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Black sails knifing through the pitchblende night
Away from the radioactive landmass madness
From the silver-suited people searching out
Uncontaminated food and shelter on the shores
No glowing metal on our ship of wood only
Free happy crazy people naked in the universe
WE SPEAK EARTH TALK
GO RIDE THE MUSIC
If you smile at me you know I will understand
Cause that is something everybody everywhere does
In the same language
I can see by your coat my friend that you're
From the other side
There's just one thing I got to know
Can you tell me please
Who won?
You must try some of my purple berries
I been eating them for six or seven weeks now
Haven't got sick once
Probably keep us both alive
Wooden ships on the water very free and easy
Easy, you know the way it's supposed to be
Silver people on the shoreline leave us be
Very free and easy
Sail away where the morning sun goes high
Sail away where the wind blows sweet
And young birds fly
Take a sister by her hand
Lead her far from this barren land
Horror grips us as we watch you die
All we can do is echo your anguished cry
Stare as all your human feelings die
We are leaving, you don't need us
Go and take a sister by her hand
Lead her far from this foreign land
Somewhere where we might laugh again
We are leaving, you don't need us
Sailing ships on the water very free and easy
Easy, you know the way it's supposed to be
Silver people on the shoreline leave us be
Very free, and gone
No (repeats)
No c'mon,
Go ride the music
C'mon ride it child
Skydog wrote:
Absolutely, today one of the most under appreciated guitarists from that time. If you can catch him alone or even better, with Hot Tuna definitely do so.
I concur. I guess you had to be there.
true dat! (double true!)
Jefferson Airplane - Wooden Ships
Big Head Todd & The Monsters - Drought of 2013
Talking Heads - (Nothing But) Flowers
nailed it.
You make it sound like that's a bad thing.
You make it sound like that's a bad thing.
Not a cover. Paul Kantner, David Crosby and Stephen Stills wrote this song (on a boat, supposedly)!
Many performed it, this is one of the better versions, mostly due to Grace Slick's amazing voice.
But all versions are great.
Cover? Paul Kantner shares a writing credit on this tune, son. It ain't a cover.
:indeed:
The clothes and hair styles then....The continual self indulgent "Me" generational thinking that continues to pervade our society...dreaming is nice and all, but when it got to actually doing something about it, the Me kids pretty much decided to look after themselves and raise the bar on greed and selfishness....American history has pretty much mirrored the boomers...the 50s was a childhood, the 60s was the rebellious teens/20s...the 70s was the lost, well what do I do wth my life...the 80s were the well I wanna make lots of money, so lets be greedy...followed by the continual shift in the 90s to the right politically as they reach old age and get more rigid in thier thinking...but throughout it all, its been "gee, how great we were/are"..while actually having very little to show to back that up. I mean consider this....since the Boomers got the right to vote..we have had Nixon twice (1 and 1/2+Ford), Carter(purely a reaction to Nixon/Watergate) Reagan twice, followed by Bush..Clinton twice, and one of those due entirely to a right leaning third party candidate, followed by Bush twice...Not really a very anti-war voting history
I suppose this is akin to pissing into the wind, but... You have somehow bought into a cartoon history of the latter twentieth century and accepted that this cartoon mirrors the reality. Fine. But, your super-oversimplification of complexity is just the Classics Illustrated version of a cartoon. Maybe it's a manga for your entertainment. Jolly good entertainment, but maybe a tad over-simplified? By the way, Dan Quayle was what American got when the "boomer" generation came to power. There's another cartoon image.
OK, I get it, this is the anti-war/postapocalyptic set,
- Talking Heads - (Nothing But) Flowers
- Big Head Todd & The Monsters - Drought of 2013
- Jefferson Airplane - Wooden Ships
Nice thematic grouping. Normally, I'd say BRAVO! But I just can't get past this version of Wooden Ships. It's so discordant that it's actually painful to listen to. I guess they were making a "statement" there - war is painful, yada yada, I agree - but this version is just miserable. Please, please can we have the CSN classic instead?
Um, hands have stopped working. Checking out now.
Really? Like which part ? The amazing social revolution, the anti-war protests, getting high,
dreaming of a world without war (peace), the music, the attempt to make the world a better place to live in ?
Could you be a bit more specific ?
The clothes and hair styles then....The continual self indulgent "Me" generational thinking that continues to pervade our society...dreaming is nice and all, but when it got to actually doing something about it, the Me kids pretty much decided to look after themselves and raise the bar on greed and selfishness....American history has pretty much mirrored the boomers...the 50s was a childhood, the 60s was the rebellious teens/20s...the 70s was the lost, well what do I do wth my life...the 80s were the well I wanna make lots of money, so lets be greedy...followed by the continual shift in the 90s to the right politically as they reach old age and get more rigid in thier thinking...but throughout it all, its been "gee, how great we were/are"..while actually having very little to show to back that up. I mean consider this....since the Boomers got the right to vote..we have had Nixon twice (1 and 1/2+Ford), Carter(purely a reaction to Nixon/Watergate) Reagan twice, followed by Bush..Clinton twice, and one of those due entirely to a right leaning third party candidate, followed by Bush twice...Not really a very anti-war voting history
It may have just been referring to purple berries.
or the apocolypse...scavenging for food...and it always sparked a sci fi imagine for me too.
Thank God for mute.
I been eating them for six or seven weeks now
Haven't got sick once
Probably keep us both alive"
WTF? The sixties were weird man, was it really so cool to make weird metaphors for drug-use? I guess this is the band that wrote "White Rabbit", so maybe that question answers itself.
It may have just been referring to purple berries.
I been eating them for six or seven weeks now
Haven't got sick once
Probably keep us both alive"
WTF? The sixties were weird man, was it really so cool to make weird metaphors for drug-use? I guess this is the band that wrote "White Rabbit", so maybe that question answers itself.
Try not to make such a fool of yourself.
Thanks for that information, I was also thinking it was a cover. I think both versions are watertight.
Really? Like which part ? The amazing social revolution, the anti-war protests, getting high,
dreaming of a world without war (peace), the music, the attempt to make the world a better place to live in ?
Could you be a bit more specific ?
For all the comments about acid and hippy bs, the Airplane at this point had become very clear-eyed about the state of the movement and where it was headed. It's like they knew we were going to lose, or had lost already, but still believed in the dream.
We can be together.
I thought we knew that already.
We do? Then tell me please, who won?
I been eating them for six or seven weeks now
Haven't got sick once
Probably keep us both alive"
WTF? The sixties were weird man, was it really so cool to make weird metaphors for drug-use? I guess this is the band that wrote "White Rabbit", so maybe that question answers itself.
I think Paul Kantner gets co-writer credits, so it may not even be a "cover."
edit: Oops. Somebody had already put this out. My bad. I'll retreat back into my corner now.
This is the very first post for the song from 2002 that needs correcting.
A rare case in which both versions are considered "original."
Great minds think alike.
It's not a cover, both versions came out at the same time and and it was co-written by Crosby, Stills and Kantner together.
No,not in the least.
IMO
Agreed! PEACE
History is hard to know, because of all the hired bullshit, but even without being sure of "history" it seems entirely reasonable to think that every now and then the energy of a whole generation comes to a head in a long fine flash, for reasons that nobody really understands at the time-and which never explain, in retrospect, what actually happened.
My central memory of that time seems to hang on one or five or maybe forty nights-or very early mornings-when I left the Fillmore half-crazy and, instead of going home, aimed the big 650 Lightning across the Bay Bridge at a hundred miles an hour wearing L. L. Bean shorts and a Butte sheepherder's jacket . . . booming through the Treasure Island tunnel at the lights of Oakland and Berkeley and Richmond, not quite sure which turn-off to take when I got to the other end (always stalling at the toll-gate, too twisted to find neutral while I fumbled for change) . . . but being absolutely certain that no matter which way I went I would come to a place where people were just as high and wild as I was: No doubt at all about that. . . .
There was madness in any direction, at any hour. If not across the Bay, then up the Golden Gate or down 101 to Los Altos or La Honda. . . . You could strike sparks anywhere. There was a fantastic universal sense that whatever we were doing was right, that we were winning. . . .
And that, I think, was the handle-that sense of inevitable victory over the forces of Old and Evil. Not in any mean or military sense; we didn't need that. Our energy would simply prevail. There was no point in fighting-on our side or theirs. We had all the momentum; we were riding the crest of a high and beautiful wave. . . .
So now, less than five years later, you can go up on a steep hill in Las Vegas and look West, and with the right kind of eyes you can almost see the high-water mark-that place where the wave finally broke and rolled back."
- Hunter S. Thompson (Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream)
As brutal as the CSN version is wonderful. I don't know why bandwidth is wasted on this version.
1.
AGREED. Love this song - really dislike this version of it.
According to his notes and "lists", Nixon apparently thought John Lennon was the most "dangerous" entity in the music business, so much that Lennon had his visa revoked. Old Milhous certainly had a great amount of contempt for Jefferson Airplane as well.
As brutal as the CSN version is wonderful. I don't know why bandwidth is wasted on this version.
1.
Tricky Dick .... let us never forget him, his ilk, and such niceties as "The Huston (Houston) Plan".
Ah yes Tricky indeed. But this song blows me waaay back to my early years as a kid growing up the child of a US Air Force NCO in the Far East. Japan, Philippines, Taiwan and all the rest...if there was a US air base there I've visited it (or lived near it). In hindsight I had a hell-uv-a childhood different from most American kids; especially for the times. Anyway, at the time the Taiwanese were blatantly copying most of the (then vinyl) LP's and music of the US. They'd copy it on some fairly crappy vinyl then turn around and sell it to the military men for....oh....25cents (US) an album. The vinyl didn't last long, but usually long enough to transfer to tape. This Jefferson Airplane Volunteers album was one of the first to which I did just that. Hands down I thought this song was the better version.
And I still do today. ;-)
The war?
I thought we knew that already.
BTW, this is 40 years old this year. How's that grab ya'?
Tricky Dick .... let us never forget him, his ilk, and such niceties as "The Huston (Houston) Plan".
BTW, this is 40 years old this year. How's that grab ya'?
Me, neither. Somebody spare me the looking it up—which is the cover?
laramieu wrote:
Years ago when Rolling Stone was still a newsprint foldover, they interviewed David Crosby. Among the most amazing range of topics the interview covered, one was how he in his pre-Byrds days hung with Kantner and David Freiberg (Quicksilver Messenger Service and later Jefferson Starship) in Venice in SoCal. According to Crosby when the gigs were in short supply, they eked out a living burglarizing the community. The story may be semi-apocryphal, but the point I took was that these guys who would populate some of the most influential bands in the coming decade all knew each other from Before They Were Famous. BTW, the Airplane had already recorded "Triad," another Crosby song, on Crown of Creation—I recall because Stills and Nash refused to do it as CSN.
They're both good, but personally, I give this version a slight edge.
While we can debate the "better" cover, this one still is great in it's own right. Evocative of the era, and for me, hitting all the right emotional chords. What we all love about RP is the diversity, and hearing songs matched up with others we would not normally put together'
that, and the fact that Grace Slick was kind of a babe.
Still ridin' the music!
I mean really, when was the last time you heard this on the radio and some 20 min earlier, Starship Trooper and in between the Tlking Heads.
Whole reason why I started supporting RP 2+ years ago.
Stephen Stills was on Bob Edward's Weekend radio show recently and said they shot that photo on a whim and then realized it was out of order - it's Nash, Stills and Crosby as they sit.
So they went back to the site to re-take the photo and the house had been torn down in the meantime.
Yes, but outstanding great superb hippy bullsh*t!
Indeed! Bring on the hippie bullsh*t! Let's wave our freak flags high!
Now lessee...where are my flowered bellbottoms, leather vest, headband and beads...
EssexTex (Bee Cave, Texas) |
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Or model your life after the antagonist in Joe?
Is there something Earth shaking going on like the meltdown of our financial markets? Presidential election? hmmm...
I've always loved both versions of this song. Completely different feel to them.
IDK! I like BOTH!