eMusic Review 0
They may have turned into everything wrong with the rich-hippie ethos even before evolving into various spacecraft, but when Jefferson Airplane stepped into the greater public eye with this album, they became the ultimate draw for kids discovering the San Francisco acid-rock ethos — and for good reason. More than four decades after it was waxed, Surrealistic Pillow still carries the immediacy of its times: it sounds even now like a new thing coming around the corner, spiky folk-rock juiced by propulsive interplay, both instrumental and vocal, an unstinting eye for adventure, and an almost offhanded anti-authoritarian sensibility that the group itself eventually started taking too seriously. It's the very model of classic psychedelic rock.
You could remove the two iconic hit singles from Surrealistic Pillow and still have a first-rate album (albeit a short one). "She Has Funny Cars" opens things with an ominous touch, Grace Slick gliding coolly over and then in passionate tandem with Marty Balin while his bass guides us into the dark. Balin and Paul Kantner co-wrote the gentle "Today," a West Coast match for the Velvet Underground's "I'll Be Your Mirror." "How Do You Feel" is acid-folk with frost at the edges. Still,… read more »