After Bathing at Baxter's
After Bathing at Baxter's is the third studio album by the San Francisco-based psychedelic rock band Jefferson Airplane, released on November 27, 1967, by RCA Victor.[1][2] The record, recorded primarily at RCA's Hollywood studios, features the band's core lineup of vocalists Grace Slick, Marty Balin, and Paul Kantner, guitarist Jorma Kaukonen, bassist Jack Casady, and drummer Spencer Dryden.[3] Departing from the more structured folk-rock and hit singles of their prior release Surrealistic Pillow, the album embraces experimental fragmentation, with tracks blending acid rock improvisation, poetic lyrics, and avant-garde arrangements that reflect the intensifying psychedelic ethos of 1967 San Francisco.[4] Key compositions like Paul Kantner's "The Ballad of You and Me and Pooneil" and Grace Slick's "Rejoyce" exemplify this shift toward sonic exploration over commercial accessibility, produced largely by the band itself with engineering by Al Schmitt.[3] Peaking at number 17 on the Billboard 200 in a 23-week run, it achieved moderate commercial success compared to its predecessor but garnered divided reviews: praised by some for its bold innovation and raw energy, while critiqued by others for incoherence and departure from pop conventions.[2][5] Over time, the album has been reevaluated as a pivotal artifact of psychedelic rock's experimental peak, underscoring Jefferson Airplane's role in pushing genre boundaries amid the countercultural ferment.[4]Historical Context
Band Lineup and Evolution
The Jefferson Airplane lineup responsible for After Bathing at Baxter's, recorded primarily in the fall of 1967, consisted of lead vocalist Grace Slick, co-lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist Marty Balin, rhythm guitarist and co-lead vocalist Paul Kantner, lead guitarist Jorma Kaukonen, bassist Jack Casady, and drummer Spencer Dryden.[4] This configuration, which emphasized dual lead vocals from Slick and Balin alongside Kantner's harmonizing, provided a dynamic vocal front, while Kaukonen's lead guitar work featured experimental fingerstyle techniques derived from blues and ragtime influences, often engaging in extended improvisational dialogues with Casady's agile, melodic bass lines.[4] Dryden's jazz-inflected drumming, honed from earlier sessions with performers like Roy Haynes, delivered precise yet flexible rhythms that accommodated the band's shifting tempos and polyrhythms.[6] The sextet's formation traced to mid-1966, when Dryden replaced founding drummer Skip Spence shortly after the completion of the band's debut album Jefferson Airplane Takes Off in March 1966.[7] Spence, who had contributed drums and co-wrote tracks like "My Best Friend," departed amid personal unreliability exacerbated by heavy LSD use and a desire to shift to guitar and songwriting, leading him to co-found Moby Grape later that year.[8] Dryden's integration stabilized the rhythm section just prior to Grace Slick's arrival from The Great Society in October 1966, completing the core group that propelled Surrealistic Pillow to commercial breakthrough with Top 10 singles "Somebody to Love" and "White Rabbit" upon its February 1, 1967 release.[7] By the time of After Bathing at Baxter's, this lineup's cohesion masked emerging fractures from divergent artistic priorities: Balin advocated for structured, radio-friendly compositions rooted in folk-rock accessibility, while Kantner, Slick, and Kaukonen pursued fragmented, acid-fueled abstraction influenced by free jazz and avant-garde impulses.[9] These tensions, compounded by the band's immersion in San Francisco's LSD culture, manifested in the album's eschewal of Pillow's hit-oriented polish for sui generis track sequencing and sonic disruptions, foreshadowing Balin's marginalization in subsequent recordings.[10] Casady and Dryden, less vocal in songwriting disputes, functioned as musical anchors amid the ideological splintering.[4]San Francisco Psychedelic Scene in 1967
In 1967, San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury neighborhood emerged as the epicenter of a burgeoning psychedelic music scene, attracting thousands of young people drawn by promises of communal living, experimental art, and widespread LSD use. Local bands including Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead, and Quicksilver Messenger Service dominated venues like the Fillmore Auditorium and Avalon Ballroom, blending folk, blues, and improvisational elements into extended jams that reflected the era's emphasis on altered states of consciousness.[11] [12] This environment fostered both creative experimentation and interpersonal rivalries, as groups vied for audiences in a competitive landscape while occasionally sharing bills, such as the Grateful Dead and Quicksilver Messenger Service co-headlining at the Avalon Ballroom on January 27-28, 1967.[13] A pivotal event shaping the scene's momentum was the Human Be-In on January 14, 1967, held in Golden Gate Park's Polo Fields, which drew an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 attendees for speeches, music, and public LSD distribution. Jefferson Airplane performed alongside Quicksilver Messenger Service and others, with the gathering promoting ideals of "love and activism" amid chants and free-form expressions that presaged the Summer of Love.[14] [15] Although Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters' acid tests had largely concluded by late 1966, their earlier events from 1965 onward had normalized LSD-fueled multimedia happenings, influencing the Human Be-In's format and contributing to the drug's cultural permeation in Haight-Ashbury.[16] LSD's ubiquity in the scene correlated with reported surges in musical innovation, as musicians credited hallucinogens for expanded improvisational techniques, yet it also precipitated acute psychological distress in documented cases. For instance, former Jefferson Airplane drummer Skip Spence experienced a LSD-induced psychotic break in mid-1967, during which he attempted to axe down a bandmate's hotel door, resulting in his involuntary commitment to a psychiatric institution and subsequent schizophrenia diagnosis.[17] Such incidents underscored the substance's dual role in fueling creative output while exacerbating mental vulnerabilities among participants, with empirical accounts from the period linking heavy use to both ephemeral breakthroughs and lasting breakdowns.[18] The Airplane's position within this milieu intensified following the February 1, 1967, release of Surrealistic Pillow, which achieved commercial breakthrough with hits like "White Rabbit," prompting RCA Victor to accelerate production of follow-up material amid the label's push for marketable psychedelic sounds.[19] This external commercial imperative clashed with the scene's anti-establishment ethos, as the band navigated Haight-Ashbury's chaotic influx of newcomers—peaking at around 100,000 during the summer—while contending with infrastructural strains like overcrowding and hygiene issues that eroded the district's viability by late 1967.[20]Production
Recording Process
The recording sessions for After Bathing at Baxter's commenced in May 1967 at RCA Victor's studios in Hollywood, Los Angeles, following the commercial success of Surrealistic Pillow.[21] Producer Al Schmitt, who had transitioned to independent work after leaving RCA, supervised the engineering and production, employing multitrack recording to capture the band's experimental layering of instruments and vocals.[22] Sessions extended through the summer and into early fall, culminating in the album's completion by October 1967 for a November release.[23] Technical aspects emphasized psychedelic experimentation, with extensive takes—often numbering in the mid-hundreds per track—to achieve dense sonic textures, including Jorma Kaukonen's improvisational guitar solos and Grace Slick's multi-tracked harmonies.[24] The band utilized RCA's facilities for overdubs that amplified the album's fragmented, vignette-style structure, forgoing a unified thematic arc in favor of loosely grouped "suites" that prioritized individual creative impulses over polished cohesion.[24] Band dynamics strained the process, as members divided between San Francisco and East Coast commitments, exacerbated by disputes with manager Matthew Katz, whose oversight clashed with the group's autonomous ethos and contributed to reduced collaborative focus. These tensions manifested in a disjointed workflow, where interpersonal frictions limited rehearsal cohesion and favored spontaneous, drug-influenced studio jams over structured arrangements.[25] Despite such challenges, the sessions yielded a raw, unrefined sound reflective of the Airplane's evolving internal schisms.[26]Songwriting and Contributions
Paul Kantner dominated the songwriting for After Bathing at Baxter's, receiving credits for five tracks including "The Ballad of You and Me and Pooneil," "Martha," "Wild Tyme (H)," "Watch Her Ride," and "Won't You Try/Saturday Afternoon," which together comprised a significant portion of the album's core material.[27] His lyrics frequently drew on science fiction influences from authors such as Robert A. Heinlein, evident in the apocalyptic and exploratory themes of "Pooneil," reflecting his broader interest in speculative narratives that infused the band's evolving sound.[28] [10] Grace Slick contributed two original compositions, "Rejoyce" and "Two Heads," highlighting her emergence as a key creative voice with introspective and surreal wordplay that complemented the album's psychedelic leanings.[29] [27] Jorma Kaukonen handled instrumental authorship for "The Last Wall of the Castle" and co-credited the nine-minute jam "Spare Chaynge" alongside bassist Jack Casady and drummer Spencer Dryden, emphasizing the guitarist's focus on extended, improvisational structures.[27] Marty Balin's songwriting role diminished markedly compared to prior releases like Jefferson Airplane Takes Off, where he shared multiple credits; here, he co-wrote only "Young Girl Sunday Blues" with manager Bill Thompson, underscoring his preference for more conventional folk-rock forms amid the band's push toward fragmented, experimental psychedelia.[10] [29] This pattern of individualized efforts, including external inputs like Gary Blackman's "A Small Package of Value Will Come to You, Shortly," signaled a causal shift from collective composition to solo-driven pieces, contributing to the album's disjointed yet innovative suite format.[29][30]Musical Style and Composition
Psychedelic Innovations
"Spare Chaynge," a 9:05 instrumental track, exemplifies the album's embrace of extended improvisation, with bassist Jack Casady delivering a prominent, melodic solo line unprecedented in rock bass playing at the time, supported by guitarist Jorma Kaukonen's spaced-out leads and drummer Spencer Dryden's jazz-inflected rhythms that push against conventional beats.[10][31] Recorded live in the studio on Halloween 1967 at RCA's Los Angeles facility, the piece builds through free-form interplay, diverging from standard rock song structures by prioritizing rhythmic exploration over verse-chorus forms.[10] Feedback emerges as a deliberate structural tool, integrated into tracks like "The Ballad of You & Me & Pooneil" and "The Last Wall of the Castle" to heighten intensity and create textural chaos, reflecting the band's amplification-driven live ethos translated to recording.[10] This approach, combined with fuzztone guitars and overdubbed effects such as echo, marked a technical advancement for 1967 psychedelic production, enabled by post-Surrealistic Pillow studio freedoms that allowed near-unlimited time for experimentation.[10] Unlike Surrealistic Pillow's focus on concise, hit-oriented singles like "White Rabbit," After Bathing at Baxter's organizes its 11 tracks into five loosely connected suites—such as "The Baptism" and "How Suite It Is"—favoring seamless transitions and conceptual flow over commercial accessibility, a shift driven by the band's pursuit of artistic independence amid the San Francisco scene's improvisational pressures.[32][33] This suite-based framework, with elements like skidding guitar frays and pounding crescendos in jams, underscores a causal evolution toward freer, less linear rock compositions.[9]Lyrical Themes and Drug Influences
The lyrics of After Bathing at Baxter's frequently explore motifs of perceptual distortion and existential questioning, reflecting the psychedelic experiences prevalent in the San Francisco counterculture of 1967. Tracks such as "Two Heads" pose queries like "Doesn't the sky look green today?", evoking synesthetic alterations associated with hallucinogenic states.[34] Similarly, "Young Girl Sunday Blues" contemplates the persistence of cosmic elements amid altered consciousness, with lines inquiring whether "the moon still hang in the sky when I'm high when I die."[34] These elements stem from the band's documented immersion in LSD use, which Paul Kantner described as rendering the album "pure LSD among 13 other things," indicating a causal link between substance-induced shifts in cognition and lyrical content.[35] Anti-establishment sentiments appear in songs like "The Last Wall of the Castle," where imagery of crumbling barriers and emotional turmoil—"Gone swirling tears came she went today / Down fallen years go by"—suggests rejection of societal constraints, paralleling the era's draft resistance amid the Vietnam War escalation, which disrupted the local music scene through enlistments and protests.[9] The album's title itself serves as a euphemism for an acid trip, with "Baxter's" functioning as band slang for LSD immersion, underscoring how drug experiences framed narrative escapism without explicit advocacy.[36] However, retrospective accounts from band members reveal limitations to drug-driven creativity. Guitarist Jorma Kaukonen, who contributed tracks like "The Last Wall of the Castle," later stated that hallucinogens had "nothing to do with [his] playing, writing, or recording," attributing stylistic innovations more to musical evolution than chemical catalysis, a view informed by his post-Airplane sobriety and critique of psychedelic excess as potentially hindering sustained artistic depth.[37] This perspective aligns with broader reflections on the 1960s scene, where initial perceptual expansions yielded diminishing returns, as evidenced by Kaukonen's emphasis on the music's independence from substance reliance in later interviews.[38]Packaging and Presentation
Title Etymology
The title After Bathing at Baxter's derives from the Jefferson Airplane's internal slang, where "Baxter" served as a code word for LSD, with "bathing" alluding to immersion in the drug's effects and the phrase as a whole evoking the comedown or recovery phase following a trip.[39][29] This metaphorical interpretation, documented in band histories, rejects literal readings such as references to actual hot springs or bathing facilities, emphasizing instead a symbolic nod to psychedelic aftereffects amid the group's experimental ethos in 1967.[40] Music historian Jeff Tamarkin, in his account of the band's trajectory, attributes the code directly to Airplane members' private lexicon during the album's creation, reflecting their immersion in San Francisco's counterculture without explicit endorsement of substance use.[29] Band associate Barry Hansen (later known as Dr. Demento), a record collector and radio personality connected to the scene, is credited in some recollections with popularizing related phrases evoking post-trip restoration, though primary confirmation ties the terminology most firmly to the musicians' collaborative mindset.[41] This etymology underscores the album's conceptual framing as a sonic exploration of altered states' repercussions, aligning with track transitions and improvisational structures that mimic disorientation and reintegration.Artwork and Design
The cover artwork for After Bathing at Baxter's was created by Ron Cobb, an American artist and cartoonist based in Los Angeles during the late 1960s, renowned for his satirical and sociopolitical illustrations critiquing war and consumerism.[42] [43] Cobb's design portrays a surreal tableau of a San Francisco Victorian house reimagined as a World War I-era biplane soaring through an urban streetscape, blending architectural whimsy with aviation fantasy to convey the band's experimental ethos.[10] This imagery, executed in vibrant colors against a stark background, was intended to disrupt traditional album aesthetics, aligning with the countercultural rejection of mainstream visual norms.[44] The album packaging utilized a gatefold sleeve format, expanding to reveal inner spreads with band photographs, handwritten annotations, and prose fragments authored by Jefferson Airplane members, embodying the era's grassroots, collaborative production style.[2] Liner notes credited to the band included cryptic, stream-of-consciousness texts interspersed with rudimentary sketches and doodles by group members and associates, fostering an intimate, unpolished presentation that mirrored the DIY imperatives of San Francisco's psychedelic community.[45] Such elements prioritized artistic autonomy over commercial polish, with the inner artwork's playful yet provocative motifs—depicting hands and abstract forms—contrasting bolder, more explicit designs on contemporaneous releases while steering clear of RCA's stricter censorship thresholds.[44]Release and Commercial Performance
Initial Release Details
After Bathing at Baxter's, the third studio album by Jefferson Airplane, was released on November 27, 1967, by RCA Victor in both stereo (LSO-1511) and mono (LOP-1511) vinyl LP formats.[1][44] The album's rollout emphasized the band's evolving psychedelic sound amid the San Francisco rock scene, with promotional efforts centered on live performances rather than radio singles. Unlike prior releases featuring hits such as "Somebody to Love," no commercial singles were issued from After Bathing at Baxter's, reflecting its experimental structure and focus on album-oriented listening.[46] Jefferson Airplane supported the launch through extensive touring, including multiple appearances at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco during 1967, such as the October 14 show where they previewed material tying into the album's psychedelic reputation.[47] These gigs leveraged the band's live energy to build anticipation in the burgeoning FM radio market and counterculture venues.[48] Later tape formats, including 8-track cartridges, followed the initial LP release to expand accessibility.[49]Chart Positions and Sales
After Bathing at Baxter's peaked at number 17 on the US Billboard 200 chart in early 1968, entering the listing on January 13 at position 38 before climbing over subsequent weeks.[50][21] This outcome marked a decline from the band's prior album, Surrealistic Pillow, which had reached number 3 earlier in 1967 and achieved platinum certification for over 1 million units sold. No RIAA certification for gold or platinum status was issued for After Bathing at Baxter's at the time, reflecting comparatively modest initial sales under 500,000 units amid RCA Victor's distribution.[51] The album's fragmented, suite-like structure and experimental psychedelic elements constrained commercial radio airplay, with the lead single "Watch Her Ride" stalling at number 61 on the Billboard Hot 100, insufficient to drive broader Top 40 exposure.[52] Lacking the accessible hits of Surrealistic Pillow like "Somebody to Love" and "White Rabbit," the record appealed primarily to niche audiences rather than mainstream programmers, as contemporaneous RCA promotion efforts prioritized but failed to overcome its unconventional format.[9] Internationally, chart performance was negligible, with no notable peaks documented in major markets such as the UK or Canada, underscoring the US-centric appeal of late-1960s psychedelic rock amid limited global export of the genre's more avant-garde expressions.[53] Overall unit sales lagged expectations for a follow-up to a breakthrough release, contributing to perceptions of underperformance despite critical interest in its innovations.[54]Reception and Analysis
Contemporary Critical Response
In a review published on November 23, 1967, Rolling Stone critic Michael Lydon hailed After Bathing at Baxter's as "probably the best rock and roll album so far produced," praising its experimental sprawl, innovative sound collages, and faithful reflection of the band's psychedelic lifestyle amid the San Francisco counterculture.[55] Lydon emphasized the album's departure from conventional song structures, positioning it as a breakthrough in psychedelic rock that captured the era's drug-fueled creativity and aversion to commercial polish.[56] Other contemporaneous outlets echoed the acclaim for its boundary-pushing elements, including distorted guitars, tape loops, and thematic explorations of alienation and revolution, which marked a shift from the hit singles of Surrealistic Pillow earlier that year.[57] However, reviews highlighted mixed sentiments on cohesion, noting the album's fragmented, suite-like arrangement—spanning four "sequences" rather than unified tracks—as uneven and occasionally self-indulgent, a product of the four-month recording process that cost ten times more than its predecessor and reflected internal band tensions over direction.[58] Critics like Pete Johnson in the Los Angeles Times on November 27, 1967, previewed its release with tempered expectations, implying it prioritized artistic experimentation over accessibility, potentially alienating listeners seeking the Airplane's prior pop appeal.[59] The lack of standout singles contributed to perceptions of it as a commercial risk post-hits like "Somebody to Love," though its raw intensity was defended as emblematic of 1967's psychedelic ethos rather than a flaw.[9] Overall, contemporary responses established the album as a daring psych milestone, balancing innovation against critiques of disarray.Retrospective Evaluations and Criticisms
In retrospective assessments, After Bathing at Baxter's has been praised for its bold experimentation within psychedelic rock, yet often critiqued for falling short of the genre's pinnacles, such as Pink Floyd's The Piper at the Gates of Dawn. Aggregated critic scores place it at 3.6 out of 5 on Rate Your Music, reflecting admiration for its acid rock improvisation but noting a roughness that prioritizes jamming over cohesion, ranking it #102 among 1967 albums.[60] Prog Archives users rate it 3.83 out of 5, commending the album's departure from pop structures in favor of surreal soundscapes, though acknowledging its position as secondary to the band's more accessible Surrealistic Pillow.[23] These evaluations highlight the record's role in capturing San Francisco's countercultural flux, but emphasize its experimental excesses as a limitation compared to peers' tighter psych explorations. Critics have pointed to a lack of memorable hooks amid the era's psychedelic indulgence, with some tracks described as bland or aimless despite innovative elements. Music reviewer Dmitry M. Epstein notes that while the album features standout riffs, others suffer from insufficient melodic anchors, contributing to an uneven listen that favors texture over tunefulness.[61] This critique aligns with broader hindsight on Jefferson Airplane's trajectory, where internal frictions—exacerbated by rampant drug use and creative ego clashes—foreshadowed the band's fragmentation in the 1970s. Marty Balin, in later reflections on the group's dynamics, linked such tensions to the shift toward harder substances post-Surrealistic Pillow, which diluted collaborative focus and amplified rivalries, particularly as Grace Slick's prominence grew.[62] Empirical reassessments debunk romanticized notions of unbridled psych synergy, attributing the album's disjointedness to real causal factors like substance-fueled disarray rather than pure artistic evolution. On the positive side, the album's rhythmic foundation earns consistent acclaim for the pioneering bass-guitar interplay between Jack Casady and Jorma Kaukonen, which advanced psychedelic improvisation through aggressive, jazz-inflected lines that influenced subsequent fusion acts.[63] Casady's melodic bass work, unencumbered by rigid pop constraints, provides a counterpoint to Kaukonen's feedback-laden guitar, creating dynamic tension lauded in modern analyses as a high point amid the record's flaws.[64] However, these strengths are tempered by the album's failure to sustain broader accessibility, with reviewers arguing that its immersion in 1967's excess—without enduring refrains—limits its replay value relative to contemporaries.[65]Legacy and Influence
Impact on Psychedelic Rock
After Bathing at Baxter's advanced psychedelic rock through its suite-based structure, dividing the album into four conceptual sections that integrated tracks into seamless, thematic flows, thereby expanding the genre's formal possibilities beyond single songs.[9][33] This approach, recorded between June and September 1967, emphasized studio experimentation and band interplay, capturing the improvisational essence of San Francisco's acid rock scene at its zenith.[9] Specific elements, such as the 9-minute jam "Spare Chaynge," presaged free-form explorations in subsequent styles, with its droning rhythms and feedback evoking early works by Can and Hawkwind, thus bridging psychedelic rock to krautrock and space rock variants.[9] Drummer Alexander Spence's avant-garde leanings, evident in tracks like "Two Heads," informed his post-Airplane output with Moby Grape, where he co-wrote material blending psych, folk, and R&B that shaped late-1960s West Coast sounds, though his influence waned amid personal decline.[66][23] The album's loose compositional freedom highlighted traits later central to progressive rock, including extended forms and genre fusion, yet its reception and sparse external covers—such as none for "Young Girl Sunday Blues" beyond Airplane affiliates—reflect a niche rather than pervasive legacy, prioritizing artistic risk over the hit-driven emulation seen in contemporaries like Jefferson Airplane's own "White Rabbit."[67][68] Spence's 1968 LSD-fueled psychotic break, involving an axe attack on bandmates' hotel doors, underscored the causal perils of unchecked psychedelic immersion, contributing to the genre's documented trajectory from innovation to participant attrition by the early 1970s.[66][69]Reissues and Modern Reappraisals
In 1996, RCA issued a remastered CD edition of After Bathing at Baxter's, which improved upon the sound quality of earlier 1980s and 1989 digital transfers that had suffered from suboptimal mastering and compression artifacts.[70] This release utilized enhanced analog-to-digital conversion techniques available at the time, restoring dynamic range and clarity to the original multitrack tapes recorded at RCA's studios in 1967.[70] A further expanded edition followed in 2003 from BMG/RCA, adding bonus tracks such as alternate mixes and outtakes to provide deeper insight into the album's production process without altering the core sequencing.[71] Vinyl reissues continued into the 2010s, with a 180-gram audiophile pressing released by Music on Vinyl in Europe around 2016–2017, coinciding with the album's 50th anniversary; this edition replicated the original gatefold sleeve art while emphasizing high-fidelity lacquers cut from the master tapes.[72] These physical reissues catered to collectors seeking tangible formats amid the shift to digital streaming, though they did not include bonus live material from the era.[73] Modern reappraisals, particularly in the 2020s, have emphasized the album's pivot toward experimental psychedelia as a deliberate creative shift away from the more accessible structures of Jefferson Airplane's prior work, with guitarist Jorma Kaukonen highlighting in a 2023 interview how it captured the band's immersion in improvisational and avant-garde influences during the Summer of Love aftermath.[74] A 2022 analysis noted this departure from pop-oriented songcraft, crediting Kaukonen and bassist Jack Casady's rhythmic explorations for lending the record a raw, boundary-pushing edge that prioritized sonic innovation over commercial viability, though it critiqued the era's tendency to overhype such output as uniformly revolutionary.[75] Empirical metrics underscore its niche endurance: while available on platforms like Spotify, streaming volumes remain modest compared to the band's hit singles, reflecting sustained but specialized appeal among psychedelic rock enthusiasts rather than broad revivalist traction.[76]Credits
Musician Personnel
The core performing ensemble for After Bathing at Baxter's consisted of Jefferson Airplane's sextet lineup, which recorded the album primarily at RCA's Hollywood studios during 1967.[77]- Marty Balin – vocals[77]
- Grace Slick – vocals, piano, organ[77]
- Paul Kantner – vocals, guitar[77]
- Jorma Kaukonen – lead guitar, vocals[77]
- Jack Casady – bass[77]
- Spencer Dryden – drums, percussion[77]
Technical and Production Staff
Al Schmitt served as the recording engineer for After Bathing at Baxter's, handling sessions at RCA's studios in Hollywood during autumn 1967, where he managed the band's experimental and often chaotic approach, including extensive takes and innovative stereo panning techniques.[79][24] Schmitt's technical expertise facilitated RCA's standard multitrack recording process, enabling the album's fragmented, psychedelic structure without external production interference beyond his supervision.[22] While manager Matthew Katz had influenced earlier Airplane projects, he received no production credit here, with band members asserting greater autonomy in creative decisions.[23] The album's artwork was designed by Ron Cobb, a Los Angeles-based illustrator known for satirical and conceptual visuals, depicting an elaborate airplane towing a banner over a junkyard landscape to evoke themes of flight and discard.[80] Cobb's fold-out cover contributed to the release's artistic distinctiveness, aligning with the band's emphasis on in-house aesthetics.[2] Liner notes were authored by Jefferson Airplane members, underscoring the absence of major external songwriters and highlighting the group's self-directed composition process, with all tracks credited internally to Kantner, Slick, Balin, Kaukonen, and Casady.[2] This internal control extended to production notes, reflecting tensions with prior management but prioritizing artistic independence over conventional oversight.Track Listing
Original LP Sides
Side One The first side of the original vinyl LP, running approximately 23 minutes, was subdivided into three conceptual sections: "Streetmasse," "The War Is Over," and "Hymn to an Older Generation."[27]| Section | Track | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Streetmasse | A1 | The Ballad of You & Me & Pooneil | Kantner | 4:30 |
| Streetmasse | A2 | A Small Package of Value Will Come to You, Shortly | Thompson, Blackman, Dryden | 1:42 |
| Streetmasse | A3 | Young Girl Sunday Blues | Balin, Kantner | 3:29 |
| The War Is Over | A4 | Martha | Kantner | 3:21 |
| The War Is Over | A5 | Wild Tyme (H) | Kantner | 3:05 |
| Hymn to an Older Generation | A6 | The Last Wall of the Castle | Kaukonen | 2:46 |
| Hymn to an Older Generation | A7 | Rejoyce | Slick | 4:00 |
| Section | Track | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| How Suite It Is | B1 | Watch Her Ride | Kantner | 3:11 |
| How Suite It Is | B2 | Spare Chaynge | Casady, Kaukonen, Dryden | 9:05 |
| Shizoforest Love Suite | B3 | Two Heads | Slick | 3:10 |
| Shizoforest Love Suite | B4 | Won't You Try / Saturday Afternoon | Kantner | 5:01 |