Quicksilver Messenger Service Lyrics — by Popularity
61 songs · Page 1 of 2
| 1 | Where You Love |
| 2 | Maiden of the Cancer Moon |
| 3 | Which Do You Love |
| 4 | How You Love |
| 5 | When You Love |
| 6 | Calvary |
| 7 | Happy Trails |
| 8 | Light Your Windows |
| 9 | It's Been Too Long |
| 10 | Shady Grove |
| 11 | Rebel |
| 12 | Codine |
| 13 | Joseph's Coat |
| 14 | Flute Song |
| 15 | Cobra |
| 16 | I Found Love |
| 17 | Fire Brothers |
| 18 | Too Far |
| 19 | Hope |
| 20 | Freeway Flyer |
| 21 | Don't Cry My Lady Love |
| 22 | Bears |
| 23 | Gone Again |
| 24 | The Truth |
| 25 | Song for Frisco |
| 26 | Changes |
| 27 | All in My Mind |
| 28 | The Hat |
| 29 | Who Do You Love, Part 2 |
| 30 | The Bears |
| 31 | Just for Love |
| 32 | Who Do You Love (demo version) |
| 33 | The Mat |
| 34 | I Heard You Singing |
| 35 | Castles in the Sand |
| 36 | Just for Love, Part 1 |
| 37 | Just for Love, Part 2 |
| 38 | Too Long |
| 39 | Who Do You Love? (single edit) |
| 40 | Mona |
| 41 | Who Do You Love |
| 42 | Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You |
| 43 | California State Correctional Facility Blues |
| 44 | Cowboy on the Run |
| 45 | Dino's Song |
| 46 | Doin' Time in the U.S.A. |
| 47 | Fresh Air |
| 48 | Fresh Air (2001 digital remaster) |
| 49 | Got My Mojo Workin’ |
| 50 | Gypsy Lights |
Quicksilver Messenger Service Albums
Singles
About Quicksilver Messenger Service
Quicksilver Messenger Service was a San Francisco psychedelic rock band formed in 1965 that became integral to the city's counterculture movement alongside the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane. Led by guitarist Gary Duncan and featuring the distinctive harmonica and vocals of John Cipollina, they crafted sprawling, improvisational jams that epitomized the Haight-Ashbury sound on albums like their 1968 self-titled debut and "Happy Trails" (1969). Songs like "Pride of Man" and their extended live versions of "Mona" and "Who Do You Love" showcased their ability to stretch blues and folk into hypnotic, feedback-drenched epics. While they never achieved mainstream success like some peers, Quicksilver's influence on jam band culture and their role in defining the San Francisco psychedelic scene made them essential architects of 1960s rock experimentation.