Crown of Creation (Bonus Track Version)
Download links and information about Crown of Creation (Bonus Track Version) by Jefferson Airplane. This album was released in 1968 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 55:44 minutes.
Artist: | Jefferson Airplane |
---|---|
Release date: | 1968 |
Genre: | Rock, Folk Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic |
Tracks: | 15 |
Duration: | 55:44 |
Buy it NOW at: | |
Buy on iTunes $9.99 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Lather | 2:56 |
2. | In Time | 4:12 |
3. | Triad | 4:54 |
4. | Star Track | 3:08 |
5. | Share a Little Joke | 3:07 |
6. | Chushingura | 1:17 |
7. | If You Feel | 3:21 |
8. | Crown of Creation | 2:54 |
9. | Ice Cream Phoenix | 2:59 |
10. | Greasy Heart | 3:25 |
11. | The House At Pooneil Corners | 5:49 |
12. | Ribumbabap Rubadubaoumoum (Bonus Track) | 1:29 |
13. | Would You Like a Snack (Bonus Track) | 2:37 |
14. | Share a Little Joke (Mono Single Version) [Bonus Track] | 3:06 |
15. | The Saga of Sydney Spacepig (Bonus Track) | 10:30 |
Details
[Edit]The group's fourth album, appearing ten months following After Bathing at Baxter's, isn't the same kind of leap forward that Baxter's represented from Surrealistic Pillow. Indeed, in many ways Crown of Creation is a more stylistically conservative album. It opens with "Lather," a Grace Slick original that was one of the group's very last forays (and certainly their last prominent one) into a folk idiom. Much of what follows is a lot more based in electric rock, as well as steeped in elements of science fiction (specifically author John Wyndham's book The Chrysalids) in several places, but Crown of Creation was still deliberately more musically accessible than its predecessor, even as the playing became more bold and daring within more traditional song structures. Jack Casady by this time had developed one of the most prominent and distinctive bass sounds in American rock, as identifiable (if not quite as bracing) as John Entwistle's was with the Who, as demonstrated on "In Time," "Star Track," "Share a Little Joke," "If You Feel," (where he's practically a second lead instrument), and the title song. Jorma Kaukonen's slashing, angular guitar attack was continually surprising as his snaking lead guitar parts wended their way through "Star Track" and "Share a Little Joke." The album also reflected the shifting landscape of West Coast music with its inclusion of "Triad," a David Crosby song that Crosby's own group, the Byrds, had refused to release. Its presence (the only extant version of the song for a number of years) was a forerunner of the sound that would later be heard on Crosby's own debut solo album If I Could Only Remember My Name (on which Slick, Paul Kantner, and Casady would appear). The overall album captured the group's rapidly evolving, very heavy live sound within the confines of some fairly traditional song structures, and left ample room for Slick and Marty Balin to express themselves vocally, with Balin turning in one of his most heartfelt and moving performances on "If You Feel." "Ice Cream Phoenix" pulses with energy and "Greasy Heart" became a concert standard for the group — the studio original of the latter is notable for Slick's most powerful vocal performance since "Somebody to Love." And the album's big finish, "The House at Pooneil Corners," seemed to fire on all cylinders, their amps cranked up to ten (maybe 11 for Casady), and Balin, Slick, and Kantner stretching out on the disjointed yet oddly compelling tune and lyrics. It didn't work 100 percent, but it made for a shattering finish to the album. Crown of Creation has been reissued on CD several times, including a Mobile Fidelity audiophile edition at the start of the '90s, but in 2003, RCA released a remastered edition with four bonus tracks from the same sessions including the mono single mix of "Share a Little Joke," the previously unreleased eight-minute "The Saga of Sydney Spacepig," Spencer Dryden's co-authored "Ribump Ba Bap Dum Dum" (a spaced-out assembly of noises, effects, and pop culture catchphrases), and the more accessible "Would You Like a Snack?," an atonal piece of musical scatology co-authored by Slick and Frank Zappa. ~ Bruce Eder & Al Campbell, Rovi