One of my favorite rock bands of my past life was the Jefferson
Airplane. A major writer for that group was Paul Kantner. He died
recently and that leaves me with a hollow feeling. He came out with the
album "Blows Against the Empire, which had a positive message about the
1960s country culture. He took the counter-culture seriously and he encompassed
the spirit of rebellion and revolution. He was responsible for the launching of
the band Jefferson Starship or just Starship, after the Jefferson Airplane
broke up.
As with John Lennon I see him as a musician who liked to
shake things up. His "Blows Against the Empire" was classics:
The album is a narrative concept album that
tells the story of a counter-culture revolution against the oppressions of
"Uncle Samuel" and a plan to steal a starship from orbit and journey
into space in search of a new home. The original vinyl release is divided into
two album sides. "Mau Mau (Amerikon)" launched Side One, a
counter-culture manifesto and call to arms. In the context of the narrative,
this is the free music being performed in the park, drawing everyone together.
"Put your old ladies back into bed,
Put your old men into their graves,
Cover their ears so they can't hear us sing,
Cover their eyes so they can't see us
play."
"Get out of the way, let the people
play,
We gotta get down on you,
Come alive all over you,
Dancing down, into your town."
It celebrates late-sixties counter-culture,
depicting people celebrating mind expansion and free love, "We'll ball in
your parks, insane with the flash of living...calling for acid, cocaine and
grass." They've had enough of the military, domestic and abroad, and make
one of the earliest references to Ronald Reagan in popular
music in the line, "You unleash the dogs of a grade-B
movie star Governor's war...so drop your fuckin' bombs, burn your demon babies,
I will live again!" They condemn the divisive strictures of conservative
society, and dream of finding a Utopia.
Perhaps drug use is not really revolutionary, but rebellion
is. I like to think that Kantner contributed to the rebelliousness of the 1960s
and 1970s.
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