Technically speaking, 
Red Octopus was the first album credited to 
Jefferson Starship, though practically the same lineup made 
Dragon Fly, credited to 
Grace Slick/
Paul Kantner/
Jefferson Starship. The difference, however, was crucial: 
Marty Balin was once again a fully integrated bandmember, writing or co-writing five of the ten tracks. And there can be little doubt that it was 
Balin's irresistible ballad "Miracles," the biggest hit single in the 
Jefferson Whatever catalog, that propelled 
Red Octopus to the top of the charts, the only 
Jefferson album to chart that high and the best-selling album in their collective lives. This must have been sweet vindication for 
Balin, who founded 
Jefferson Airplane but then drifted away from the group as it veered away from his musical vision. Now, the collective was incorporating his taste without quite integrating it -- "Miracles," with its strings and sax solo by nonband member Irv Cox, was hardly a characteristic 
Airplane/
Starship track. But then, neither exactly was 
Papa John Creach's showcase, "Git Fiddler," or bassist 
Pete Sears' instrumental "Sandalphon," which sounded like something from an early 
Procol Harum album. 
Slick has three strong songs, among them the second single "Play on Love." Like 
Dragon Fly, 
Red Octopus reflected a multiplicity of musical tastes; there were ten credited songwriters, seven of whom were in the band. If there is any consistency in this material, it is in subject matter (love songs). The album is more ballad-heavy and melodic than the 
Airplane albums, which made it more accessible to the broader audience it reached, though "Sweeter Than Honey" is as tough a rocker as the band ever played. ~ William Ruhlmann