EPISODE · Jun 15, 2026 · 59 MIN
Jefferson Airplane — Crown of Creation
from 30 Albums For 30 Years (1964-1994) · host Jay Sweet
Jefferson Airplane — Crown of Creation (RCA Victor) Release Date: September 1968Released in September 1968, Jefferson Airplane’s Crown of Creation stands as one of the strongest and most cohesive statements of the San Francisco psychedelic era. Arriving after the more experimental After Bathing at Baxter’s, the album balances adventurous studio textures with more focused songwriting, creating a record that is both accessible and artistically ambitious. The classic lineup of Grace Slick, Marty Balin, Paul Kantner, Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady, and Spencer Dryden was operating at its creative peak, with each member contributing distinctive musical and lyrical ideas. Songs such as “Lather,” “Triad,” “Greasy Heart,” the title track, and “The House at Pooneil Corners” explore themes of adulthood, social change, war, personal freedom, and cultural uncertainty. The album’s famous mushroom-cloud cover reflected the tensions of the Cold War and the turbulent climate of 1968. Although it produced no major hit single, Crown of Creation reached No. 6 on the Billboard chart and remains one of Jefferson Airplane’s most compelling, intelligent, and enduring recordings. (S5-EP23)
What this episode covers
Jefferson Airplane — Crown of Creation (RCA Victor) Release Date: September 1968Released in September 1968, Jefferson Airplane’s Crown of Creation stands as one of the strongest and most cohesive statements of the San Francisco psychedelic era. Arriving after the more experimental After Bathing at Baxter’s, the album balances adventurous studio textures with more focused songwriting, creating a record that is both accessible and artistically ambitious. The classic lineup of Grace Slick, Marty Balin, Paul Kantner, Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady, and Spencer Dryden was operating at its creative peak, with each member contributing distinctive musical and lyrical ideas. Songs such as “Lather,” “Triad,” “Greasy Heart,” the title track, and “The House at Pooneil Corners” explore themes of adulthood, social change, war, personal freedom, and cultural uncertainty. The album’s famous mushroom-cloud cover reflected the tensions of the Cold War and the turbulent climate of 1968. Although it produced no major hit single, Crown of Creation reached No. 6 on the Billboard chart and remains one of Jefferson Airplane’s most compelling, intelligent, and enduring recordings. (S5-EP23)
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Jefferson Airplane — Crown of Creation
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