Volunteers

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (178 ratings)
Volunteers album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 69:31

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Jim Farber

eMusic Contributor

Jim Farber has been writing about music since the Ramones were new. For the last 21 years, he has been chief music critic for the New York Daily News. In additi...more »

06.30.09
Sums up the currents of hippie culture like no other album could
2004 | Label: RCA/BMG Heritage

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 »

Write a Review 6 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Their Best

Biz5th

Great Nicky Hopkins piano and a good selection of songs. I wore out a vinyl copy years ago, and it holds up well.

user avatar

If You Love the Airplane ...

TweezerMan

... then you need this album. Back in the day it did not impress me as much as "Surrealistic Pillow" and "Crown of Creation". In retrospect I think that's because I didn't appreciate the stronger folk influence in some of the tracks, and because, frankly, there are not as many good hooks. But the band is sounding great and this album is a great value as a download.

user avatar

Volunteers (a/k/a "Music from the Revolution")

chris.luhn

This is THE best overall effort JA produced (rivaled only by "Bathing at Baxter's" and "Crown of Creation"). PS: 39 years later, I'm still clueless as to the meaning behind "Minnie Snodgrass lives! Oh gota." (A cryptic bit of silliness printed on my 1967 JA Fan Club card.)

user avatar

This one is a MUST HAVE!

stevebentz

While I remember Woodstock like yesterday, this was the music of that time and it still has that magic (without all of the mud)! Jorma and Jack rock on Good Shepherd and Eskimo Blue Day is one of Grace's best (though Hey Frederick is excellent). Some extra tracks on here make the download quite worth the while.

user avatar

Acid Rock

EMUSIC-009A8603

JA was among the pioneers of this politically uncorrect genre'. You could not hear this over the air on the (am) radio.

user avatar

For All Seasons

timabouttown

Surrealistic Pillow is the one that gets all the attention, but THIS is JA at their best (sez me), their sweetest (Good Shepherd) and most incendiary (Volunteers). Wooden Ships, co-written by JA's Paul Kantner, is a wonder in both studio and live versions, some of the most locked-in grooves they ever played. This is definitely "don't miss" stuff.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Controversial at the time, delayed because of fights with the record company over lyrical content and the original title (Volunteers of America), Volunteers was a powerful release that neatly closed out and wrapped up the ’60s. Here, the Jefferson Airplane presents itself in full revolutionary rhetoric, issuing a call to “tear down the walls” and “get it on together.” “We Can Be Together” and “Volunteers” bookend the album, offering musical variations on the same chord progression and lyrical variations on the same theme. Between these politically charged rock anthems, the band offers a mix of words and music reflecting the competing ideals of simplicity and getting “back to the earth” vs. the overthrow of greed and exploitation through political activism, adding a healthy dollop of psychedelic sci-fi for texture. Guitarist Jorma Kaukonen’s beautiful arrangement of the traditional “Good Shepherd” is a standout here, and Jerry Garcia’s pedal steel guitar gives “The Farm” an appropriately rural feel. The band’s version of “Wooden Ships” is much more eerie than that released earlier in the year by Crosby, Stills & Nash. Oblique psychedelia is offered here via Grace Slick’s “Hey Frederick” and the ecologically tinged “Eskimo Blue Day.” Drummer Spencer Dryden gives an inside look at the state of the band in the country singalong “A Song for All Seasons.” The musical arrangements here are quite potent. Nicky Hopkins’ distinctive piano highlights a number of tracks, and Kaukonen’s razor-toned lead guitar is the recording’s unifying force, blazing through the mix, giving the album its distinctive sound. Although the political bent of the lyrics may seem dated to some, listening to Volunteers is like opening a time capsule on the end of an era, a time when young people still believed music had the power to change the world. [The 2004 reissue of the album comes with the addition of five previously unreleased bonus tracks recorded live at the Fillmore East on November 28 and 29, 1969: "Good Shepherd," "Somebody to Love," "Plastic Fantastic Lover," "Wooden Ships," and "Volunteers."] – Jim Newsom

more »