Earth
File:Earth Jefferson Starship.jpg
Studio album by Jefferson Starship
Released February 6, 1978
Recorded July - October, 1977 at Wally Heider Studios, San Francisco
Genre Rock, AOR
Length 41:27
Label Grunt/RCA
Producer Larry Cox / Jefferson Starship
Jefferson Starship chronology
Flight Log (1977) Earth (1978) Gold (1979)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 2/5 stars[1]
Robert Christgau C[2]

Earth is a 1978 album by Jefferson Starship. The album was recorded in 1977, with the same band lineup as the previous album, Spitfire. The band had not toured in 1977, partly due to Marty Balin's reluctance to commit fully to the band. The song "Count on Me" became a Top-10 single, peaking at #8. The album itself hit #5 on the Billboard charts. A US and European tour followed, after which Balin, Grace Slick and John Barbata all left the group. Success of this album led to Jefferson Starship being contacted to provide a song for the Star Wars Holiday Special.

Contents

Track listing [link]

Side A
No. Title Lyrics Music Length
1. "Love Too Good"   Gabriel Robles Craig Chaquico 6:03
2. "Count on Me"   Jesse Barish Barish 3:14
3. "Take Your Time"   Grace Slick Pete Sears 4:08
4. "Crazy Feelin'"   Barish Barish 3:38
5. "Skateboard"   Slick, Chaquico Chaquico 3:18
Side B
No. Title Lyrics Music Length
1. "Fire"   Marty Balin, Trish Robbins David Freiberg, Sears 4:44
2. "Show Yourself"   Slick Slick 4:36
3. "Runaway"   N. Q. Dewey Dewey 5:18
4. "All Nite Long"   Paul Kantner, Balin, Barish, Slick Kantner, John Barbata, Sears, Chaquico, Freiberg 6:28

Personnel [link]

  • Grace Slick – vocals, piano on "Show Yourself"
  • Paul Kantner – rhythm guitar, vocals
  • Marty Balin – vocals
  • Pete Sears – bass on "Skateboard", "Runaway", and "All Nite Long", electric piano on "Love Too Good", organ on "Love Too Good", "Count on Me", "Take Your Time", "Crazy Feelin", "Fire", and "Show Yourself", Moog on "Love Too Good", "Skateboard", and "All Nite Long", synthesizer on "Love Too Good", piano on "Count on Me", "Take Your Time", "Crazy Feelin'", "Fire", and "Show Yourself", celeste on "Count on Me", clavinet on "Crazy Feelin'" and "Fire"
  • Craig Chaquico – lead guitar, rhythm guitar on "Love Too Good", "Crazy Feelin'", "Skateboard", and "Show Yourself", vocals
  • John Barbata – electric drums, drums, congas, percussion, vocals
  • David Freiberg – vocals, bass on all tracks except "Skateboard", "Runaway" and "All Nite Long", organ on "Skateboard", "Runaway", and "All Nite Long"

Additional Personnel [link]

Production [link]

  • Jefferson Starship – producer, arrangements, art direction
  • Larry Cox – producer, engineer
  • David Frazer – assistant engineer
  • Steve Hall – recordist
  • Pat Ieraci (Maurice) – production coordinator, art coordination
  • Nat Quick – illustration
  • Bill Thompson – manager
  • Paul Dowell – amp consultant
  • Cynthia Bowman – art coordination
  • Bill Laudner – art assistant
  • Gribbitt (Tim Bryant) – art director
  • Don Davis – Earth dust sleeve illustration, Earth label illustration
  • Roger Rossmeyer – photography
  • Recorded and Mixed at Wally Heiders, San Francisco
  • Strings and Horns arranged by Gene Page, Whitney Recording Studio, Glendale
  • Mastered by John Golden at Kendun Recorders, Burbank

Singles [link]

  • "Count on Me" (3/11/78) #8 US
  • "Runaway" (5/27/78) #12 US
  • "Crazy Feelin'" (9/9/78) #54 US

References [link]

  1. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas (2011 [last update]). "Earth - Jefferson Starship | AllMusic". allmusic.com. https://www.allmusic.com/album/r10309. Retrieved 17 August 2011. 
  2. ^ Christgau, Robert (2011 [last update]). "Robert Christgau: CG: Jefferson Starship". robertchristgau.com. https://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?name=Jefferson+Starship. Retrieved 17 August 2011. 

https://wn.com/Earth_(Jefferson_Starship_album)

Earth (Wu Xing)

Earth (Chinese: ; pinyin: ), is the changing point of the matter. Earth is the third element in the Wu Xing cycle.

Earth is a balance of both yin and yang, the feminine and masculine together. Its motion is inward and centering, and its energy is stabilizing and conserving. It is associated with the color yellow and the planet Saturn, and it lies at the center of the compass in the Chinese cosmos. It is associated with the turn of each of the four seasons and with damp. It governs the Spleen, Stomach, mouth and muscles. Its negative emotion is anxiety and its positive emotion is empathy. Its Primal Spirit is represented by the Yellow Dragon. Colour Yellow, Golden (Sun).

Attributes

The Chinese think Earth is associated with the qualities of patience, thoughtfulness, practicality, hard work, and stability. The earth element is also nurturing and seeks to draw all things together with itself, in order to bring harmony, rootedness and stability. Other attributes of the earth element include ambition, stubbornness, responsibility and long-term planning.

List of Foundation universe planets

This is a list of Foundation universe planets featured or mentioned in the Robot series, Empire series, and Foundation series created by Isaac Asimov.

61 Cygni

The star system 61 Cygni, in the Sirius Sector, is advanced by Lord Dorwin as the potential site for a planet of origin for the human species. Lord Dorwin cites 'Sol' (meaning Earth's Sun) and three other planetary systems in the Sirius Sector, along with Arcturus in the Arcturus Sector, as potential original worlds. (This fact seems to be contradicted by information given in Foundation and Earth). Claims were made as early as 1942 that 61 Cygni had a planetary system, though to date, none has been verified, and Asimov was aware of these claims.

Alpha

Alpha is a fictional planet orbiting the larger of the two stars in the Alpha Centauri system.

In Asimov's Foundation Series, Alpha Centauri is cited by Lord Dorwin as one of the solar systems where humankind potentially originated. The others are Sol, Sirius, 61 Cygni and Arcturus. Beyond mentioning that it is in the Sirius Sector, Dorwin gives no further details.

Earth (1930 film)

Earth (Ukrainian: Земля, translit. Zemlya) is a 1930 Soviet silent film by Ukrainian director Alexander Dovzhenko, concerning the process of collectivization and the hostility of Kulak landowners. It is Part 3 of Dovzhenko's "Ukraine Trilogy" (along with Zvenigora and Arsenal).

Plot

The film begins with the final moments of grandfather Semyon (Simon) Opanas beneath a pear tree. Next local kulaks, including Arkhyp Bilokin, contemplate the process of collectivization and declare their resistance to it, while elsewhere Semyon's grandson Vasyl (Basil) and his komsomol friends also meet to discuss collectivization, although his father is skeptical.

Later, Vasyl arrives with the community's first tractor to much excitement. After the men urinate in the overheated radiator, the peasants plow the land with the tractor and harvest the grain. A montage sequence presents the production of bread from beginning to end. That night Vasyl dances a hopak along a path on his way home, but a dark figure attacks and kills him.

Earth (EP)

Earth is the second recording from the progressive metal band Elitist.

Track listing

Personnel

Band

  • Alex "DeHeart" Kolominsky - vocals
  • Julian Rodriguez - guitar
  • Sean Hall - guitar
  • Mike Danese - bass
  • Robert Platz - drums
  • Additional

  • Diego Farias - production
  • Places in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

    This is a list of places featured in Douglas Adams's science fiction series, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. The series is set in a fictionalised version of the Milky Way galaxy and thus, while most locations are pure invention, many are based on "real world" settings such as Alpha Centauri, Barnard's Star and various versions of the Earth.

    The Galaxy

    "The Galaxy" is our home galaxy, the Milky Way, though it is referred to exclusively as "the Galaxy" in the series. Apart from a very brief moment during the first radio series, when the main characters were transported outside the galactic plane into a battle with Haggunenons, and a moment when one of Arthur's careless remarks is sent inadvertently through a wormhole into "a distant galaxy", the Galaxy provides the setting for the entire series. It is home to thousands of sentient races, some of whom have achieved interstellar capability, creating a vast network of trade, military and political links. To the technologically advanced inhabitants of the Galaxy, a small, insignificant world such as Earth is considered invariably primitive and backward. The Galaxy appears, at least nominally, to be a single state, with a unified government "run" by an appointed President. Its immensely powerful and monumentally callous civil service is run out of the Megabrantis Cluster, mainly by the Vogons.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×