Nuclear Furniture

Nuclear Furniture
Studio album by Jefferson Starship
Released May 30, 1984
Recorded 1984 at the Automatt, San Francisco
Genre Rock, AOR
Length 42:46
Label Grunt/RCA
Producer Ron Nevison
Jefferson Starship chronology
Winds of Change
(1982)
Nuclear Furniture
(1984)
Deep Space / Virgin Sky
(1995)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Nuclear Furniture is an album by the American rock band Jefferson Starship. It was the last album released by the band until 1998's Windows of Heaven; and was also the final album by the band before the departure of leader Paul Kantner and the formation of the offshoot band Starship. It was released in 1984 and spawned the Top 40 single "No Way Out", which was also the first single by any incarnation of the band to hit #1 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. The album itself reached #28. Produced by Ron Nevison, the album was arranged with the help of Peter Wolf, who had worked with Grace Slick on her solo album, Software. Wolf also contributed keyboard and synthesizer work to the album, although not an official part of the band. Peter Wolf (not the singer of the same name) and Ina Wolf also wrote the single "No Way Out", the first of many songs penned by the husband and wife duo that took "Starship" in a more commercial direction. As the album was being recorded, Paul Kantner became frustrated with the album's direction. Before the sessions came to a close, he stole the master tapes, put them in his car and drove around San Francisco for a few days and wouldn't bring them back until the band mixed the album in a way more to his liking.[2] Shortly after release of the album, Kantner left the band, and he only appears in the first promotional video produced, "No Way Out." After the departure of Kantner the band lost the "Jefferson" moniker and morphed into Starship; there would not be another studio album released under the Jefferson Starship name until after Kantner reformed the band in 1992.

At least four of the tracks on Nuclear Furniture (namely "Connection", "Rose Goes to Yale", "Showdown" and "Champion") seem to tell a story about a nuclear war; the protagonist "Lightning Rose" was first mentioned in the song of that name on the 1979 album Freedom at Point Zero. The reference in "Showdown" to "Six minutes and the war is roaring" is a specific reference to the fact that it took six minutes for a sea-launched ballistic missile to impact on its target.

Track listing

Side A
No. TitleLyricsMusic Length
1. "Layin' It on the Line"  Mickey Thomas, Craig ChaquicoChaquico, Thomas 4:09
2. "No Way Out"  Ina WolfPeter Wolf 4:22
3. "Sorry Me, Sorry You"  Jeannette SearsPete Sears 4:07
4. "Live and Let Live"  J. SearsP. Sears 3:50
5. "Connection"  Paul Kantner, ThomasKantner 4:27
Side B
No. TitleLyricsMusic Length
1. "Rose Goes to Yale"  Kantner, Ronnie GilbertKantner 2:56
2. "Magician"  Grace SlickP. Wolf 3:23
3. "Assassin"  J. SearsP. Sears 3:52
4. "Shining in the Moonlight"  Chaquico, ThomasChaquico 3:38
5. "Showdown"  SlickSlick 3:22
6. "Champion"  Kantner, GilbertKantner 4:40

Personnel

Additional Personnel

Production

Singles / Music Videos

Charts

Album

Year Chart Position
1984 The Billboard 200 28

Singles

Year Single Chart Position
1984 "No Way Out" The Billboard Hot 100 23
1984 "Layin' It on the Line" The Billboard Hot 100 66
1984 "No Way Out" Mainstream Rock Tracks 1
1984 "Layin' It on the Line" Mainstream Rock Tracks 6

Notes

  1. Allmusic review
  2. Tamarakin, Jeff (2003). Got a Revolution: The Turbulent Flight of Jefferson Airplane. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-671-03403-0.
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