Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Co-founder of fabled rock band Jefferson Airplane

Jan. 30, 1942 - Sept. 27, 2018

- By Randy Lewis

It was emblematic of the turbulent path San Francisco’s Jefferson Airplane navigated in the 1960s and ‘70s that when the group showed up to play a 1969 festival that was supposed to be the West Coast version of Woodstock, founding member Marty Balin got knocked out cold.

The event was the Altamont Festival, cooked up and headlined by the Rolling Stones. Held four months after Woodstock outside of San Francisco, Altamont failed to replicate that event’s touted “three days of peace and music” and turned tragic when a concert-goer was stabbed to death by a member of the Hells Angels motorcycle club, which the Stones had hired to provide security.

“I didn’t think anything of the Hells Angels doing security, because I didn’t know that’s what they were there for,” singer, songwriter and guitarist Mr. Balin told the Los Angeles Times in 1994 around the 25th anniversar­y of that show.

“I’d always seen them at Avalon and Fillmore shows, and there was never any trouble,” Mr. Balin said. “But when we were playing, I saw these guys hitting people with pool cues right in front of the stage. I thought somebody should be doing something, so I jumped down and tried to break things up. The Angels were a little surprised. One of them said, ‘Marty, what are you doing down here? You’re gonna get hurt.’”

In fact, while Mr. Balin was trying to break up one fight, someone hit him from behind and knocked him unconsciou­s. Word of the incident prompted the Grateful Dead, which also had been scheduled to play, to pack up and leave, and the concert further devolved and eventually left four concert-goers dead.

Mr. Balin died Thursday at 76, according to a spokesman for the family. His cause of death was not immediatel­y available, spokesman Ryan Romanesko said, but added that he died in Tampa, Fla., en route to a hospital with his wife, Susan Joy Balin.

The Altamont incident was reflective of the wild state of rock music in late1960s, and for a time, Mr. Balin and his co-horts in the Airplane — singer Grace Slick, Paul Kantner, guitarist Jorma Kaukonen and bassist Jack Casady — were considered key players.

Mr. Balin, whose real name was Martyn Jerel Buchwald, was born Jan. 30, 1942, in Cincinnati, to Joseph and Catherine Eugenia Buchwald, and moved with his family as a boy to San Francisco, where he attended Washington High School.

Mr. Balin had been caught up in the folk music revival of the late-1950s and early-’60s, and in 1962 changed his name to Marty Balin. He recorded a couple of singles, “Nobody But You” and “I Specialize in Love” on his own before joining a folk quartet called the Town Criers.

It was on the folk scene, at a hootenanny, that he met guitarist Kantner and, in 1965, along with Mr. Casady, Mr. Kaukonen, drummer Skip Spence and singer Signe Toly Anderson formed the first iteration of the Jefferson Airplane at a club, the Matrix, which Mr. Balin had bought and converted from a pizza parlor.

Their 1966 debut album “Jefferson Airplane Takes Off” quickly found a national audience, in part because of enthusiast­ic reviews from San Francisco Chronicle critic Ralph Gleason, and sold more than 500,000 copies to qualify for gold sales status.

“Marty was the one who started the San Francisco scene,” his one-time roommate Bill Thompson, manager the Jefferson Airplane and Jefferson Starship, said in a statement Friday.

In an early sign of what was to become a hallmark of the ever-evolving group, Mr. Spence left shortly after the album was recorded; a few months later, after giving birth to her first child that year, Ms. Anderson also quit the band, setting the stage for the classic lineup that would vault to superstar status after Grace Slick joined to share lead singing duties with Mr. Balin and Mr. Kantner.

The new lineup recorded “Surrealist­ic Pillow,” a 1967 album considered a quintessen­tial work of the emerging psychedeli­c music scene that flowered out of San Francisco and yielded the hit singles “White Rabbit” and “Somebody to Love,” along with Mr. Balin’s “Plastic Fantastic Lover,” “3/5 of a Mile in 10 Seconds” and the ballad he wrote with Mr. Kantner often cited as one of the group’s finest, “Today.”

“White Rabbit” was widely considered an anthem to LSD, and caused many pop radio programmer­s to steer clear of subsequent Airplane singles. The group also took on political issues, sometimes making their music too hot to handle for controvers­y-shy radio outlets.

Yet the group was chosen as one of the headliners for the first major rock festival, the 1967 Monterey Internatio­nal Pop Festival. The event was a springboar­d to fame for then-rising acts Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Otis Redding.

Jefferson Airplane also was a marquee name two years later at Woodstock, and subsequent­ly at Altamont. Yet as Ms. Slick’s commanding voice and onstage presence helped lift the band’s profile, it simultaneo­usly reduced Mr. Balin’s profile.

Mr. Kantner and Ms. Slick, who later became romantical­ly involved, slowly took over the reins of the band, and moved it in a heavier direction that appealed less to Mr. Balin’s more folk and pop-leaning taste.

The 1966-1970 lineup of Jefferson Airplane was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A Dec. 5, 1968, photo shows the rock band Jefferson Airplane, from left, Marty Balin, Grace Slick, Spencer Dryden, Paul Kantner, Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady in their Pacific Heights, San Francisco, apartment.
Associated Press A Dec. 5, 1968, photo shows the rock band Jefferson Airplane, from left, Marty Balin, Grace Slick, Spencer Dryden, Paul Kantner, Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady in their Pacific Heights, San Francisco, apartment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States