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Paul Kantner
Paul Kantner
American musician
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Jefferson Airplane
Jefferson Airplane
American rock band
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Starship
Starship
American rock band
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Marty Balin
Marty Balin
American singer, songwriter, and musician
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Papa John Creach
Papa John Creach
American musician (1917-1994)
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Hot Tuna
Hot Tuna
American blues-rock band, spin-off of Jefferson Airplane
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Craig Chaquico
Craig Chaquico
American musician
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Pete Sears
Pete Sears
British musician
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Jack Casady
Jack Casady
American bass player
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Grace Slick
Grace Slick
American musician, writer and painter
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Jorma Kaukonen
Jorma Kaukonen
American blues, folk, and rock guitarist, songwriter
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Quicksilver Messenger Service
Quicksilver Messenger Service
American psychedelic rock band formed in 1965 in San Francisco
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Signe Toly Anderson
Signe Toly Anderson
American singer
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Joey Covington
Joey Covington
American drummer
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Spencer Dryden
Spencer Dryden
American musician; rock drummer for a number of San Francisco-based bands
Members, past and present

Jefferson Starship is an American rock band from San Francisco, California, formed in 1974 by a group of musicians including former members of Jefferson Airplane. Between 1974 and 1984, they released eight gold or platinum selling studio albums, and one gold selling compilation. The album Red Octopus went double-platinum, reaching No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart in 1975. The band went through several major changes in personnel and genres through the years while retaining the Jefferson Starship name. The band name was retired in 1984, but it was picked up again in 1992 by a revival of the group led by Paul Kantner, which has continued following his death in 2016.

The group was formed by former Jefferson Airplane members Kantner and Grace Slick, and evolved from several solo albums they had recorded and a business decision to connect the two bands. They were joined by David Freiberg, Craig Chaquico, Johny Barbara Pete Sears and Papa John Creach. Former Airplane frontman Marty Balin subsequently joined the group in 1975, and the following year's album Spitfire was a top five hit. Slick and Balin both left the group in 1978, leaving the remaining members to recruit Mickey Thomas as their replacement. Slick rejoined the group in 1981, which continued with minor chart success. Kantner quit in 1984 and took legal action towards using the name; the remaining members became Starship. Kantner reformed the group as Jefferson Starship: The Next Generation in 1992, which toured regularly throughout that decade and into the 21st century. Following Kantner's death, the group continued with new members; Craig Chaquico filed a lawsuit against them in 2016 for continuing to use the name, and the suit was consequently settled.