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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper offers a glimpse into the history of Jefferson Airplane singer and 1960s psychedelic icon Grace Slick, while exploring the impact and meaning of one of her greatest hits, “White Rabbit.” Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Mtgslick.rtf.
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
IN THE 60S Research Compiled by 11/2001 Please
Those who experienced the drug- and love-soaked era of the late 1960s will no doubt nostalgically remember that psychedelic band, Jefferson Airplane, and remember how
important that group was in sketching out the emotions of that period. Especially memorable would be the groups lead singer, Grace Slick, the constantly drugged, long-haired hippie that enthusiastically belted
out the golden hit tunes "Someone to Love" and "White Rabbit" in her raspy, wavery voice. Slick, however, was more than a girl pop star with a passable voice and
an addiction problem. Her songwriting and lyrics admirably reflected the sex, drugs and rock n roll spirit of the times. And at the pinnacle of Slicks "art imitating life" style
was one of her first compositions and solo songs, "White Rabbit." "When Grace Slick commands you to feed your head, she aint
talking about summer beach reading," wrote Entertainment magazine about "White Rabbit," listing the song as 23rd of its "100 Greatest Summer Songs of All Time (Browne et al, 1996). ".
. . sure, Sgt. Pepper gave the Summer of Love its soundtrack, but White Rabbit melted the patchouli-scented essence of 1967 into three mind-expanding minutes" (Browne et al, 1996).
Yet behind the "slow march of pills, shrooms and talking chess pieces" (Browne et al, 1996) lay Grace Slick, the interesting and memorable
singer, the sensitive and talented songwriter and the product of an affluent, suburban family upbringing. "I was a pretty standard representative of
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