We Can Be Together

Album: Volunteers (1970)
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Songfacts®:

  • This song is a clarion call to the young, inviting them to come together to resist authority. It shows the dividing line between generations that was so pronounced in America in 1970. The Vietnam War was raging and had the support of most older Americans who felt it was a necessary fight for freedom. Many of these supporters looked down on the able-bodied young people who resisted the war as dirty hippies who didn't love their country. The song uses this rhetoric as a rallying cry:

    We are obscene lawless hideous dangerous dirty violent and young

    Jefferson Airplane was suggesting they embrace this vitriol and use it to unify and revolt.
  • Paul Kantner of Jefferson Airplane wrote this song and sang the lead vocal along with Grace Slick and Marty Balin.
  • "We Can Be Together" is the first track on the Volunteers album and was also released as the B-side of their more well-known title track.
  • Jefferson Airplane was a top-selling act on RCA Records, so the label granted them full artistic control for the Volunteers album, which they exercised on this song with the line, "Up against the wall, motherf--kers," a reference to the many drug busts hippies and protesters had to deal with. It was one of the first uses of the word "f--k" in a popular song.
  • The (uncensored) performance of this song for The Dick Cavett Show episode broadcast on August 19, 1969 marked the first time the F-word was uttered on national television. Apparently, Cavett was asked to make a pre-show disclaimer statement before the broadcast. >>
    Suggestion credit:
    Tony - Westbury, NY

Comments: 10

  • Fred from Lost In TimeUp against the wall, m.f. had been what the New York city cops yelled at any ( mostly Black) people they wanted to harrass in the Bedford Steyvesant neighborhood around Columbia Unversity. In the spring of 1968 mostly White students in SDS acting in solidarity with the black community seized buildings and turned the phrase around into a battle cry. See ramparts magazine May or June of 1968.
  • Bruce from New Orleans, La"Up Against the Wall, Motherf--ker" had its lyrical origination with the MC5 (Motor City 5 -- from, not oddly, Detroit). The origin of the original phrase is somewhat more obscure, old and, no doubt, shrouded in the mists of time.
  • Husunzi from Neijiang, China'Most of the lyrics for... "We Can Be Together"... were used virtually word for word on a leaflet written by [UAW/MF member] John Sundstrom, and published as "The Outlaw Page" in the East Village Other.' Not sure if this means Paul Kantner borrowed the words from UAW/MF or vice versa. Anyone know anything else about this coincidence?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Up_Against_the_Wall_Motherf--kers
  • Julian from Minneapolis, MnUh, Fyodor -- it was the other side's fault. Or weren't you actually there?
  • Jay from Hope, AbThis song was the cry for change that was only ever partially heard. It was a plea for humanity to return before everything collapsed, and while it went only partially heeded everyone got a taste of things to come.

    I wish their luxury cars would have been stolen, too, but haven't you read the essay "Death of the Author" by Barthes? The author is irrelevant, get over it. All that matters is the words. You'll find hypocrisy in everyone - just judge the words themselves and stop trying to feel superior simply because the author reaches out to heaven and fails to grasp it. Are you truly so saddened by your own failures to reach your dreams you can only spit vritually at others who have equally failed but at least tried?

    How sad. Oh well.
  • Doug from Oakland, CaTrish,the Movement peaked in May,1970.After that,it was all downhill.
    We Can Be Together came out in the first part of 1970 when it appeared that the entire country was on the brink of chaos.
    One wonders what would have happened if someone tried to steal one of the Airplane's luxury cars and told Grace and Marty,"Hey,all your private property is a target for your enemy"
  • Steve from Birmingham, AlEskimo Blue Day
  • Fred from Laurel, MdThe remark about the Baxter's album is interesting, because they at least got the s-word into the soundtrack of an album-I remember hearing it on the recording. I don't remember the song or album title, but the lyric was, "...the great American dream doesn't mean s--- to a tree." Tony, was that what you were referring to, and are you saying they didn't get the word into the printed lyrics; or that in a different battle, over the song I excerpted from above, they couldn't get the word into the song at all?
  • Fyodor from Denver, CoThis very self-conscious hippy movement manifesto does a good, if inadvertent, job of laying bare the movement's contradictions and confusion as it advocates unethical behavior for some supposedly higher morality, destruction for the sake of peace and a divisive stance for the sake of togetherness. Oh, I know it's supposedly all the other side's fault. It always is, isn't it?
  • Trish from Old Forge, Pai'm pretty sure that up against the wall mother****ers was not originated by the airplane. this is what protesters and SDS members heard quite a bit from national guardsmen and pigs all over america in the mid to late 60's. this song did not come out until 1970, well after most of the underground movement's main protests and rallies had ended
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