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Starship (Music)

 Starship (Music)
type
TVTItem
 Starship (Music)
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Starship (Music)
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Starship
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Starship is an American pop-rock band formed in 1984. It is the legal and Spiritual Successor to Jefferson Starship, which itself is a Spiritual Successor to Jefferson Airplane. Starship was formed directly after the dissolution of Jefferson Starship, caused by the departure of Paul Kantner (a founding member of both the aforementioned groups); subsequent legal action by Kantner led the remaining members to remove the Jefferson" moniker, thus rechristening themselves "Starship". Presumably to prevent the acrimonious inter-band conflicts that had befallen (and ultimately obliterated) its predecessor, Starship shifted from playing primarily group-written work to externally-sourced material; only a single track on their debut album Knee Deep in the Hoopla was contributed by any members.Starship released three somewhat synth-heavy albums in the mid to late 1980s and had three number one singles with "We Built This City", "Sara" and "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now", the latter of which was famously used in the film Mannequin. Though generally critically reviled, they were quite successful commercially nonetheless. However, this band turned out to have less staying power than its two predecessors. Longtime Jefferson Starship member David Freiberg left during the making of their first album (Knee Deep In The Hoopla, 1985), Pete Sears, after realising what the hell he was doing there (literally) left in 1987, and Grace Slick, the group's sole remaining link to Jefferson Airplane, left the following year after being increasingly sidelined on the group's second album, No Protection and, ultimately, becoming unavoidably jaded with the group's perceived creative sterility. With Mickey Thomas as the sole remaining lead singer, they released a single further album, the Def Leppard-reminiscent Love Among the Cannibals, before two notable disruptions impaired the group's progress further: on the 1989 tour, Donny Baldwin was sacked after assaulting Thomas to the point where Thomas had to have facial reconstruction surgery and plates implanted into his skull, while longtime guitarist Craig Chaquico (the final remaining founding member of Jefferson Starship) departed in 1990, completing the group's transformation into an effective solo vehicle for Thomas. The band subsequently disintegrated, eventually breaking up in 1991 and resultantly concluding the main evolutionary line of the Jeffersons.However, around the same time Paul Kantner reformed Jefferson Starship, Mickey Thomas chose to reform Starship. Briefly known as Mickey Thomas's Starship, they quickly settled on Starship Featuring Mickey Thomas, a clear indication of Thomas being the band. With a revolving-door line-up, Starship continues to tour today. Guitarist Mark Abrahamian tragically died of a heart attack after a concert in 2012, and Starship released their first album in over 20 years with Loveless Fascination the following year, to extremely positive reviews.
 Starship (Music)
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2023-06-11T13:44:53Z
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Dropped link to AmericanTop40: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Starship (Music)
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Dropped link to JeffersonAirplane: Not a Feature - IGNORE
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Dropped link to JeffersonStarship: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Starship (Music)
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DBTropes
 Starship (Music) / int_5033694a
type
Revolving Door Band
 Starship (Music) / int_5033694a
comment
Revolving Door Band: Note that, unlike the revived Jefferson Starship, none of Starship's other founding members have featured (presumably due to long-standing interpersonal conflicts) in the group's current incarnation, further solidifying its status as this.
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Starship (Music) / int_5033694a
 Starship (Music) / int_5c26386e
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City Shout Outs
 Starship (Music) / int_5c26386e
comment
City Shout Outs: "We Built This City" had a version recorded without the San Francisco-themed DJ pattern, so that local DJs could insert their own shoutouts.
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 Starship (Music) / int_8c00118f
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Spoken Word in Music
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Spoken Word in Music: "We Built This City" features DJ Les Garland providing the voice-over during the song's bridge. There were also localized variants featuring DJs of other radio stations during its original radio broadcasts.
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Starship (Music) / int_8c00118f
 Starship (Music) / int_99699561
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Questioning Title?
 Starship (Music) / int_99699561
comment
Questioning Title?: "How Do You Sleep?", "What Did I Ever Do?", "Where Did We Go Wrong?", and "How Will I Get By?" from Loveless Fascination.
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What Have I Become?
 Starship (Music) / int_b6c0ef1f
comment
What Have I Become?: Both Sears and Slick felt Starship had sold out, straying too far from Jefferson Airplane's folk/psychedelic rock roots.
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 Starship (Music) / int_b8e3f20a
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Demoted to Extra
 Starship (Music) / int_b8e3f20a
comment
Grace Slick quit Starship after No Protection (in which she featured prominently on less than half of the album's eleven tracks) due to both conflicts with Thomas' mounting egomania and recognition of her apathy towards the group's output. She would rejoin the reformed Jefferson Airplane a year later - only to quit them after one tour when she decided she was getting too old for this.
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 Starship (Music) / int_c10da874
type
The '80s
 Starship (Music) / int_c10da874
comment
The '80s: Starship became pretty much the poster band for the so-called "corporate rock" movement mid-decade, an ironic fate for a group distantly descended from one of the most counterculture-aligned and politically-oriented groups of The '60s (or any group helmed by Paul Kantner, for that matter).
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Starship (Music) / int_c10da874
 Starship (Music) / int_c4d09d24
type
Couch Gag
 Starship (Music) / int_c4d09d24
comment
Couch Gag: Two in "We Built This City": The bridge between the second stanza and final reprise of the chorus features a different radio DJ depending on which station played the song back in the day (The version as done by MTV's Les Garland is the one heard in the studio recording). On top of that, many of those stations would also hire some singers (the same ones responsible for the jingles and music on American Top 40 at the time, JAM Creative Productions; who in turn were assisted by the band's label, RCA Records), to record a tagline between the opening lines and the first verse.
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 Starship (Music) / int_ce6555f0
type
Lighter and Softer
 Starship (Music) / int_ce6555f0
comment
Lighter and Softer: Relative even to Jefferson Starship, Starship's lyrics tend to be vehemently apolitical (a number of tracks offered by longtime Jefferson Starship member Pete Sears were thereby actively rejected for their political commentary), almost invariably centering on romantic love with a quasi-idealistic worldview. Bizarrely, "We Built This City", while often reviled as naïve and insincere by both music critics and fans of the group's predecessors, serves as an exception to this trend.
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 Starship (Music) / int_d9cf40fa
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Screw This, I'm Outta Here
 Starship (Music) / int_d9cf40fa
comment
Screw This, I'm Outta Here: David Freiberg quit Starship not long after it was formed. He lasted long enough to be around for the first sessions of Knee Deep In The Hoopla, but found himself replaced in the studio by session musicians. Pete Sears quit Starship after Knee Deep In The Hoopla when during a performance of "Sara" he realized just how much they had sold out and wondered what the hell he was still doing with them. Grace Slick quit Starship after No Protection (in which she featured prominently on less than half of the album's eleven tracks) due to both conflicts with Thomas' mounting egomania and recognition of her apathy towards the group's output. She would rejoin the reformed Jefferson Airplane a year later - only to quit them after one tour when she decided she was getting too old for this.
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Starship (Music) / int_d9cf40fa
 Starship (Music) / int_dbc664dd
type
Album Title Drop
 Starship (Music) / int_dbc664dd
comment
Album Title Drop: Knee Deep In The Hoopla in "We Built This City."
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 Starship (Music) / int_e18675e6
type
Word Salad Lyrics
 Starship (Music) / int_e18675e6
comment
Word Salad Lyrics: "We Built This City" uses mostly nonsense lyrics (like "someone's always playing corporation games"), which is a contributing factor in critics slamming the song as "the worst rock song ever".
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Starship (Music)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Starship (Music)
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Actor Allusion / int_513b0109
 Starship (Music)
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Album Title Drop / int_513b0109
 Starship (Music)
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City Shout Outs / int_513b0109
 Starship (Music)
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Classic Rock / int_513b0109
 Starship (Music)
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Covered Up / int_513b0109
 Starship (Music)
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Critic-Proof / int_513b0109
 Starship (Music)
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Power Ballad / int_513b0109
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Spoken Word in Music / int_513b0109
 Starship (Music)
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The Band Minus the Face / int_513b0109
 Starship (Music)
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Titled After the Song / int_513b0109