Starship (band)

Starship was a chart-topping, Grammy nominated, American rock and pop band established in 1985. It included all of the members of the band, Jefferson Starship, except for Paul Kantner, who left the group and the name “Jefferson” was legally retired. Starship's hit songs included "We Built This City," "Sara," "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now," "It's Not Over 'Til It's Over," "It's Not Enough," and more.

History
In 1985, Jefferson Starship’s founder, Paul Kantner left the band, and then took legal action over the Jefferson Starship name against his former bandmates. Kantner settled out of court and every member of the band at the time, including Grace Slick, Craig Chaquico, Pete Sears, David Freiberg, Mickey Thomas, Donny Baldwin, and the band’s manager, Bill Thompson, signed an agreement that neither party would use the names "Jefferson" unless all agreed. It was agreed that the band would now be called "Starship".

David Freiberg stayed with the band after the lawsuit and attended the first studio sessions for the next album during which he was unanimously voted out of the band. The band’s keyboard work was now being done in the studio by Peter Wolf (who had played on the sessions for Nuclear Furniture and briefly joined the band on the road for the follow-up tour) and that was the instrument Freiberg was supposed to be playing.[1] The next album was finished with the five remaining members, consisting of Slick (vocals,percussion), Mickey Thomas, (vocals, percussion), Craig Chaquiço (lead guitarist),  Pete Sears (bass guitar), and Donny Baldwin (drums). In 1984, Gabriel Katona (who had previously played in Rare Earth and Player) joined the band to play keyboards and saxophone on the road with them through to the end of the 1986 tour.

The next album, Knee Deep in the Hoopla was released in September 1985 and scored two number-one hits. The first was "We Built This City", written by Bernie Taupin, Martin Page, Dennis Lambert, and Peter Wolf and was engineered by Grammy-winning producer Bill Bottrell and arranged by Bottrell and Jasun Martz; the second was "Sara". The album itself reached No. 7, went platinum, and spawned two more singles: "Tomorrow Doesn't Matter Tonight" (#26), and "Before I Go" (#68).

In 1986, the group recorded "Cut You Down to Size" for the film Youngblood. By the time the sessions for No Protection began, bassist Pete Sears had left the band. Sears went on to play keyboards with former Jefferson Airplane members Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady in Hot Tuna for ten years. In early 1987, "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now", recorded while Sears was still with the band, was featured in the film Mannequin and hit No. 1. It also received a Golden Globe and an Academy Award- nomination for "Best Original Song." The band performed the song at that year's Academy Awards presentation with Gloria Estefan replacing Grace Slick. At that time, the song made Slick the oldest female vocalist to sing on a number-one Billboard Hot 100 hit, at the age of 47 (she held this record until Cher broke it at the age of 52, in 1999 with "Believe"). No Protection was released in 1987, and also featured the singles "It's Not Over ('Til It's Over)" (#9), and "Beat Patrol" (#46). "Wild Again" (which reached No. 73 on the Billboard singles chart) was also used in the film Cocktail. The last song on the album, "Set the Night to Music", would later become a hit in 1991, re-recorded as a duet by Roberta Flack and Maxi Priest. Following the completion of the album sessions in 1987, Brett Bloomfield was brought in to replace Sears and Mark Morgan joined the band on keyboards.

Slick left Starship in 1988, going on to join the reformed Jefferson Airplane for an album and tour in 1989, before announcing that she was retiring from music. As Kantner, Sears and Freiberg had left the band, all the new and remaining members were more than a decade younger than she was. Slick has been quoted as saying that "old people don't belong on a rock and roll stage".

With Thomas the sole lead singer, the revamped lineup released Love Among the Cannibals in August 1989 and went on another tour to support the album; recruiting backing singers Christina Marie Saxton and Melisa Kary to fill the gap left by Slick's departure. On September 24, 1989, while the band was in Scranton, Pennsylvania for a show, Baldwin and Thomas got into a violent altercation during which Thomas was seriously injured and required facial surgery, and two titanium plates implanted in his skull. Baldwin resigned from the band immediately afterward. The remainder of the tour was postponed until Thomas had recovered and was able to tour again.

After Thomas was well enough to tour, the band continued to tour in support of Cannibals. Kenny Stavropoulos was recruited to be the band's new drummer. After the Cannibals tour wound up in 1990, Chaquico, the last remaining original Jefferson Starship member, handed in his notice. Thomas attributes the comparative lack of commercial success of the last album to the interruption of the tour, among other factors. Cannibals remains his personal favorite Starship album. Early the following year, RCA assembled a greatest hits album, Greatest Hits (Ten Years and Change 1979-1991), which featured two new tracks, one with Thomas and Chaquico (recorded before Craig had left) and the other featuring only Thomas and session players. For a brief period it was thought that Thomas would continue forward as Starship, but manager Bill Thompson then decided it was over and told RCA that the band was done making records.

In 1992, Thomas revived Starship as "Mickey Thomas' Starship" before changing the name to Starship featuring Mickey Thomas, with his own band members, which has toured steadily ever since, performing the hits of the original band and re-recording many of those hits on new CDs that feature the Starship name. In November 2010, Thomas announced on his website that a new Starship album, Loveless Fascination, would be released in the summer or fall of 2011. The album was eventually released on September 17, 2013. The band performed at the Streamy Awards on September 8, 2014.

Former Starship trumpet player Max Haskett, who performed with the band from their reformation in 1992 until the following year, died in 1999 as a result of pancreatic cancer. Lead guitarist Erik Torjesen, who performed with the band between 1996 and 2000, died of cancer, aged 34, in 2001. Torjesen's replacement, Mark Abrahamian, died from a heart attack, aged 46, following a concert on September 2, 2012. He was replaced by John Roth.

MTV Era
Starship had a massive presence during the era of MTV with oft-repeated plays of their videos for hit songs such as, “Winds of Change,” “Layin’ It on the Line,” “Sara,” “Nothing’s Gonna Stop Us Now,” “We Built This City,” and Live shows such as 1986’s MTV’s Spring Break in Daytona Beach, Florida.

Discography

 * Knee Deep in the Hoopla (1985)
 * No Protection (1987)
 * Love Among the Cannibals (1989)
 * Starship's Greatest Hits (Ten Year's and Change 1979 – 1991)