eMusic Review 0
If you had to sum up the tribal connection and confrontational politics of hippie culture in 1969 in just one album, you couldn't do better than Volunteers. As much a placard as a piece of music, the album found this San Francisco collective marching through a suite of electric protest songs.
The high-pitched set kicks off with “We Can Be Together,” which declares “we are dirty, lawless, violent and young,” and ends with the title track, which employs the same chords as “Together” but in an intensified version, topped by the orgasmic cry “up against the wall/motherf—ker/Tear down the wall.”
The disc proved once again the Airplane had their finger far up the anus of America in the ’60s. Two years earlier, they nailed the blissful psychedelic Summer of Love with “Surrealistic Pillow.” Here they were screaming bloody murder, right in step with the culture.
Of course, all that would render the album just a historic time capsule if its music didn't rock so hard or flow so beautifully. All four of the band's stars compete in top form on the disc. Paul Kantner's chords never sounded more pitched and beautiful than on “We Can Be Together.” Jorma Kaukenon fashions the most… read more »