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Thirty Seconds Over Winterland

 
Album Review: Thirty Seconds Over Winterland
 

  • Artist: Jefferson Airplane
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1973 04
  • Total Time: 36:40
  • Type: Live
  • Genre: Rock

Review

By the summer of 1972, the Jefferson Airplane were on their final approach to the eventual evolution that would produce Jefferson Starship, arguably the most drastic difference being the absence of Jorma Kaukonen (guitar, vocals) and Jack Casady (bass), both of whom were several years into Hot Tuna, a project that began as a musical diversion for the pair and rapidly developed into a permanent roots rock unit. Released in 1973, Thirty Seconds Over Winterland (cleverly named after the Mervyn LeRoy-directed 1944 film Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo) would become the Airplane's swansong. Included were seven tracks taken from the band's last tour of the 1970s, specifically, August 24 and 25 at the Auditorium Theatre in Chicago and the last two gigs the Bay Area combo played in its native San Francisco on September 21 and 22, fittingly held at the band's longtime stomping grounds of the Winterland Arena. Only Kaukonen, Casady, and Paul Kantner (guitar, vocals) remained from the first lineup. They are joined by Grace Slick -- who took over from Signe Anderson just prior to the recording of 1967's landmark Surrealistic Pillow -- and violinist Papa John Creach. Former Turtles and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young drummer Johnny Barbata had come aboard in the previous year, and the latest addition was Quicksilver Messenger Service co-founder David Freiberg, whose contributions at the time were primarily vocal. The bulk of the effort was drawn from 1971's Bark and 1972's Long John Silver. Although they were still performing "Somebody to Love," "Volunteers," and "Wooden Ships" in concert, a cursory stab at "Crown of Creation" is the earliest cut on this package that harks back to their acid rock persona. Despite some questionable intonations from Kaukonen on "Have You Seen the Saucers," the opener quickly establishes the Jefferson Airplane's harder edge. Kaukonen's "Feel So Good" is the jewel in this otherwise thorny rock & roll tiara. The tune stretches over ten minutes, spotlighting Casady's quake-inducing contributions and Creach's unmistakable fiddle. Speaking of Papa John, he shines on the propelling "Milk Train," featuring a seminal lead from Slick. An outtake of note from the September 22 show made its way onto the 1992 Jefferson Airplane Loves You box set. Marty Balin returned for the one-off, albeit incendiary, "You Wear Your Dresses Too Short." ~ Lindsay Planer, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Have You Seen the Saucers Paul Kantner Jefferson Airplane (4:12)
Feel So Good Jorma Kaukonen Jefferson Airplane (11:00)
Crown of Creation Paul Kantner Jefferson Airplane (3:17)
When the Earth Moves Again Paul Kantner Jefferson Airplane (4:05)
Milk Train Grace Slick, Papa John Creach, Roger Spotts Jefferson Airplane (3:54)
Trial by Fire Jorma Kaukonen Jefferson Airplane (4:46)
Twilight Double Leader Paul Kantner Jefferson Airplane (5:26)

Credits

Jefferson Airplane (Main Performer), Jorma Kaukonen (Guitar), Jorma Kaukonen (Vocals), Grace Slick (Keyboards), Grace Slick (Vocals), Papa John Creach (Violin), Papa John Creach (Vocals), Paul Kantner (Guitar), Paul Kantner (Vocals), John Barbata (Percussion), John Barbata (Drums), Jack Casady (Guitar (Bass)), David Freiberg (Guitar), David Freiberg (Keyboards), David Freiberg (Vocals), Bruce Steinberg (Art Direction), Bruce Steinberg (Photography), Bruce Steinberg (Illustrations), Bruce Steinberg (Cover Design)
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Wikipedia: Thirty Seconds Over Winterland
Top
Thirty Seconds Over Winterland
Thirty Seconds Over Winterland cover
Live album by Jefferson Airplane
Released April 1973
Recorded August 24-25, 1972 Chicago Auditorium, Chicago, September 21-22, 1972 Winterland Arena, San Francisco
Genre Rock
Length 38:13
Label Grunt/RCA
Producer Jefferson Airplane
Professional reviews
Jefferson Airplane chronology
Long John Silver
(1972)
Thirty Seconds Over Winterland
(1973)
Early Flight
(1974)

Thirty Seconds Over Winterland is a 1973 album by the American psychedelic rock band Jefferson Airplane. It was the second live album recorded by the group, recorded during the Long John Silver tour. The band did not tour together after September, 1972. Paul Kantner, Grace Slick, and David Freiberg headed to the studio to record the next album, and every memeber of the band showed up for Baron von Tollbooth and the Chrome Nun, but for the most part Jerry Garcia played the lead guitar and Chris Ethridge played bass. Jefferson Airplane didn't play together again until the 1989 tour and eponymous album.

Contents

Flying Toasters lawsuits

In 1989, software company Berkeley Systems released its immensely popular After Dark screensaver. The best-known of the various screensaver options was Flying Toasters, whose winged appliances strongly resembled the toasters on the cover of Thirty Seconds Over Winterland. When another software company, Delrina, copied the trademarked Flying Toasters artwork into a competing screen saver, a Bloom County-themed version, Berkeley successfully sued Delrina for trademark infringement. Although much of the media and public bought into Delrina's well-prepared PR campaign spin that they were merely "parodying" the product...the judge did not see it that way.

Shortly after this, Jefferson Airplane sued Berkeley for copying their flying toasters trademark for their album. The band's case, however, was lost because Berkeley claimed no prior knowledge of the artwork and a judge noted the band had failed to trademark the cover art.[1]

Track listing

Side One

  1. "Have You Seen the Saucers?" (Paul Kantner) – 4:15
  2. "Feel So Good" (Jorma Kaukonen) – 11:10
  3. "Crown of Creation" (Kantner) – 4:05

Side Two

  1. "When the Earth Moves Again" (Kantner) – 4:05
  2. "Milk Train" (Grace Slick, Papa John Creach, Roger Spotts) – 3:57
  3. "Trial by Fire" (Kaukonen) – 5:00
  4. "Twilight Double Leader" (Kantner) – 5:41

Personnel

Production

  • Produced and arranged by Jefferson Airplane
  • Pat "Maurice" Ieraci – production coordinator
  • Don Gooch – recording engineer
  • Mallory "Mallory" Earl – mixing engineer
  • Recorded by Wally Heider's remote unit
  • Mixed at Wally Heider Studios, San Francisco
  • Bruce Steinberg – album design, illustration, photography
  • Randy Tuten – inner sleeve art: photo frames
  • Greg Irons – inner sleeve art: "Gruntman"
  • Heavy Water Lights (Joan Chase, Mary Ann Mayer, and John Hardham) – light show
  • Acy Lehman – art coordination

Charts

Album

Year Chart Position
1973 Billboard Pop Albums 52


Notes


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Thirty Seconds Over Winterland" Read more

 

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