Sunday, October 23, 2022

Jefferson Airplane - Mexico


 #Jefferson Airplane #Grace Slick #Jorma Kaukonen #psychedelic rock #acid rock #folk rock #hard rock #West coast psychedelia #1960s

President Richard Nixon engaged in anti-drug measure that went into effect from September 21 to October 11 in 1969 in order to fulfill a campaign promise, which resulted in a near shutdown of border crossings between Mexico and the United States.  He wanted to seal the border to stop the steady flow of marijuana into the states and he was determined to prove that he could establish law and order in a nation that seemed to be spinning out of control.  He called it Operation Intercept, and it did not sit well with Jefferson Airplane.  In the early part of 1970, the Jefferson Airplane released a single entitled ‘Mexico’ that was written and sung by Grace Slick.  The song was not played on some radio stations at the time because the lyrics referred to Operation Intercept, but this song became a classic on many of the so-called underground radio stations and it did reach #102 on the Billboard charts.  Five months after the release of ‘Mexico’, President Nixon requested that songs relating to drug abuse not be broadcast.
The Jefferson Airplane single ‘Have You Seen The Saucers’/‘Mexico’ was their last release for RCA before assembling their own subsidiary label, Grunt and it would be the only new material in 1970 that they released as The Airplane.  That year Paul Kantner released his epic Blows Against The Empire album and Hot Tuna’s self-titled live acoustic debut marked a separation for the band.  The single was recorded by Paul Kantner, Grace Slick, Marty Balin, Jack Casady, Jorma Kaukonen, Spencer Dryden and Joey Covington.  1970 was a year of total chaos for The Airplane, as Jack and Jorma played countless gigs as Hot Tuna, both Dryden and Balin quit and Paul and Grace would become a couple, but yet their live recordings from this period rank as some of their most aggressive and raw.
Grace Slick starts out this song by dropping the names “Owsley and Charlie”, and I knew right away who Owsley was, but I was curious about Charlie.  My first thought was Charlie Manson, but he was only arrested in October 1969 on unrelated charges, and his trial didn’t begin till July 15, 1970, so I don’t think that Grace knew who he was before she wrote this song.  Near the end of this song Grace mentions Charlie again saying, “But thanks Uncle Charlie” and other than discovering that drummer Spencer Dryden’s half-uncle was Charlie Chaplin, and that Charlie is often a reference to cocaine, I have no clue who Charlie is.  Maybe he was a marijuana dealer who inspired Grace Slick to write this touching and heartfelt tribute, but the only other name that popped us was a journalist and hippie named Charles Perry. Grace seems infuriated saying, “donde esta la planta”, which translates to where is the plant and it is very clear that the lyrics in the song ‘Mexico’ are about pot.  She says that Mexico is under the thumb of Richard who she says is a small-headed man.  Nixon’s anti-drug stance, and his advocacy for conservative values did not sit well with many of the nation’s youth, especially the revolutionary Grace Slick.
In April 1970, Slick received an invitation to attend a tea party at the White House being thrown by the president’s daughter Tricia.  Tricia and Slick were both alumni of Finch College, an all-girls school located in upstate New York.  Tricia was a recent graduate and this would have been like a ten-year reunion for Slick, who attended under her maiden name, Grace Wing.  Slick invited Abbie Hoffman as her date to the April 24 event.  Slick had 600 micrograms of LSD powder in her pocket, more than enough to provide a powerful hallucinogenic experience for anyone who ingested it.  Her plan was to tuck the powder into her long fingernail and drop it into Nixon’s tea cup during some polite conversation.  When Grace and Abbie were on line, a security guard wouldn’t let them in.  He told Grace that Abbie had been branded as domestic security risk for his anti-establishment views and actions.  Hoffman then took out a black flag with a multicolored marijuana leaf and hung it on the White House gate.  From: https://jimadamsauthordotcom.wordpress.com/2020/05/03/airplane-protest-song/