• Download Shazam

Embryonic Journey

Jefferson airplane, music video, featured in, top songs by jefferson airplane, similar songs, shazam footer.

  • Help for Apple Devices
  • Help for Android Devices
  • ShazamKit for Developers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Your Data

Watch {trackName} music video by {artistName}

Spotify is currently not available in your country.

Follow us online to find out when we launch., spotify gives you instant access to millions of songs – from old favorites to the latest hits. just hit play to stream anything you like..

embryonic journey song

Listen everywhere

Spotify works on your computer, mobile, tablet and TV.

embryonic journey song

Unlimited, ad-free music

No ads. No interruptions. Just music.

embryonic journey song

Download music & listen offline

Keep playing, even when you don't have a connection.

embryonic journey song

Premium sounds better

Get ready for incredible sound quality.

Acid daze and revolution: Jefferson Airplane's long summer of love

They wowed Woodstock, got attacked at Altamont and blew minds at Monterey. The rest of the time they made era-defining records, fried their brains on acid, and shagged each other

Jefferson Airplane in May 1967

“Sex, drugs, rock’n’roll, freedom, art, literature, poetry, Haight Street – it was just Heaven on Earth.”

Jefferson Airplane guitarist Paul Kantner’s description of San Francisco in the mid-60s is also what Jefferson Airplane represented musically. They were the sound of the city’s psychedelic experience and, more specifically, the soundtrack to 1967’s Summer Of Love, courtesy of two major hits: the acid-fuelled White Rabbit and Somebody To Love , a timeless hymn for hippies everywhere – ‘When the truth is found to be lies/And all the joy within you dies/Don’t you want somebody to love?’ .

It wasn’t just the chemicals inside the band members. It was also the chemistry between them, epitomised by the contrasting dynamics of the two singers: the exquisite, yearning vocals of Marty Balin, and the imperious, strident tones of Grace Slick . “We had this wild, intense chemistry between us,” Balin says. “Most people thought we were married or having this great affair. But it was just on stage.”

Slick confirms this in her own inimitable style. “Marty was remote off stage. He was just not real chummy. He was the only one in the band I didn’t screw.”

Balin was the one who guided Jefferson Airplane to the runway – albeit prior to Slick. He had released a couple of unsuccessful pop singles in the early 60s and been in a local folk band called the Town Criers. When he heard The Byrds’ Mr Tambourine Man he started envisaging a band that would be a cross between amplified folk and The Beatles .

There was a certain blind intuition involved in putting the band together. Balin had never heard Kantner play, but when he saw this long-haired guy carrying a 12-string and a banjo he walked straight up to him and suggested they form a band. Similarly, when he came across Skip Spence sitting in a club, he decided instantly that he was the band’s drummer. Spence had never played drums, he was a guitarist, but Balin persuaded him to swap his plectrum for a pair of sticks.

They still needed another guitarist. Kantner had his eye on Jorma Kaukonen, who was making a reputation for himself as a solo performer around the clubs. Kaukonen needed more persuasion however. “I was kinda reluctant,” he recalls. “I’d never played in a band before. Plus these guys were not into what I called pure music. Which I know is baloney now, but that’s what I thought at the time. So it wasn’t until I started hanging out with them and that it became apparent something was happening.”

Classic Rock Newsletter

Sign up below to get the latest from Classic Rock, plus exclusive special offers, direct to your inbox!

Jefferson Airplane in 1970

However, Kaukonen was not enamoured with the bass player. And when he discovered that his high-school buddy back in Washington DC, Jack Casady, had started playing bass, he lured him over to California. “When Jorma told me about this group he was joining, I said: ‘You? The purist?’” says Casady, who had just finished his college thesis on child ballads and the folk music tradition. “But he sounded really enthusiastic about it, and I decided to go out and give it a try.”

Balin and Kantner had already decided they needed a female voice, and folk singer Signe Anderson’s rich, powerful tones fitted the bill perfectly. It was Kaukonen who came up with the name Jefferson Airplane. Everybody else laughed when he suggested it, but when everybody else they told laughed as well they decided to go with it.

The band made their debut at the Matrix Club, owned by Balin and some of his more entrepreneurial mates, and soon became regular fixtures on the thriving San Francisco live scene which revolved around three of the city’s venerable ballrooms: the Fillmore, the Avalon and the Carousel.

Jefferson Airplane were not the first psychedelic band in San Francisco – Janis Joplin was already making waves in Big Brother & The Holding Company, The Grateful Dead were gradually getting their act together – but they had a musical focus and a sense of purpose that set them apart. And they were the first to land a record contract – with the ultra-straight RCA Records for an advance of $25,000, five times the going rate.

Jefferson Airplane Takes Off , released in September 1966, had a modern folk feel to it, in a jangly, Byrdsy way. It was dominated by Balin’s expansive ballads – he wrote or co-wrote eight of the 11 tracks – and there was little sign of the influence of LSD unless you listened closely.

RCA didn’t until the record came out. But when they heard Running ’Round This World , with its lyric, ‘The nights I’ve spent with you have been fantastic trips’, they got very hot under their starched collars. It was clearly an incitement to sex and/or drugs. The record pressing plant was halted and the was track pulled. RCA then listened to the rest of the album, and demanded alterations to the lyrics of two other songs. But Jefferson Airplane would get their revenge.

aul Kantner and Grace Slick backstage at Hunter College in New York City

Meanwhile, there were more important matters to attend to. One day, they got to a gig to discover that Skip Spence had decided to go to Mexico instead. That wasn’t too serious; his replacement, Spencer Dryden, was a proper drummer. But then Signe Anderson started imposing travel restrictions on the group. Or as Balin puts it: “She got pregnant and she had a crazy husband and didn’t want to move outside the city.”

There were only two other girl singers in San Francisco: Janis Joplin and the well-bred Grace Slick who had been working as a model in the couturier department of I Magnin’s department store before forming a band called The Great Society.

“We formed the band after we went to see Airplane one night,” Slick relates, “and I thought: ‘They’re making more than me and they only work two hours a night and they get to drink and smoke dope’. My mother had been a singer, and I thought: ‘I can do that’. My husband had a set of drums at his parents’ house, so it was: ‘You be the drummer’. And his brother Darby had a guitar. But compared to Jack and Jorma we were amateur hour.”

Slick accepted immediately the offer to board the Airplane. In fact The Great Society were disintegrating – along with her marriage. Along with her voice and model deportment, she brought two songs that would enable Jefferson Airplane to take off: Somebody To Love , written by her brother-in-law Darby one night on an acid trip after being dumped by his girlfriend, and her own White Rabbit .

Not that she envisaged her Alice In Wonderland -based fable as a hit. “I wasn’t even thinking of hits. I was just so tired of all the damn love songs. I was just trying to up the possibilities.”

For the record, the dormouse never actually said ‘Feed your head’, did he?

“No, I just made that up.”

Both songs were among the highlights of 1966’s Surrealistic Pillow , Airplane’s second and finest album. It features some of the sweetest songs they ever wrote – Today , My Best Friend , How Do You Feel? – with some of their most ferocious: 3/5ths Of A Mile In 10 Seconds (the $65 that ‘make a poor man holler’ is a comment on the price of a kilo of marijuana) and Plastic Fantastic Lover . Suddenly the whole band were firing, individually and collectively. The Airplane were flying high.

A poster for Jefferson Airplane and The Grateful Dead at the Fillmore in San Francisco

“That was the thing I liked about it,” says Slick. “It was like a smorgasbord. Jorma and Jack were more blues oriented; Paul was 12-string big, grand, Wagnerian cosmic political folk; I’m kind of dark and sarcastic and semi-classical; and Marty was a great love/pop song writer. So you got four for the price of one. And my way of treating stuff is different from Marty’s. And so on.”

About the only common influence was LSD. (There are accounts of the band throwing bagfuls of acid tabs into the audience like M&Ms; LSD was not actually made illegal until late 1966). So it seemed only natural that their next album should be the sound of an acid trip. After Bathing At Baxters has been described by Paul Kantner as “pure LSD among 13 other things”. Nobody can remember what the 13 other things were, but Grace Slick has a memory of “Jack recording a bass part in this huge, gorgeous acoustic room at RCA’s Hollywood studios, and Jorma riding into the studio on his motorbike. Meanwhile there are six guys in the corner sucking on a nitrous oxide cylinder. That’s After Bathing At Baxters .”

Given unlimited studio time by a record company who thought they were going to get Son Of Surrealistic Pillow , the band took full advantage, demanding to produce themselves. Kaukonen and and Casady regard it as their breakthrough album. “We started to learn how to do a lot of stuff with electric guitars – feedback and stuff,” Kaukonen says. “Nowadays every kid learns this as part of their basic guitar vocabulary. But back then it was all different and new. I remember the first time my guitar fed back with a sustained note it was, ‘Wow, really cool’.”

The 12-second guitar wail that opens the album is a defiant portent of the band’s wilful determination to boldly go where no commercially successful band had dared to go before. Unfortunately, amid the jamboree of distorted bass, spacey jams and incomprehensible lyrics no one remembered to bring along any melodies. Marty Balin, who should have provided a few, decided to sit this record out, complaining that he was unable to communicate with the others who were “too stoned out”.

He was also miffed at the growing media perception of the band as Grace Slick & The Jefferson Airplane. Watching footage of the band with the camera zeroing in on Slick while Balin is singing, you can see his point. To be fair, Slick never claimed to be any kind of band leader, but she said what she thought. She thought Balin was “mysterious. He would occasionally just not be there.”

Even when Balin was there he could be upstaged by Slick at any moment. Like the time she blacked up for an appearance on the Smothers Brothers’ TV show without telling anyone: “They sent me to make-up, and there was every colour known to man on this tray. Including black. And I had this white outfit on, and I thought, ‘Aoow yeah!’. But the thing was, because of my features I didn’t look black. I looked like some Indian woman. The band just looked at me and went: ‘Oh God.’”

To the relief of the record company, the next album was mellower than its acid-fried predecessor. Relatively. Balin was back on board. Kantner’s writing was taking on a more strident quality, particularly on the album’s stirring title track, Crown Of Creation . Slick was having fun at the expense of drummer Spencer Dryden who’d just turned 30 (“He was the most child-like of all of us”), as well as the male psyche on Greasy Heart – ‘Girls, wonder why he wants some more when he’s just had some?’ . By now it was 1968 and Jefferson Airplane were rolling with the punches.

Politically they upped their profile by playing a charity show for Robert Kennedy, a few months before his assassination. They also raised their avant-garde profile by playing a rooftop concert in New York (a year before the Beatles did the same thing in London) which was filmed by Jean Luc Godard and D.A. Pennebaker, and Balin managed to get himself arrested by the cops when they came to break it up.

The Airplane had several run-ins with the law – not surprisingly, as the authorities correctly believed them to be to the left of Chairman Mao. Some of this was self-inflicted – like when Casady gallantly agreed to test-drive a new drug called STP. An hallucinogenic first synthesised by Alexander Shulgin, STP was stronger than LSD and unfortunately the manufacturers were still have problems figuring the correct dosage. Casady was arrested after being found naked on Santa Cruz Beach, drawing pictures in the sand.

Grace Slick at a label party for the band as they arrived in London

Ohio police seemed have a particular problem with the Airplane, busting them virtually every time they crossed the State line. This could have had something to do with an earlier fracas (caused, as usual, after security started beating up fans and the band started hitting the security) when Kantner spiked the police officers’ drinks while they were laboriously being bailed. Slick can still remember riding back to the hotel and chuckling: “About now they’re gonna be wondering what’s hit them.”

So a European tour with The Doors provided some light relief. As well as two shows at London’s Roundhouse , the Airplane also played the Isle of Wight Festival a year before it turned into a mega-event, and a free gig on Parliament Hill Fields in London.

If Slick was becoming blasé about Airplane’s drug intake, Jim Morrison ’s was a revelation: “He basically used himself as a lab rat. He was trying to find out how far you could fuck the human mind up. I remember walking down the street in Amsterdam with him, and kids were running up to us and giving us drugs. I’d politely decline, or take a joint to save for later, but Jim took everything they gave him. That night he came on stage looking like a pinwheel. They had to take him to the hospital afterward he was so fucked up.”

That didn’t stop Slick adding Morrison to her portfolio. She can’t remember which city it was, although she can recall the room décor.

On stage Jefferson Airplane cut the studio crap and spread their wings in a different way, which they caught successfully on the Bless Its Pointed Little Head live album in 1969. Balin remembers that Kaukonen started it: “He just took off one night and it was amazing. The next night he did it again, and this time we all joined in; you’d have this subconscious communication on acid.”

The next studio album, Volunteers , took a more overtly political turn, and Kantner found some grist for his increasingly anthemic songs. The swirling harmonies on the seemingly benign We Can Be Together could not disguise the recurring phrase ‘Up against the wall, motherfuckers’ . RCA Records were apoplectic, Airplane were adamant – and, after a three-week stand-off, they prevailed.

Even Balin’s idea for the album’s title track – which came to him when he was woken by the sound of a noisy garbage truck which had ‘Volunteers Of America’ emblazoned down the side – was hijacked by Kantner for a rallying call to the counter culture.

“I have to say that when it got more political it kind of lost certain members of the band,” says Casady, who found solace in a side project with Kaukonen called Hot Tuna, who frequently opened for the Airplane at concerts.

Jefferson Airplane at Woodstock Festival

Musically the Airplane were by now getting heavier. “We were being influenced by some of the bands around us,” says Casady. “Cream had come over and opened up all kinds of possibilities. And I became good buddies with Mitch Mitchell of the Jimi Hendrix Experience, and ended up playing on a track on the Electric Ladyland album.”

But neither Casady nor Kaukonen was ready to leave Jefferson Airplane yet. In fact We Can Be Together remains one of Kaukonen’s favourite songs.“You’re not gonna believe this but I’ve completely forgotten what the lyrics were about,” he says. “It was the beauty of the music. A lot of the time we’d be playing away and I wouldn’t even hear what Paul was singing.”

Balin, though, had had enough. He quit after Volunteers was released, citing Janis Joplin’s death as the reason. “It was dark times,” he told Airplane biographer Jeff Tamarkin. “Everybody was doing so much drugs. Cocaine was a big deal at that time, and I couldn’t talk with people who had an answer for every goddam thing, rationalising everything that happened. And I thought it made the music tight and constrictive. So after Janis died I thought, I’m not going to go on stage and play that kind of music.” There is a general consensus among the band that Volunteers is the last ‘real’ Jefferson Airplane album.

Spencer Dryden was also feeling the pace and was replaced by young hotshot drummer Joey Covington (Dryden died of lung cancer at the beginning of 2005).

Balin was not replaced as such. Instead the band brought in Papa John Creach, a tall, thin, black, white-haired (what there was of it) 53-year-old jazz and blues fiddle player. “The point was, he was an incredible showman as well as a great musician,” says Casady, who also lured him into Hot Tuna.

Jefferson Airplane released two more studio albums, Bark and Long John Silver , both of which have their moments. Kantner’s polemic was now taking on cosmic dimensions with the epic-sounding Have You Seen The Saucers? and When The Earth Moves Again . In contrast there’s the sublime, in-the-groove Pretty As You Feel that was edited down from a 30-minute jam that included Carlos Santana. “That was just a bunch of us in the studio,” Kaukonen says. “Luckily the tape was rolling, and Joey Covington wrote a song around it.”

And Kaukonen’s best Airplane song – apart from the stunning instrumental vignette Embryonic Journey , on Surrealistic Pillow – is definitely the wistful, restless Third Week In The Chelsea , about the ennui of life of the road. “It’s a nice song, even if I say so myself,” he agrees. “And Grace did a fine job on it too. I guess the pressure was beginning to tell on me by then.”

Jefferson Airplane circa 1970

The Airplane taxied in and ground to a halt in late 1972, although there was the inevitable live album, 30 Seconds Over Winterland , the following year. Slick had decided to sample parenthood with Kantner, and, as she put it at the time: “It’s hard to babysit while you’re hallucinating.”

Casady and Kaukonen decided to devote all their energies to Hot Tuna. “The chemistry that made Jefferson Airplane great was a loose and fragile thing. You can look back on it and think, well maybe we should have done this or that. But we didn’t. I’m still playing with Jorma now – we’ve been together for 46 years – and there’s a great chemistry between us and the rest of the band. But that magical chemistry we had in Jefferson Airplane is very hard to recapture.”

And are they as wild as they used to be? “The only drugs we compare these days,” says Casady, “are cholesterol medications.”

This article originally appeared in Classic Rock 84, in September 2005

Hugh Fielder

Hugh Fielder has been writing about music for 47 years. Actually 58 if you include the essay he wrote about the Rolling Stones in exchange for taking time off school to see them at the Ipswich Gaumont in 1964. He was news editor of Sounds magazine from 1975 to 1992 and editor of Tower Records Top magazine from 1992 to 2001. Since then he has been freelance. He has interviewed the great, the good and the not so good and written books about some of them. His favourite possession is a piece of columnar basalt he brought back from Iceland.

"If you just stay in your comfort zone all the time, you keep writing the same type of songs over and over again": They almost called it a day, but the Pineapple Thief are rejuvenated and regenerated

"We were young and crazy. We were trying to do all the things that Led Zeppelin did": What happened when Billy Corgan interviewed Eddie Van Halen

“Not dissimilar to the sound Radiohead would later explore on King Of Limbs”: With the help of Brian Eno, Coldplay dipped into prog with Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends

Most Popular

embryonic journey song

Observer Logo

  • Entertainment
  • Rex Reed Reviews
  • Awards Shows
  • Climate Change
  • Restaurants
  • Gift Guides
  • Business of Art
  • Nightlife & Dining
  • About Observer
  • Advertise With Us

The Enduring Mystery of Jefferson Airplane’s ‘Surrealistic Pillow’

The ingredient that makes jefferson airplane's "surrealistic pillow" such a classic is a name many know, but one you wouldn't likely expect..

Jefferson Airplane

Long before the word “unplugged” became part of our common vernacular, an evocative instrumental, barely under two minutes long appeared on Jefferson Airplane ’s 1967 opus Surrealistic Pillow . The first piece of music guitarist Jorma Kaukonen ever wrote, “Embryonic Journey” was a six-string meditation that encapsulated the mood of the 1960s as powerfully as any song of that era (with or without lyrics).

Sign Up For Our Daily Newsletter

Thank you for signing up!

By clicking submit, you agree to our <a rel="nofollow noreferer" href="http://observermedia.com/terms">terms of service</a> and acknowledge we may use your information to send you emails, product samples, and promotions on this website and other properties. You can opt out anytime.

“ ‘Embryonic Journey’ made me sit up and take notice of Jorma’s remarkable acoustic playing,” exclaimed former Captain Beefheart guitarist Gary Lucas . “It is one of the most crystalline, beautiful compositions ever, right up there with John Fahey at his best.”

Blending modal sitar-inspired raga riffs with the Piedmont finger-picking style of Reverend Gary Davis, Kaukonen’s tune quickly became a favorite of DJs back in the days of free-form FM radio, who regularly employed it as either a lead-in or chaser to the news of the day, most of it bad, grim reports of inner-city riots or the escalating war in Vietnam. Fifty years later, that piece of music has been lodged in our collective consciousness.

Released on February 1, 1967, the Airplane’s second album (and the first to showcase Grace Slick , who replaced Signe Anderson, a recent mother who left the band to care for her baby) contained two of their greatest hits: “Somebody To Love,” which featured Slick’s gale-force vocals and Kaukonen’s howling guitar as well as the creeping, claustrophobic bolero, “White Rabbit,” complete with a Lewis Carroll-inspired lyric built on the insistent pulse of Jack Casady ’s bass.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4YSHQuQILkY?list=PLVPGzOHIIgz_PYsW0wurklbMPdL_HIGYa&w=560&h=315]

“Jack falls somewhere between John Entwistle and [Motown session bassist] James Jamerson,” asserts Victor Krummenacher, bassist with Santa Cruz rock stalwarts Camper Van Beethoven . “He’s more accurate than McCartney, but not as melodic. He’s got a strong groove and is good with a fast fill. He knows how to propel the music in interesting ways. Jack knows his job and doesn’t get in the way, which is admirable.”

Before performing at the idyllic Monterey Pop Festival (June 16-18 ,  1967) where the band played an explosive set to the first mass-gathering of the mushrooming counter-culture, the Airplane appeared on American Bandstand on June 3. The show’s host, “America’s Oldest Teenager,” Dick Clark informed his teenybopper audience that there was “a whole new scene [happening] in San Francisco” before he awkwardly attempted to interview the band, who, donning a variety of sunglasses, stood before the image of a creepy old Victorian mansion that resembled the run-down residence of Norman Bates in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho .

Clad in a black hoodie, Grace Slick looked like a menacing cult den-mother while Casady smirked a Cheshire cat smile as he played, entangled in a spider-web of guitar cables. During “White Rabbit” the camera intermittently cut between upside down shots of the band and a slow-spurting lava lamp.

But it’s Paul Kantner ’s casual reply to Clark’s question of whether parents have any reason to fear the recent trends amongst America’s youth that still stands out today as a telling moment of the Summer of Love. “I think so,” Kanter answered. “Their children are doing things that they don’t understand.”

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tKtJ0XTwgTE&w=560&h=315]

Although the media generally fixated on Slick, listening to the Airplane one had to wonder who actually was the lead singer of the band.

At any moment there could be three—Marty Balin, Grace Slick, Paul Kantner—or four, as Kaukonen would join in from time to time, as well as offering the occasional songwriting gem like “Good Shepherd” (from 1969’s Volunteers ). Their voices would swoop and weave, circling, chasing each other, until ultimately coming together like a ragged Wagnerian choir. Meanwhile, Kaukonen’s snaky lead guitar smoldered with blues and stinging tremolo overtones that threatened to obliterate the song altogether.

Were Kaukonen’s improvisations, like many psychedelic guitarists of the day, inspired by the modal jazz of John Coltrane and the mesmerizing ragas played by the Bengali sitar master Ravi Shankar?

“Oh, absolutely,” Kaukonen said in a recent interview. “We just didn’t know that much about harmony at the time. Back in the ’60s when anyone wanted to play raga they just smoked a bunch of pot and started playing away. But now you’ve got a guy like Derek Trucks. When he wanted to play raga, he went to India and studied for a year.”

“Jorma is one of the finest exemplars of the San Francisco raga style of electric guitar playing in terms of his overall attack and modal scale approach,” Gary Lucas explained. “The nearest contemporary comparison at the time would be Mike Bloomfield on Paul Butterfield’s East-West . Bringing it geographically closer would be John Cippolina [the prodigious guitarist with Quicksilver Messenger Service] with ‘The Fool.’ All were adept at using waves of sustained feedback while brushing neighboring sympathetic open strings adjacent to the primary articulated lead string as drone generators.”

American rock group Jefferson Airplane performs on stage at the Central Park bandshell, New York City, August 1969. L-R: Guitarist Paul Kantner, drummer Spencer Dryden, singer Grace Slick, guitarist Jorma Kaukonen, bassist Jack Casady, singer Marty Balin.

“But the key ingredient that gives them all that raga sound is their signature vibrato in the fingers of the left hand which causes the picked string to sing like the keening wailing human voice of the ghazal or quawalli singers of India and Pakistan. In Jorma’s case, his tone and attack is uniquely singular and always unmistakably his. You would never mistake him for any other guitarist but Jorma.”

Speaking of guitar innovators, the unsolved mystery of Jerry Garcia ’s role in the making of Surrealistic Pillow still looms large to this day. I now hand the reins over to Oliver Trager , author of The American Book of the Dead , an obsessive encyclopedia of the Grateful Dead’s sprawling legacy, to help fill in the cracks of this long-time enigma:

“The first time many of us ever heard the name Jerry Garcia was on the back LP cover of  Surrealistic Pillow  where he was acknowledged as ‘Musical and Spiritual Adviser.’ In listening to the album today, Jerry’s touch can be heard all over it. Songs such as ‘Today’ and ‘How Do You Feel?’ are imbued with an alternately sweet and autumnal hopeful melancholia that the Dead would capture on their Aoxomoxoa – era material (think ‘Mountains of the Moon’ and ‘Rosemary’). Jerry’s sensibility of what a song could sound like and what an album should be was a gentle force on the nascent San Francisco scene and sound, one that endured for a solid three decades.”

Haight Ashbury’s benevolent guru, “Captain Trips,” as Jerry was once known, is said to have named the album when he spontaneously quipped that one of the album’s tracks was “surrealistic as a pillow.”

Jefferson Airplane

O.K., it’s time, as they say, to “give the drummer some.”

The first sound you hear on Surrealistic Pillow is the reverb-drenched thunder of Spencer Dryden ’s drums pounding out a respectable Bo Diddley rhythm on Marty Balin’s “She Has Funny Cars.” Barry Melton, a.k.a., “The Fish,” lead guitarist with Country Joe & the Fish, recalls his old friend and occasional jam partner Dryden: “He was an extraordinary musician. Spencer had an extraordinary feel for ‘the groove,’ and when he was on, he would find it instantly. I wanted to tell him to cut back on his drinking, but it was obvious that he could never lose his bearings no matter how much he consumed. The ‘feel’ or ‘the groove’ was the most important thing about music to Spencer; and he could talk about it for hours. He knew where it was and how to get there.”

Beyond the hits, Surrealistic Pillow offered a wide assortment of songs strung together like a bright glittering chunky necklace of love beads. Written by the tragic Skip Spence , the Airplane’s drummer who jumped ship to form the fabled but doomed Moby Grape, “My Best Friend” evoked the Mamas and the Papas’ lilting sound as Slick and Balin’s vocals volleyed playfully back and forth on the song’s coda.

“Today” is a soul-searching ballad that featured Marty Balin, along with sweet harmonies from Slick and Kanter and a dusting of (the phantom guest star) Jerry Garcia’s sparkling lead guitar.

Jefferson Airplane

The introspective “Comin’ Back to Me” is a perfect example of ’60s-style mind-melting musical meandering. Following this momentary bout of belly-button gazing, “3/5’s of a Mile in 10 Seconds,” as its title (randomly inspired by a newspaper headline seen by Balin) suggests, smokes like a patch of freshly laid rubber, bursting with the kind of fire and edge that was previously the domain of Brit invasion bands like the Stones, Kinks and the Who.

Another sweet, easy-grooving Mamas and the Papas-style folk-rocker, complete with an echo-drenched recorder tootled by Slick, “How Do You Feel” seemed to pose a gentle reply to Dylan’s “Like a Rolling Stone,” when Dylan crowed “How does it feel?” And speaking of Dylan, the influence of his fractured poetry on “Subterranean Homesick Blues” is all over the abstract lyrics in “Plastic Fantastic Lover.”

Play Surrealistic Pillow loud and in its entirety. It unfolds from song to song like a strange flower whose aural perfume continues to intoxicate 50 years on.

The Enduring Mystery of Jefferson Airplane’s ‘Surrealistic Pillow’

  • SEE ALSO : This Is Why You Couldn’t Get Tickets for the Radiohead Concert at MSG

We noticed you're using an ad blocker.

We get it: you like to have control of your own internet experience. But advertising revenue helps support our journalism. To read our full stories, please turn off your ad blocker. We'd really appreciate it.

How Do I Whitelist Observer?

Below are steps you can take in order to whitelist Observer.com on your browser:

For Adblock:

Click the AdBlock button on your browser and select Don't run on pages on this domain .

For Adblock Plus on Google Chrome:

Click the AdBlock Plus button on your browser and select Enabled on this site.

For Adblock Plus on Firefox:

Click the AdBlock Plus button on your browser and select Disable on Observer.com.

embryonic journey song

We will keep fighting for all libraries - stand with us!

Internet Archive Audio

embryonic journey song

  • This Just In
  • Grateful Dead
  • Old Time Radio
  • 78 RPMs and Cylinder Recordings
  • Audio Books & Poetry
  • Computers, Technology and Science
  • Music, Arts & Culture
  • News & Public Affairs
  • Spirituality & Religion
  • Radio News Archive

embryonic journey song

  • Flickr Commons
  • Occupy Wall Street Flickr
  • NASA Images
  • Solar System Collection
  • Ames Research Center

embryonic journey song

  • All Software
  • Old School Emulation
  • MS-DOS Games
  • Historical Software
  • Classic PC Games
  • Software Library
  • Kodi Archive and Support File
  • Vintage Software
  • CD-ROM Software
  • CD-ROM Software Library
  • Software Sites
  • Tucows Software Library
  • Shareware CD-ROMs
  • Software Capsules Compilation
  • CD-ROM Images
  • ZX Spectrum
  • DOOM Level CD

embryonic journey song

  • Smithsonian Libraries
  • FEDLINK (US)
  • Lincoln Collection
  • American Libraries
  • Canadian Libraries
  • Universal Library
  • Project Gutenberg
  • Children's Library
  • Biodiversity Heritage Library
  • Books by Language
  • Additional Collections

embryonic journey song

  • Prelinger Archives
  • Democracy Now!
  • Occupy Wall Street
  • TV NSA Clip Library
  • Animation & Cartoons
  • Arts & Music
  • Computers & Technology
  • Cultural & Academic Films
  • Ephemeral Films
  • Sports Videos
  • Videogame Videos
  • Youth Media

Search the history of over 866 billion web pages on the Internet.

Mobile Apps

  • Wayback Machine (iOS)
  • Wayback Machine (Android)

Browser Extensions

Archive-it subscription.

  • Explore the Collections
  • Build Collections

Save Page Now

Capture a web page as it appears now for use as a trusted citation in the future.

Please enter a valid web address

  • Donate Donate icon An illustration of a heart shape

Embryonic journey

Audio with external links item preview, share or embed this item, flag this item for.

  • Graphic Violence
  • Explicit Sexual Content
  • Hate Speech
  • Misinformation/Disinformation
  • Marketing/Phishing/Advertising
  • Misleading/Inaccurate/Missing Metadata

plus-circle Add Review comment Reviews

2,572 Views

DOWNLOAD OPTIONS

In collections.

Uploaded by zoopalast on September 30, 2010

SIMILAR ITEMS (based on metadata)

Songfacts Logo

  • Songwriter Interviews
  • Song Writing
  • Fact or Fiction
  • They're Playing My Song
  • Songfacts Pages
  • Songwriting Legends
  • Songfacts Podcast
  • Amanda Flinner
  • Bruce Pollock
  • Corey O'Flanagan
  • Dan MacIntosh
  • Laura Antonelli
  • Leslie Michele Derrough
  • Maggie Grimason
  • Nicole Roberge
  • Roger Catlin
  • Shawna Ortega
  • Stephanie Myers
  • Trevor Morelli

Embryonic Journey by Jefferson Airplane

embryonic journey song

Songfacts®:

  • This song is an acoustic instrumental showcasing guitarist Jorma Kaukonen's formidable fingerpicking style. According to the album's liner notes, Kaukonen composed the tune in 1962 as part of a guitar workshop in Santa Clara and included it on Surrealistic Pillow at the band's behest. >> Suggestion credit : Mark - Hot Springs, CA
  • In "Embryonic Journey," Jorma Kaukonen captures optimism in an instrumental. "I wish I could tell you how that came to pass," he told Mojo magazine. "I was obviously in an in-the-moment process that I was able to capture it as it happened. I was fooling around in a drop D tuning in a workshop I was giving. A friend said 'you oughta check that out.' So I made it into a song. It just made sense to me."
  • "Embryonic Journey" plays at the end of the credits for the 1980 documentary Berkeley in the Sixties . Other uses of the song in movies include: 1982 dramedy Purple Haze 1999 drama A Walk on the Moon 2002 sports drama The Rookie "Embryonic Journey" also played in the final Friends episode (titled "The Last One"), and in Ken Burns' 2017 TV documentary series The Vietnam War .
  • More songs from Jefferson Airplane
  • More instrumental songs
  • More songs used in movies
  • More songs used in TV shows
  • More songs from 1967
  • Jefferson Airplane Artistfacts

Comments: 4

  • Johann from Buenos Aires Fact: this melancholic song sounds on the last scene of the sitcom "Friends", as the camera pans through the empty apartment.
  • Airplane Fan from St Petersburg Hi all, Does anyone know what guitar Jorma used to play Embryonic Journey? Thanks in advance.
  • Apsa from Africa Brilliant finger-picking guitar playing. I heard that it actually was Rick Jarrard himself (RCA producer) who insisted for it to be included in the LP. Because he was too impressed.
  • Kerry G. from Detroit Rock City, Mi To drive just werever with my head out the window, with the wind in my hair, listening to this song, is just truly magic.

More Songfacts:

The Pussycat Dolls

Don't Cha The Pussycat Dolls

The Pussycat Dolls hit "Don't Cha" was written by Cee-Lo Green and Sir Mix-a-Lot.

The Four Seasons

Walk Like a Man The Four Seasons

The Four Seasons' "Walk Like a Man" was the first Hot 100 #1 hit to feature a simile in its title.

Cyndi Lauper

Time After Time Cyndi Lauper

Cyndi Lauper came up with the title "Time After Time" when she saw it in TV Guide magazine. It's the name of a 1979 movie about a man who invents a time machine.

Good Charlotte

Lifestyles Of The Rich And Famous Good Charlotte

The first Good Charlotte hit, "Lifestyles Of The Rich And Famous," is a send-up of celebrity culture, but the group's leaders, Joel and Benji Madden, both married celebrities: Nicole Richie and Cameron Diaz, respectively.

Ed Sheeran

Photograph Ed Sheeran

Ed Sheeran thought he wrote the x track "Photograph" on 6th Street in Denver, so he got a tattoo saying 6 ST. But when he returned it turned out the street was actually 6th Avenue.

Bryan Adams

Heat Of The Night Bryan Adams

Bryan Adams' 1987 song "Heat Of The Night" has the distinction of being the first commercially released cassette single in the US.

Editor's Picks

Maxi Priest

Maxi Priest Songwriter Interviews

The British reggae legend tells the story of his #1 hit "Close To You," talks about his groundbreaking Shabba Ranks collaboration "Housecall," and discusses his latest project with Robin Trower.

Mike Rutherford (Genesis, Mike + The Mechanics)

Mike Rutherford (Genesis, Mike + The Mechanics) Songwriter Interviews

Mike Rutherford talks about the "Silent Running" storyline and "Land Of Confusion" in the age of Trump.

Martyn Ware of Heaven 17

Martyn Ware of Heaven 17 Songwriter Interviews

Martyn talks about producing Tina Turner, some Heaven 17 hits, and his work with the British Electric Foundation.

Goodbye, Hello: Ten Farewell Tour Fake-Outs

Goodbye, Hello: Ten Farewell Tour Fake-Outs Song Writing

The 10 biggest "retirement tours" that didn't take.

Corey Hart

Corey Hart Songwriter Interviews

The Canadian superstar talks about his sudden rise to fame, and tells the stories behind his hits "Sunglasses At Night," "Boy In The Box" and "Never Surrender."

Francis Rossi of Status Quo

Francis Rossi of Status Quo Songwriter Interviews

Doubt led to drive for Francis, who still isn't sure why one of Status Quo's biggest hits is so beloved.

Songfacts® Newsletter

A monthly update on our latest interviews, stories and added songs

Information

  • Terms of Service
  • Our Privacy Policy
  • Google Privacy Policy
  • Songfacts API
  • Music History Calendar
  • Song Licensing
  • Affiliate Disclosure
  • Privacy Manager
  • X (Twitter)

Contribution

  • Message Boards
  • Songfacts Writers

©2024 Songfacts, LLC

Website Logo

  • Social account link

Embryonic Journey Guitar Lesson and TABS

Jefferson aeroplane, song details, difficulty:, d a d g b e.

In this lesson we’re going to be learning how to play Embryonic Journey, written by Jorma Kaukonen for the band Jefferson Airplane.

This short guitar instrumental packs a strong punch and isn’t particularly easy to play; having said that, it is great fun once you’ve got it down. There’s a lot going on throughout so really take your time as you learn the piece.

Alright, let’s pick up our guitars and learn how to play Embryonic Journey!

Get The Tab

Get The tab for this song from music notes now!

Don't forger, you can get 25% off all tabs when you join the mailing list!

Learn To Play Embryonic Journey

Embryonic journey (performance).

As you learn to play this fingerstyle arrangement of Embryonic Journey, be sure to frequently return to the performance as a good reference point and guide.

GET THE TAB!

Get 25% off tabs, try the courses for free and get exclusive lessons when you join the mailing list.

Get the Tabs

Embryonic Journey Guitar Lesson (Part 1)

OK, let’s jump into the first section of the song. One of the trickiest things to learn here is getting the timing and all the hammer ons right. I’d recommend Listening to the song over and over again to make sure you’re playing it all correctly. Really take your time and make sure all the notes are lined up correctly.

Hopefully you’re now ok with the first section, let’s now jump into the second.

40% OFF - The Ultimate Bundle

Want to be a truly great player? Get HUNDREDS of fingerstyle video lessons for an incredible 40% OFF! Take advantage of this brilliant offer and learn absolutely everything you need to know about fingerpicking.

This section is really tricky but great fun to play once mastered!

There’s just the outro to learn now.

We Recommend These Songs Next

embryonic journey song

Isn't She Lovely

Stevie Wonder

embryonic journey song

Take Me Home, Country Roads

John Denver

embryonic journey song

Haba Na Haba

Tommy Emmanuel

embryonic journey song

Merry Xmas Everybody

IMAGES

  1. Embryonic Journey Guitar Lesson and TABS and Chords

    embryonic journey song

  2. Embryonic Journey Sheet Music

    embryonic journey song

  3. Embryonic Journey by Jefferson Airplane

    embryonic journey song

  4. Jorma Kaukonen and Barry Mitterhoff ~ Embryonic Journey

    embryonic journey song

  5. Embryonic Journey by Jefferson Airplane Guitar Lesson and TABS

    embryonic journey song

  6. Embryonic Journey

    embryonic journey song

VIDEO

  1. Embryonic Journey

  2. Embryonic Journey

  3. Embryonic Devourment

  4. My Pregnancy Journey || The next phase of my life ||

  5. Embryonic journey cover

  6. Embryonic Journey (Jorma Kaukonen, arr. Doug Smith)

COMMENTS

  1. Jefferson Airplane

    "Embryonic Journey" by Jefferson AirplaneListen to Jefferson Airplane: https://JeffersonAirplane.lnk.to/listenYDSubscribe to the official Jefferson Airplane ...

  2. Embryonic Journey (instrumental)

    "Embryonic Journey" is an instrumental piece composed by Jorma Kaukonen, which originally appeared as the ninth track on Jefferson Airplane's second album Surrealistic Pillow. Other versions of "Embryonic Journey" were recorded by Kaukonen and featured on an album sharing the song's name .

  3. Jefferson Airplane

    Title: Embryonic JourneyAlbum: Surrealistic PillowTrack No: 9Written By: Jorma KaukonenJorma Kaukonen - Lead GuitarPaul Kantner - Rhythm GuitarJack Casady - ...

  4. Jefferson Airplane

    Jefferson Airplane performing Embryonic Journey, from the album Surrealistic Pillow.More from Jefferson Airplane: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLhKD...

  5. Jefferson Airplane

    "Embryonic Journey" by Jefferson Airplane Listen to Jefferson Airplane: https://JeffersonAirplane.lnk.to/listenYD Subscribe to the official Jefferson Airpla...

  6. Embryonic Journey by Jefferson Airplane

    "Embryonic Journey" plays at the end of the credits for the 1980 documentary Berkeley in the Sixties.Other uses of the song in movies include: 1982 dramedy Purple Haze 1999 drama A Walk on the Moon 2002 sports drama The Rookie "Embryonic Journey" also played in the final Friends episode (titled "The Last One"), and in Ken Burns' 2017 TV documentary series The Vietnam War.

  7. Jefferson Starship

    Use italics (<i>lyric</i>) and bold (lyric) to distinguish between different vocalists in the same song part If you don't understand a lyric, use [?] To learn more, check out our ...

  8. Jefferson Airplane

    Title: Embryonic Journey Album: Surrealistic Pillow Track No: 9 Written By: Jorma Kaukonen Jorma Kaukonen - Lead Guitar Paul Kantner - Rhythm Guitar ...

  9. Embryonic Journey

    Listen to Embryonic Journey by Jefferson Airplane, 139,821 Shazams, featuring on '60s Love Song Essentials, and Folk Rock Essentials Apple Music playlists. ... Connect to Apple Music to play songs in full within Shazam. Connect. Embryonic Journey. Jefferson Airplane Rock. 139,821 Shazams. play full song. Get up to 3 months free of Apple Music ...

  10. Embryonic Journey

    Provided to YouTube by RCA Records LabelEmbryonic Journey · Jefferson AirplaneJefferson Airplane Loves You℗ Recorded prior to 1972. All rights reserved by BM...

  11. Embryonic Journey

    "Embryonic Journey" is an instrumental piece composed by Jorma Kaukonen whi… Read Full Bio ↴ "Embryonic Journey" is an instrumental piece composed by Jorma Kaukonen which originally appeared as the ninth track on Jefferson Airplane's second album "Surrealistic Pillow". Other versions of "Embryonic Journey" were recorded by Kaukonen and featured on an album sharing the song's name.

  12. Embryonic Journey

    Listen to Embryonic Journey on Spotify. Jefferson Airplane · Song · 1967.

  13. Jefferson Airplane: their incredible story

    "Luckily the tape was rolling, and Joey Covington wrote a song around it." And Kaukonen's best Airplane song - apart from the stunning instrumental vignette Embryonic Journey, on Surrealistic Pillow - is definitely the wistful, restless Third Week In The Chelsea, about the ennui of life of the road. "It's a nice song, even if I ...

  14. Embryonic Journey (album)

    Embryonic Journey is an album by Jorma Kaukonen, the lead guitarist for Jefferson Airplane / Hot Tuna, and former Grateful Dead keyboardist Tom Constanten.The album consists of studio sessions for the recording of Kaukonen's instrumental Embryonic Journey for the Constanten album Morning Dew.The song had originally appeared on Jefferson Airplane's Surrealistic Pillow album in 1967.

  15. The Enduring Mystery of Jefferson Airplane's 'Surrealistic Pillow'

    The first piece of music guitarist Jorma Kaukonen ever wrote, "Embryonic Journey" was a six-string meditation that encapsulated the mood of the 1960s as powerfully as any song of that era ...

  16. "Embryonic Journey" 1996 Induction Ceremony Performance ...

    1996 Inductees Jefferson Airplane perform the song "Embryonic Journey" at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in New York City.Looking for more I...

  17. Embryonic journey : Jefferson Airplane : Free Download, Borrow, and

    Embryonic journey by Jefferson Airplane. Topics viaje, jefferson airplane. Viaje al centro de Laprida Addeddate 2010-09-30 04:24:38 Identifier EmbryonicJourney. plus-circle Add Review. comment. Reviews There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to write a review. 2,572 Views ...

  18. Embryonic Journey by Jefferson Airplane

    "Embryonic Journey" plays at the end of the credits for the 1980 documentary Berkeley in the Sixties.Other uses of the song in movies include: 1982 dramedy Purple Haze 1999 drama A Walk on the Moon 2002 sports drama The Rookie "Embryonic Journey" also played in the final Friends episode (titled "The Last One"), and in Ken Burns' 2017 TV documentary series The Vietnam War.

  19. Embryonic Journey Guitar Lesson and TABS

    D major. In this lesson we're going to be learning how to play Embryonic Journey, written by Jorma Kaukonen for the band Jefferson Airplane. This short guitar instrumental packs a strong punch and isn't particularly easy to play; having said that, it is great fun once you've got it down. There's a lot going on throughout so really take ...

  20. Jefferson Airplane

    Jefferson Airplane - Embryonic Journey. Price: $6.97. Advanced - 442 Mb. Return to Individual Songs page. You'll receive at least two videos per song, one lesson and one performance-standard play-through. You'll receive the chords/lyrics and guitar tabs as PDF files. The videos are mp4 format and should play on PC's, Macs and most mobile ...

  21. Jefferson Airplane

    Jorma Kaukonen playing Embryonic Journey LiveJefferson Airplane, Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony 1996Re-uploaded as the sound on the original v...

  22. Jorma Kaukonen

    Use italics (<i>lyric</i>) and bold (lyric) to distinguish between different vocalists in the same song part If you don't understand a lyric, use [?] To learn more, check out our ...

  23. Jorma Kaukonen

    Jorma Kaukonen - Embryonic Journey LiveJefferson Airplane, Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony 1996