Paul Kantner, Jefferson Airplane guitarist and founding member, dies
He was not on the list.
Paul Kantner, a founding member and guitarist in the '60s
psychedelic rock band Jefferson Airplane and its successor, Jefferson Starship,
has died, the Grammy Awards Twitter page said. He was 74.
The statement did not mention a cause of death.
"Paul was a key architect in the development of what
became known as the San Francisco Sound," Neil Portnow, president and CEO
of the Recording Academy, the organization in charge of the Grammy Awards, said
in a statement. "The music community has lost a true icon."
The academy named Jefferson Airplane one of its annual
Lifetime Achievement Award recipients this month.
"Although he never wrote or sang lead on a hit single,
Paul Kantner had the greatest impact on Jefferson Airplane/Starship of any
member," the band says on its website.
Kantner and Jefferson Airplane were pioneers of psychedelic
rock -- their sound fused fuzzy, distorted, reverb-filled tones with influences
from folk, rock and the blues.
Paul Kantner was my friend,roommate, pal..we wrote Wooden
Ships together with Stephen I'm going to miss him
— David Crosby (@thedavidcrosby) January 29, 2016
The Airplane helped define the San Francisco music scene in
the 1960s, debuting at the Matrix nightclub in 1965, about a year before its
first album, "Jefferson Airplane Takes Off," was released.
"We didn't even know what we were doing when we started
doing it," Kantner said in a 1970 interview with Rolling Stone.
"Looking back, all we were saying was, 'Look, we're having a good time.'
And nothing else."
Paul Kantner was no less than one of the very few spokesmen
for the entire hippie generation. Smart and funny with a deep rebel streak. Huey
— Huey Lewis (@Huey_Lewis_News) January 29, 2016
Grace Slick, whose powerful vocals added another unique
element to the band's sound, joined the group in 1966, bringing two songs with
her from her previous band, the Great Society.
Those songs, "Somebody to Love" and "White
Rabbit," became Top 10 hits the following year on "Surrealistic
Pillow," one of the defining rock albums of the late '60s.
Kantner and Slick were romantically involved and had a
daughter together, China.
Slick posted a photo of Kantner on her Facebook page
Thursday along with a brief tribute: "Rest in peace my friend. Love
Grace."
Multivocal harmonies were a staple of the Airplane, with
male lead singer Marty Balin and Slick soaring over one another and Kantner weaving
in. In a 2011 interview, Kantner said this interplay is "maybe the best
thing I do in the bands that I've been in."
And the music was largely improvisational.
"We are an orchestra without rules," said Kantner,
who was born and raised in San Francisco. "By the time Grace got with us,
I'd just throw the song out on the stage and (say) sing, everybody!"
"We never rehearsed that stuff."
The band performed at three of the legendary music festivals
of the '60s, including the Monterey Pop Festival, Woodstock and the ill-fated
Altamont.
Among the artists that opened for the group were the
Grateful Dead, Santana, the Doors, Jimi Hendrix, Creedence Clearwater Revival,
the Who, Janis Joplin and Big Brother and the Holding Company, and Steve
Miller.
Kantner wrote or co-wrote many of the Airplane's best-known
songs, including "The Ballad of You and Me and Pooneil," "Crown
of Creation," "We Can Be Together" and "Volunteers."
His interest in science fiction and post-apocalyptic themes was perhaps best
exemplified in "Wooden Ships," which he wrote with Stephen Stills and
David Crosby.
The band had broken up by 1973, after which Kantner, Slick
and Balin formed a new band, Jefferson Starship. That band had a string of
soft-rock hits in the 1970s, mostly sung by Balin, including
"Miracles" and "Count on Me."
Kantner was not involved with Slick's spinoff band Starship,
which forged a slicker pop sound and scored No. 1 hits in the '80s with
"We Built This City" and "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now."
On social media some were lamenting Kantner's death as yet
another recent loss for fans of '60s and '70s music. This month has also seen
the deaths of David Bowie, the Eagles' Glenn Frey and Robert Stigwood, famed
producer of the Bee Gees.
In 1996 Jefferson Airplane was inducted into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame along with Gladys Knight and the Pips, Pink Floyd, the Velvet
Underground and Bowie.
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