Paul Kantner & Grace Slick - Baron Von Tollbooth & the Chrome Nun

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Album Details

Title: Baron Von Tollbooth & the Chrome Nun
Artist: Paul Kantner & Grace Slick
Release Date: 1973
Re-Released On: 8/4/2009
Label: Sony BMG Music (Canada), RCA Records
Duration: 40:01
UPCs: 078636741826, 886974850823
Genre: Rock
Styles: Rock & Roll, Country-Rock, Hard Rock, Psychedelic, Folk-Rock
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 4
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Ballad of the Chrome Nun
  2. Fat
  3. Flowers of the Night
  4. Walkin'
  5. Your Mind Has Left Your Body
  6. Across the Board
  7. Harp Tree Lament
  8. White Boy
  9. Fishman
  10. Sketches of China

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2009CDSony BMG Music (Canada)748508
1997CDRCA Records67418

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Credited to Paul Kantner, Grace Slick, and David Freiberg, Baron von Tollbooth & The Chrome Nun was the first album made by these erstwhile members of Jefferson Airplane since the breakup of that group. Like such other spin-off projects as Blows Against the Empire and Sunfighter, this one featured a supporting cast of San Francisco Bay Area musicians including present and former members of a variety of groups, such as The Grateful Dead (lead guitarist Jerry Garcia, percussionist Mickey Hart, and lyricist Robert Hunter, who wrote the words to "Harp Tree Lament"), Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (singer David Crosby), and The Flying Burrito Brothers (bassist Chris Ethridge), as well as other former members of The Airplane and future members of Jefferson Starship. The Pointer Sisters even guested on one track. Despite the co-billing, the album's guiding force was Slick, who sang on every track and wrote or co-wrote six of the ten songs, though there was still room for the unbilled Jack Traylor to write, play acoustic guitar, and sing lead vocals on the song "Flowers of the Night," a celebration of monarchial overthrows throughout history. Perhaps more outside songwriting should have been employed, since the compositions here were second-rate. The public was catching on, too: Kantner's Blows Against the Empire had reached the Top 20, but Baron von Tollbooth didn't come near the Top 100. The team would attempt one more splinter project, Slick's "solo" album Manhole, then re-organize as Jefferson Starship in 1974 with the notable return of singer/songwriter Marty Balin. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Bill GarlandIllustrations
Bill LaceyAudio Restoration
Chris EthridgeBass
Craig ChaquicoGuitar
Dalita KeumurianProject Manager
David CrosbyGuitar, Vocals
David FreibergVocals, Producer
Drew StruzanIllustrations
Eddie EddingsVault Research
Grace SlickVocals, Producer, Keyboards
Jack CasadyBass
Jack Traylor & SteelwindVocals
Jeff TamarkinLiner Notes
Jerry GarciaGuitar, Banjo
Jim GainesEngineer
Jim MarshallPhotography
John BarbataDrums
Jorma KaukonenGuitar
Mickey HartDrums
Mike HartryDigital Transfers
Pacific Eye & EarDesign
Papa John CreachViolin
Paul KantnerProducer, Guitar, Vocals
Paul WilliamsTape Research, Reissue Coordination
The Pointer SistersVocals