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# Disc length: 4605 seconds
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# Revision: 4
# Processed by: cddbd v1.5.2PL0 Copyright (c) Steve Scherf et al.
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DISCID=f211fb10
DTITLE=Jefferson Airplane / The Essential Jefferson Airplane
DYEAR=2005
DGENRE=Folk-Rock, Hard Rock
TTITLE0=3-5's of a Mile in 10 Seconds [Live]
TTITLE1=Plastic Fantastic Lover [Live]
TTITLE2=We Can Be Together
TTITLE3=Good Shepherd
TTITLE4=Wooden Ships
TTITLE5=Eskimo Blue Day
TTITLE6=Volunteers
TTITLE7=Have You Seen the Saucers [Single Version]
TTITLE8=Mexico [Single Version]
TTITLE9=When the Earth Moves Again
TTITLE10=Pretty As You Feel
TTITLE11=Third Week in the Chelsea
TTITLE12=Long John Silver
TTITLE13=Twilight Double Leader
TTITLE14=Feel So Good [Live]
TTITLE15=Milk Train [Live]
EXTD=The Essential Jefferson Airplane - Disc 2 of 2\n2005 RCA/Legacy\n\nOriginally Released April 26, 2005\n\nAMG EXPERT REVIEW: RCA/Legacy's 32-track Jefferson Airplane retrospective focuses on the influential psychedelic rock collective's late-'60s/ear
EXTD=ly-'70s heydays. From 1966 (Jefferson Airplane Takes Off) through 1972 (Thirty Seconds Over Winterland), the group released nine albums that effectively shadowed the era, blending social themes with drugs, paranoia, and youthful rebellion/revolution
EXTD=. Essential may be a bit much for the casual fan, as its two discs delve deep into the group's eclectic catalog, stacking lost gems like "Eskimo Blue Day" and "Third Week in the Chelsea" alongside radio staples like "Somebody to Love," "White Rabbit
EXTD=," and "Volunteers," but those who are willing to take the plunge will be rewarded with the band's most thorough, informative, and thoughtfully paced anthology to date.  -- James Christopher Monger\n\nAmazon.com Editorial Review\nFilling the double-
EXTD=disc void left by the excellent but sonically inferior and out-of-print 2400 Fulton Street: An Anthology, The Essential Jefferson Airplane digs deeper into the San Francisco band's catalog than the many single disc collections available. Less expans
EXTD=ive, but with better sound than the three disc box set, Jefferson Airplane Loves You, this 32 track compilation covers the band's seven albums and two live offerings, giving nearly equal time to all. Not held in as high esteem as their Bay Area comp
EXTD=atriots the Grateful Dead, the Airplane successfully combined Marty Balin's expressive voice on such lovely folk-tinged love songs as "Comin' Back to Me," the apocalyptic visions of "Wooden Ships" (co-written by the Airplane's Paul Kantner with Davi
EXTD=d Crosby and Stephen Stills), the edgy, psychedelia of "The Ballad of You and Me and Pooneil" and the politically charged rallying cry of "Volunteers." Singer Grace Slick provided a photogenic focal point and dynamic interplay that meshed perfectly 
EXTD=with the band's three male vocalists. \n\nDisc one clocks in at a relatively anemic 50 minutes, leaving nearly an unused half hour that could have included such influential album tracks as the band's version of Donovan's "The Fat Angel," "Won't You 
EXTD=Try/Saturday Afternoon," "Triad," and "Wild Thyme." Regardless, this is a well-chosen selection (with first-rate liner notes from J.A. historian Jeff Tamarkin) that highlights the Airplane's diverse influences as it echoed and exemplified the turbul
EXTD=ent end of the '60s/beginning of the '70s. --Hal Horowitz\n\nAmazon.com Customer Review\nSome non-album tracks, November 23, 2005 \nReviewer: Laurence Upton (Wiltshire, England)\nThis may be the most inexpensive way to acquire their non-album single
EXTD= Have You Seen The Saucers?/Mexico, released during a transitional period between Volunteers and Bark. The mono single mixes of Martha and Share A Little Joke are also included, though these are also to be found as bonus tracks on their parent album
EXTD=s, After Bathing At Baxter's and Crown Of Creation. Unfortunately for collectors the opportunity to include the mono single version of The Ballad Of You And Me And Pooneil has again been passed over. \nThe rest of the two discs is taken up with a fa
EXTD=irly sensibly chosen selection from their albums Jefferson Airplane Takes Off, Surrealistic Pillow, After Bathing At Baxter's, Crown Of Creation, Bless It's Pointed Little Head, Volunteers, Bark, Long John Silver, and finally two live tracks from 19
EXTD=72 that appeared on 30 Seconds Over Winterland, including the eleven minute Jorma Kaukonen epic Feel So Good. Tracks that were also A-sides or B-sides have been favoured and We Can Be Together, from Volunteers, is the edited B-side version. \n\nHalf
EXTD=.com Album Notes\nJefferson Airplane: Paul Kantner (vocals, guitar); Grace Slick, Marty Balin (vocals); Jorma Kaukonen (guitar); Jack Casady (bass guitar); Spencer Dryden (drums).\n\nAdditional personnel: Nicky Hopkins (piano); Stephen Stills (organ
EXTD=); Joey Covington (percussion); David Crosby, Mary Gannon, Denise Jewkes, Diane Hursh, Marilyn Hunt (background vocals).\n\nProducers: Matthew Katz; Rick Jarrard; Tommy Oliver; Al Schmitt.\nEngineers: Dave Hassinger; Don Gooch; Richie Schmitt.\nReco
EXTD=rding information: 1966 - 1972.\n\nIndustry Reviews\n4 stars out of 5 - [T]heir music sounded like a supercharged folk-rock strain with a pronounced blues influence...\n\nSome tracks remain classics....This is a good overview of the work of an impor
EXTD=tant American band. YEAR: 2005
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