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| Recorded = December 18, 1965 – March 31, 1966 at RCA Victor's Music Center of the World, Hollywood, CA, USA | Length = 29:19 | Genre = Folk rock | Label = RCA Victor | Producer = Matthew Katz and Tommy Oliver | Last album = | This album = ''Jefferson Airplane Takes Off'' (1966) | Next album = ''Surrealistic Pillow'' (1967) |Misc = }} ''Jefferson Airplane Takes Off'' is the debut album of American rock band Jefferson Airplane, released in August 1966 as RCA Victor LSP-3584 (stereo) & LPM-3584 (mono). The personnel differs from the later "classic" lineup and the music is more folk-rock than the harder psychedelic sound for which the band later became famous. Signe Toly Anderson was the female vocalist and Skip Spence played drums. Both left the group shortly after the album's release and were replaced by Grace Slick and Spencer Dryden, respectively. ==Recording== RCA executives found some of the lyrics too sexually seggestive. They had the band change the lyrics in "Let Me In" from "I gotta get in, you know where" to "You shut your door, not that ain't fair", and "Don't tell me you want money" to "Don't tell me it's so funny". In "Run Around" they had the line "Blinded by colors come flashing from flowers that sway as you lay under me" altered to "that sway as you stay here by me". With "Runnin' 'Round This World" the executives insisted that "trips" in the line "The nights I've spent with you have been fantastic trips" referred to taking LSD, though the band insisted it was merely common slang. Even replacing the word "trips" with a guitar apreggio did not placate RCA's concerns with the line's sexual connotations and refused its inclusion on the album, and the recording remained unreleased for the next eight years. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Jefferson Airplane Takes Off」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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