Jefferson Starship - Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, Maryland, July 1st, 1981 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting) (2025)

  • 23 Apr, 16:06
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Artist:
Title: Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, Maryland, July 1st, 1981 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: DMG
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Psychedelic Rock, Progressive Rock, Soft Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:40:51
Total Size: 602 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Somebody to Love (Live) (03:46)
2. Ride the Tiger (Live) (05:04)
3. Stranger (Live) (05:22)
4. Find Your Way Back (Live) (05:02)
5. Fast Buck Freddie (Live) (03:21)
6. Girl with the Hungry Eyes (Live) (03:35)
7. Save Your Love (Live) (06:27)
8. Alien (Live) (04:43)
9. Mary (Live) (12:21)
10. Jane (Live) (04:30)
11. Mistreater (Live) (03:48)
12. Light the Sky on Fire (Live) (10:39)
13. Dance with the Dragon (Live) (04:37)
14. Dragon Jam (Live) (05:05)
15. Modern Times (Live) (02:41)
16. Guitar Solo (Live) (02:41)
17. White Rabbit (Live) (02:16)
18. Rock Music (Live) (05:59)
19. Wild Eyes (Live) (03:40)
20. Freedom at Point Zero (Live) (05:04)

Jefferson Starship were among the most successful arena rock bands of the 1970s and early '80s. Guitarist Paul Kantner and singer Grace Slick started the group after the disbandment of Jefferson Airplane, adding former Airplane vocalist Marty Balin not much later. Red Octopus, their second album, established Jefferson Starship as a mainstream rock powerhouse. It topped Billboard's album chart and its smooth single "Miracles" gave the band a number three hit that crossed over to the adult contemporary charts. Many Airplane fans decried the Starship's more mainstream musical direction, especially after Airplane singers Grace Slick and Marty Balin departed in 1978. But with shifting personnel still anchored by Kantner and bassist David Freiberg, the group managed to please its new fans, and some old ones, over a period of a decade before shifting gears into even more overtly pop territory and changing names again to simply Starship. Kantner revived Jefferson Starship in the '90s, bringing Freiberg back into the fold in the mid-2000s, and the bassist kept the band going into the 2020s after the 2016 death of Kantner.