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  1. 5 days ago · Exploring the bizarre claim, made by legendary vocalist Grace Slick, that 'White Rabbit' was the only song recorded by Jefferson Airplane about drugs and LSD.

  2. 12 hours ago · JEFFERSON AIRPLANE: (Singing) Go ask Alice. I think she'll know. MARTÍNEZ: In 1968, though, laws against the manufacture and sale of LSD were strengthened and possession was criminalized.

  3. 3 days ago · Jefferson Airplane’s “Surrealistic Pillow” launched the band into pop-culture fame. Jefferson Airplane brought the San Francisco hippie scene of the mid-1960s to the rest of the nation, knocking out psychedelic hits such as “White Rabbit” even as tour buses trundled through their Haight-Ashbury neighborhood to get a glimpse of the ...

  4. 5 days ago · JEFFERSON AIRPLANE-WHITE RABBIT @deenothedino6874 #jeffersonairplane #ALICEINWONDERLAND #70s #animatedvideo

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  5. 3 days ago · The main character's name is never revealed. The title "Go Ask Alice" is actually derived from the Jefferson Airplane song entitled "White Rabbit" which is based entirely on drugs, similar to the book itself.

  6. 21 hours ago · Surrealistic Pillow album cover, 1967.. White Rabbit was a song by Grace Slick (b 1939) and released on the album Surrealistic Pillow by Jefferson Airplane. The lyrics were inspired by Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and the sequel Through the Looking-Glass (1871).

  7. 3 days ago · San Francisco’s Jefferson Airplane released this album in February of 1967 in plenty of time for that year’s Summer of Love. Singer Grace Slick contributed “Somebody to Love” (penned by her brother-in-law, Darby Slick) as well as her own composition “White Rabbit,” a Bolero-like reimagining of “Alice in Wonderland.”

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