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Blows Against the Empire

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Album Review

Paul Kantner's debut solo album actually was credited to "Paul Kantner/Jefferson Starship," the first use of the "Starship" billing, predating the formation of the group with that name by four years. Kantner used it, extrapolating on the name of his current band, Jefferson Airplane, to refer to Blows's science fiction concept: A bunch of left-wing hippies closely resembling his San Francisco Bay Area compatriots hijack a government-built starship and head off to re-start the human race on another planet. Kantner had presaged this post-apocalyptic colonization idea on "Wooden Ships" on the last Airplane album, Volunteers, and here he expanded it out to album length with the help of members of The Airplane, the Grateful Dead, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Crosby, Stills and Nash, plus assorted others, a shifting supergroup informally known as PERRO, The Planet Earth Rock And Roll Orchestra. (Kantner later would borrow that name for a subsequent solo album.) Blows actually was a little loose as concept albums go, seeming as concerned with the arrival of Kantner and Grace Slick's baby as with the departure of the starship. Kantner employed often dense instrumentation and complex arrangements, but there were enough hooks and harmonies to keep things interesting. Blows eventually went gold, and it was even nominated for a science fiction award usually reserved for novels.

Customer Reviews

It was the times....

If you were lucky enough to be around when this album was first released, well... Like Grace Slick supposedly said, "If you remember the Sixties, you weren't there." Good thing this came out in 1970.

These were magical times, full of love, and naive, yet heart felt wishes to be at peace within and without the world; to make it better then we found it. This music was part of that great soundtrack. Listen carefully, that spirit is here, after all, isn't it love that we are all looking for?

A+ for effort

This consortium of SF talent recorded, based on your (dis)orientation, some of the most creative or flipped out music at the close of the hippie era. This album along with David Crosby's own solo album, "If I Could Only Remember My Name" were the pinnacle of this association of artists.
The songs here are so ambitious and interesting in their construct. Grace Slick drew a booklet included with the LP which reflected the loosely put together, spontaneous creativity of the music.
It's a prized album in my collection. I hate to say I miss those days so.

Gonna Hijack

People don't realize this was a great collaboration with David Crosby and Gerry Garcia.They'll be building it up in the sky. The Baby Tree song is cute. I use to sing to my kids.

Biography

Formed: 1974 in San Francisco, CA

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Jefferson Starship was among the most successful arena rock bands of the 1970s and early '80s, an even greater commercial entity than its predecessor, Jefferson Airplane, the band out of which it evolved. Many Jefferson Airplane fans decried the group's new, more mainstream musical direction, especially after Airplane singers Grace Slick and Marty Balin departed in 1978. But with shifting personnel, Jefferson Starship managed to please its new fans and...
Full Bio