"Winds of Change" is the seventh album by Jefferson Starship, released in 1982. It marked the first studio album produced after Grace Slick rejoined the band as a full member. Aynsley Dunbar played drums on the album but was replaced by Donny Baldwin for the supporting tour. The album reached number 26 on the Billboard charts.
Cash Box described the title track as "concisely crafted" and noted it as a return to Jefferson Airplane's style. Joseph McCombs of AllMusic considered the album "one of the weakest entries" in the band's discography, calling it "strikingly unadventurous." Writing for Rolling Stone, Stephen Holden remarked that the songs felt like bland, recycled versions of previous Jefferson Starship tracks but acknowledged that there was still "enough of a glimmer from the spark of Red Octopus to keep this ship rattling along."
The LP produced two U.S. Top 40 singles: "Be My Lady" in the fall of 1982, which peaked at #28, and "Winds of Change" in the winter of 1983, which reached #38.