| Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra | ||||
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| Studio album by Paul Kantner | ||||
| Released | August, 1983 | |||
| Recorded | 1983 at the Automatt and The Pen, San Francisco | |||
| Genre | Rock Psychedelic rock |
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| Length | 38:50 | |||
| Label | RCA Records | |||
| Producer | Scott Mathews & Ron Nagle with Paul Kantner | |||
| Paul Kantner chronology | ||||
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| Professional ratings | |
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| Review scores | |
| Source | Rating |
| Allmusic | |
| Robert Christgau | (D+)[2] |
Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra is an album by Paul Kantner, and his last solo studio album. The title comes from an unofficial name for San Francisco artists who recorded on various albums in 1970 - 1973, also known as PERRO. The song "Mountain Song" is dedicated "to David C, Jerry G, Graham N, Grace S, David F, Billy K and Mickey H and to one summer when all of our schedules almost didn't conflict," and was written during the 70's recording sessions by Kantner and Jerry Garcia. The album collects various Starship/Airplane alumni to front an extended trip musically similar to his then recent, Starship efforts. One track, "Circle of Fire" was recorded originally for the Jefferson Starship album, Winds of Change.
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Contents
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Kantner had intended this record to be a soundtrack to a novel he was writing at the time.[3] The album is the sequel to Kantner's Hugo Award nominated 1970 album Blows Against the Empire, and carries the sub-title "The Empire Blows Back." At the time of the album's release, the novel had not yet been completed but included with the album was an insert which explained the story. The insert describes a San Francisco band that develops telepathic amplification technology, which attracts the attention of various governments. The group attempts to escape to the safety of the Australian Outback, and joins a self-sufficient settlement of over 1500 people. The US government agents track the band down and attempt to take the technology for use in the Cold War. The telepathic children assist in creating a shield around the settlement that then escapes into space.[4] Also included on the album insert were descriptions of what each song meant in the overall story. The full-length novel was later published by Kantner's own company, Little Dragon Press.[5][6]
| Side A: America | |||||||||
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| No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length | |||||
| 1. | "The Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra" | Paul Kantner | Kantner | 4:07 | |||||
| 2. | "(She Is A) Telepath" | Kantner | Kantner | 2:51 | |||||
| 3. | "Circle of Fire" (Recorded and produced by Jefferson Starship and Kevin Beamish, summer 1982) | Kantner | Kantner | 3:47 | |||||
| 4. | "Mount Shasta" | Kantner | Kantner, Grace Slick, Scott Mathews, Ron Nagle | 2:44 | |||||
| 5. | "Lilith's Song" | Kantner | Slick, Pete Sears | 6:42 | |||||
| Side B: Australia...OZ & Beyond | |||||||||
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| No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Length | |||||
| 1. | "Transubstantiation: Part I: Esperanto / Part II: Science Friction" | (instrumental) / Kantner | Kantner, Slick, Mathews, Nagle / Kantner | 1:28 / 2:04 | |||||
| 2. | "The Mountain Song" | Kantner, Jerry Garcia | Kantner, Garcia | 5:02 | |||||
| 3. | "Declaration of Independence" | Wolcott Gibbs | Celius Dougherty | 1:38 | |||||
| 4. | "Underground (the Laboratories)" | Slick, Alexander Kantner | P. Kantner, Mathews, Nagle | 2:13 | |||||
| 5. | "The Sky Is No Limit" | Kantner, China Kantner | P. Kantner | 2:51 | |||||
| 6. | "Let's Go" | Kantner | Kantner | 5:02 | |||||
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