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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Mexico_(Jefferson_Airplane_song)
rdf:type
schema:MusicRecording owl:Thing yago:WikicatSongsAboutDrugs dbo:Work yago:WikicatPoliticalSongs yago:WikicatJeffersonAirplaneSongs yago:Song107048000 yago:Music107020895 dbo:MusicalWork yago:AuditoryCommunication107109019 schema:CreativeWork yago:WikicatProtestSongs wikidata:Q386724 yago:Wikicat1970Songs yago:Communication100033020 wikidata:Q2188189 dbo:Song yago:Abstraction100002137 yago:MusicalComposition107037465 dbo:Single
rdfs:label
Mexico (Jefferson Airplane song)
rdfs:comment
"Mexico" is a single released in May 1970 by San Francisco rock band Jefferson Airplane, produced by the band at Pacific High Recording Studios with Phill Sawyer as the recording engineer. Written and sung by Grace Slick, it is a tuneful rant against then-President Richard Nixon and his anti-drug initiative, Operation Intercept, that he had implemented to curtail the flow of marijuana into the United States from Mexico. The song closes with an exhortation for the young to realize the power of their numbers, as shown by the gathering of "half a million people on the lawn" at Woodstock.
foaf:name
Mexico
dbp:name
Mexico
foaf:depiction
n6:Mexico_Airplane.jpg
dcterms:subject
dbc:Songs_based_on_American_history dbc:1970_songs dbc:Songs_about_Mexico dbc:Jefferson_Airplane_songs dbc:Political_songs dbc:Songs_about_Richard_Nixon dbc:Songs_written_by_Grace_Slick dbc:Protest_songs dbc:RCA_Records_singles dbc:Songs_about_cannabis
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dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1107961466
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
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owl:sameAs
n11:4rt3m freebase:m.03cl6b5 yago-res:Mexico_(Jefferson_Airplane_song) wikidata:Q6826182
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Infobox_song dbt:1970s-song-stub dbt:Authority_control dbt:Jefferson_Airplane dbt:Reflist dbt:Vanchor
dbo:thumbnail
n6:Mexico_Airplane.jpg?width=300
dbp:artist
dbr:Jefferson_Airplane
dbp:bSide
Have You Seen the Saucers?
dbp:cover
Mexico Airplane.jpg
dbp:genre
dbr:Hard_rock
dbp:label
dbr:RCA
dbp:nextTitle
Pretty as You Feel
dbp:nextYear
1971
dbp:prevTitle
dbr:Volunteers_(song)
dbp:prevYear
1969
dbp:producer
Jefferson Airplane
dbp:recorded
February 1970
dbp:released
May 1970
dbp:studio
dbr:Pacific_High_Recording dbr:Wally_Heider_Studios
dbp:type
single
dbp:writer
dbr:Grace_Slick
dbo:abstract
"Mexico" is a single released in May 1970 by San Francisco rock band Jefferson Airplane, produced by the band at Pacific High Recording Studios with Phill Sawyer as the recording engineer. Written and sung by Grace Slick, it is a tuneful rant against then-President Richard Nixon and his anti-drug initiative, Operation Intercept, that he had implemented to curtail the flow of marijuana into the United States from Mexico. The song closes with an exhortation for the young to realize the power of their numbers, as shown by the gathering of "half a million people on the lawn" at Woodstock. The song received little radio airplay, being banned in some states, but did reach #102 on the Billboard charts. The version on the 2400 Fulton Street LP and CD is a completely different mix from that on the single. Five months after the release of "Mexico", President Nixon requested that songs relating to drug abuse not be broadcast. Live versions of "Mexico" and its B-side, "Have You Seen the Saucers", were intended to be released on the next Airplane album; however, Marty Balin left the band before production of Bark was completed, forcing a change in some of the planned material. A live version of "Have You Seen the Saucers" appeared as the opening track of the live album Thirty Seconds Over Winterland; the two studio tracks were finally released on an album when the Early Flight compilation was released.
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wikipedia-en:Mexico_(Jefferson_Airplane_song)?oldid=1107961466&ns=0
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4148
dbo:artist
dbr:Jefferson_Airplane
dbo:genre
dbr:Hard_rock
dbo:previousWork
dbr:Volunteers_(song)
dbo:producer
dbr:Jefferson_Airplane
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dbr:RCA
dbo:writer
dbr:Grace_Slick
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wikipedia-en:Mexico_(Jefferson_Airplane_song)