Song For All Seasons Dryden Volunteers -
Spare Chaynge Casady/Dryden/ Baxter's 12-31-67
Kaukonen
Starship Kantner/Slick/ Blows Against the Empire 9-14-70
Balin/Blackman
Star Track Kaukonen Crown of Creation 5-18-68a
Summer of Love Balin Jefferson Airplane 8-18-89
Things Are Better in the Balin Loves You 7-22-66
East
Third Week in the Chelsea Kaukonen Bark 8-15-71
This Old Heart of Mine ? - 10-31-69
3/5 of a Mile in
10 Seconds Balin Surrealistic Pillow 9-30-66
Thunk Covington Bark -
Tobacco Road Loudermilk Takes Off 11-6-65
Today Balin/Kantner Surrealistic Pillow 7-22-66
Too Many Years Kaukonen Jefferson Airplane -
Triad David Crosby Crown of Creation 8-28-68
Trial By Fire Kaukonen Long John Silver 7-??-72
True Love Porcaro/Paich Jefferson Airplane 8-18-89
Turn My Life Down Kaukonen Volunteers -
Turn Out the Lights Kantner/Casady/ Bless Its Pointed ... ?
Kaukonen/Slick/
Dryden
Twilight Double Leader Kantner Long John Silver 1-16-72
Two Heads Slick Baxter's 7-7-67
Uncle Sam Blues trad arr Loves You 4-26-69
Kaukonen,Casady
Up or Down Peter Kaukonen Early Flight 10-31-69
Upfront Blues Kaukonen Jefferson Airplane -
Volunteers Kantner/Balin Volunteers 4-26-69
Walking the Tou Tou Kaukonen Filthy! 10-3-72
War Movie Kantner Bark 8-15-71
Watch Her Ride Kantner Baxter's 5-12-67
We Can Be Together Kantner Volunteers 8-10-69
Whatever the Old Man
Wants Covington? - 5-6-70
The Wheel Kantner Jefferson Airplane 8-18-89
When the Earth Moves
Again Kantner Bark 8-15-71
White Rabbit Slick Surrealistic Pillow 11-26-66
Wild Turkey Kaukonen Bark 8-15-71
Wild Tyme(h) Kantner Baxter's 12-31-67
Won't You Try/Saturday
Afternoon Kantner Baxter's 5-19-67
Wooden Ships Crosby/Stills/
Kantner Volunteers 4-26-69
Would You Like a Snack? Zappa/Slick Loves You -
You Wear Your Dresses Balin Loves You 10-10-69
Too Short
Young Girl Sunday Blues Balin/Kantner Baxter's 5-19-67

Jefferson Airplane Concert Reviews updated: 8-22-98
A supplement to JAbase, compiled by Scott Abbot
Additions to this collection are welcome. If you have any reviews or
memories of Jefferson Airplane concerts, please send them to me at
abbot@owsley.mv.com
Copyright (c) 1998 by Scott Abbot (abbot@owsley.mv.com) and by
the authors of the reviews.
This compilation may be distributed freely, provided it is neither published
nor sold for profit, and that this notice appears on all copies.


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