Another one, Paul Kantner of the Airplane

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Fire-medic

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From the SF Chronicle:

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Paul Kantner, the Jefferson Airplane guitarist, songwriter and fixture of the San Francisco '60s rock scene, died Thursday, Jan. 28, of septic shock and organ failure, according to his publicist, who confirmed with the San Francisco Chronicle. He was 74.

Kantner's sound -- a blues-based, psychedelic style -- formed the backbone of Jefferson Airplane, a band best known for hits like "White Rabbit" and "Somebody To Love."


He co-founded the group with Marty Balin at the onset of the San Francisco hippie movement. After releasing their debut album, "The Jefferson Airplane Takes Off" in 1966, they soon recruited singer Grace Slick to add powerhouse vocals to their acid-tripping rock sounds that also featured lead guitarist Jorma Kaukonen, bassist Jack Casady and Spencer Dryden, who replaced the band's original drummer, Skip Spence.

The band's 1967 album "Surrealistic Pillow" is considered a high point of the psychedelic era, The group came to define the local scene, and played the first headline gig at legendary rock promoter Bill Graham's venue The Fillmore Auditorium.


They performed one of the most acclaimed sets at Woodstock in 1969, though like many in their scene, saw their movement cut short by the violence at the Altamont festival just months later. At a concert headlined by the Rolling Stones and seen in the 1970 documentary "Gimme Shelter," Balin was attacked during Jefferson Airplane's set by a member of the Hell's Angels, who were hired as security.

Kantner and Slick re-formed the group as Jefferson Starship in 1974, after the band was derailed in its prime by infighting and legal troubles. Kantner officially left that group in 1985, though he toured and recorded under similar monikers for years after. The group also briefly reunited under its original name in 1989.

Kantner was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame along with Jefferson Airplane in 1996. He had suffered heart attacks last year and earlier this week, amidst other health problems. He is survived by sons Gareth and Alexander and daughter China. (end)

I saw them a few times over the years, the first time was about 1970 at Michigan State University in E. Lansing MI, playing w/Chicago and Rod Stewart & Small Faces. I liked their studio presence more than their live performances. Still having my vinyl, I like to hear them, in the original music delivery system. If I haven't played them for awhile, it brings-back all-sorts of old memories of being a teenager/young adult.
 
http://news.yahoo.com/signe-anderson-original-airplane-singer-dead-74-025324240.html

Signe Toly Anderson, a vocalist and original member of the Jefferson Airplane who left the band after its first record and was replaced by Grace Slick, has died.
Anderson died Thursday at her home in Beaverton, Oregon, according to her daughter, Onateska Ladybug Sherwood. Anderson was 74 and had been suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Anderson, who survived cancer in her 30s, died on the same day that another Airplane member, Paul Kantner, died.

Born Signe Toly in Seattle and raised in Portland, Oregon after her parents divorced, she was a folk and jazz singer who had performed in groups since high school. She moved to San Francisco in her 20s and began appearing at a popular folk club, the Drinking Gourd. Vocalist Marty Balin heard her sing and asked her to join what became the Jefferson Airplane, which in 1966 released “The Jefferson Airplane Takes Off.” Strongly influenced by the folk-rock sound of the time, “Takes Off” was a word-of-mouth hit that combined original songs and covers, including a showcase for Anderson and her soulful contralto, “Chauffeur Blues.”

But by the time the album came out, Anderson had given birth to her first child and she left after a farewell concert at the Fillmore in October 1966. The switch from Anderson to Slick, formerly of the San Francisco group the Great Society, proved momentous for the Airplane and for rock history. Slick brought with her two future standards, “Somebody to Love” and “White Rabbit,” and a fierce vocal style and confrontational attitude that departed notably from Anderson’s. The next album, “Surrealistic Pillow,” was a landmark of psychedelic rock that made the Airplane superstars and representatives of the “San Francisco Sound.”

“You have to look at the priorities in your life, the reality in your life,” Anderson told radio station KGON in Portland in 2011, remembering the ordeals of bringing her baby on tour. “I had to wait in the San Francisco airport in July of 1966 for 36 hours before we got on the airplane and flew to Chicago. All the diapers were gone.” “I don’t regret having left,” she added.

Anderson was a footnote in the Airplane’s history, but was regarded with respect and affection by fans and stayed in touch with Kantner, Balin and other band members with whom she performed on occasion over the following decades. On Facebook, bassist Jack Casady remembered her as “a real sweetheart with a terrific contralto voice.” Airplane guitarist Jorma Kaukonen wrote on his blog that Anderson was “our den mother in the early days of the Airplane” a voice of reason for “our dysfunctional little family.” Balin, writing on Facebook, imagined that she and Kantner “woke up in heaven and said ‘Hey what are you doing here? Let’s start a band.’”

Anderson was married twice, to Merry Prankster Jerry Anderson and to Michael Alois Ettlin, who died in 2011. She is survived by two children and three grandchildren.
 

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