Jethro Tull Appreciation Thread

Discussion in 'Music Corner' started by tootull, Jun 21, 2006.

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  1. Hi Todd W.:wave:
    Sure i remember you were interested about. I really like to share memories from J.T Shows.:agree: In the next months i will be reporting from my town' s show, Switzerland and maybe another one in Italy while not far from here...M.:)
     
  2. Todd W.

    Todd W. It's a Puggle

    Location:
    Maryland
    Please do and thanks again for taking the time to write that up :cheers:
     
  3. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
    No need for sorry, Chea. It's all good with me.

    :cheers:
     
  4. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
  5. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
    Music Review: Jethro Tull - Catfish Rising : May 27, 2010
    Jethro Tull-Aqualung VK 41044 DIDX 68 CD
    http://www.stevehoffman.tv/forums/showthread.php?t=194689&highlight=aqualung

    Jethro Tull Aqualung Cd Sound Issue!
    http://www.stevehoffman.tv/forums/showthread.php?t=215654&highlight=aqualung

    The version of Aqualung on "M.U" - The Best Of Jethro Tull
    http://www.stevehoffman.tv/forums/showthread.php?t=120667&highlight=aqualung
     
  6. maddogfagin

    maddogfagin New Member

    Location:
    Cornwall, England
    Extract (and translated) from BN DeStem courtesy of Bert Maesen and the Dutch Fan Club:

    Jethro Tull made 24 studio albums so far and includes live material and compilations. This will now remain to be the situation, because Ian Anderson is not intending to record a new studio album ever. Ian Anderson: “I will still go on writing new songs. During the Tilburg concert I will present three to the audience. I will not be recording new songs, economically it makes no sense. It’s too much hard work and it brings you nothing when you consider the costs of hiring a studio and good musicians, producing the songs, mixing, mastering and moulding, it all costs a lot. And when I do something, I will do it well but for who should I do it? Record companies will not invest in it anymore, because 90 percent of the people, who call themselves music lovers, will not pay for music anymore. The payment you get as an artist is not more than 20 percent as in the past. I do not want to complain but as an artist I have witnessed the good times and sold more that 60 million albums”.
     
  7. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
    Thanks to maddogfagin for this info, + Bert Maesen and the Dutch Fan Club.

    It's to be expected, I guess. Hey, what happened to making an album for the sake of art. Looks like money changes everything. Money, money, money, damn.
     
  8. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
    Pay attention and don't be 'Lost' - it's from the future. :whistle:
    Q&A: Jethro Tull's Ian Anderson Speaks Before Mizner Park Show Thursday, Jun 3 2010

    Q: Did you know that Aqualung was appropriated for both PlayStation and Rock Band? A: "I had no idea. I don't do videogames." - Ian Anderson 2010

    No idea!!! Help me guard the gates of Tull. I thought it through… best to let the illusion roll. The illusion that was Tull was much better in the past, eh. :laugh:

    Read more: http://www.browardpalmbeach.com/201...-ian-anderson-speaks-before-mizner-park-show/
    http://www.j-tull.com/tourdates/index.html
    North American tour for June
    4 Boca Raton, FL Mizner Park Amphitheater - tickets
    6 Atlanta, GA Chastain Park Amphitheatre - tickets on sale March 27th
    8 Vienna, VA The Filene Center - tickets
    10 Ledyard, CT Foxwoods Resort Casino - tickets
    11 Wantagh, NY Nikon at Jones Beach Music Theater - tickets
    12 Atlantic City, NJ Caesar's Atlantic City - Circus Maximus - tickets
    13 Holmdel, NJ PNC Bank Arts Center - tickets
    15 Boston, MA Bank of America Pavillion - tickets
    17 Canandaigua, NY Constellation Brands Marvin Sands Performing Arts Center - tickets
    18 Toronto, Canada Molson Amphitheatre - tickets
    19 Windsor, Canada Caesars Windsor - The Colosseum - tickets
    20 Highland Park, IL Ravinia Pavillon - tickets


    Music Review: Jethro Tull - The Jethro Tull Christmas Album : Jun 01, 2010
    Read more: http://blogcritics.org/music/article/music-review-jethro-tull-the-jethro/#ixzz0piDy7Qrw


    The Jethro Tull Board - Appreciation Thread
    http://thejethrotullboard.proboards.com/index.cgi?action=display&board=general&thread=906&page=1



    Jethro Tull Fan Forum - Appreciation Thread
    http://jethrotull.proboards.com/index.cgi?action=display&board=general&thread=963&page=1
     
  9. Oliver

    Oliver Bourbon Infused

    I'm a big fan of earlier Jethro Tull.

    But I have to say, I saw a live show on Direct TV's concert/music channel. It was from 2003 at Montreaux. I noticed that it seems that Ian Anderson looks like he's literally straining to get every word out at the right pitch at decent volume. It gets almost distracting to watch for me.

    I'll admit I never saw Tull live and was wondering if this has actually always been his vocal style or if he really is struggling with his voice. It's not that it sounded that bad, it was just the visual that made it more offputting to watch.
     
  10. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
    Ian Anderson really does need to stretch for the voice since the early 1990's concerts to the present day concerts.
    The word is out. Without rest, the singing voice may be gone, gone, gone. I'm not going to the Toronto outdoor event, because the last time there Anderson's voice was lost to the breeze. http://www.stevehoffman.tv/forums/showthread.php?t=213285
    Thank God for Tull albums from the past.


    Under Wraps - "I think it was a great album in terms of sound, in terms of actual song, particularly I was singing really well. The best I've ever sung was on that album. Sadly it was the singing of that material on tour in 1984 that actually caused the difficulties with my larynx. Whether it was the nature of the songs or just the intensity of it I don't know, but it was a shame." - Ian Anderson 1993

    It has been stated (1998) that Anderson's voice is fine in the studio. I guess this is after resting the voice, everything falls into place.
     
  11. Oliver

    Oliver Bourbon Infused

    Thanks for the info Tootull. Actually the thread you linked might have been about the show I saw on tv. Too bad.
    Also my OP was not meant to threadcrap as this is an appreciation thread but I figured the people here would be the most knowledgeable.
     
  12. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
    http://blogs.browardpalmbeach.com/countygrind/2010/06/qa_jethro_tulls_ian_anderson_mizner.php
    More...Q&A: Jethro Tull's Ian Anderson Speaks Before Tonight's Mizner Park Show - By Lee Zimmerman, Friday, Jun. 4 2010

    After more than four decades, numerous personnel changes, and a musical trajectory integrating blues, rock, prog, folk, classical, and practically every other genre either straddling or circumventing pop's progress over the past 40 years, Jethro Tull's Ian Anderson has remained the band's leader and musical mainstay.

    His iconic image as the wild-eyed ruffian balancing precariously on one leg became, in the minds of many, the quintessential model of English eccentricity, a role Anderson assumed early on. "It obviously served the band very well as an identifying feature and a kind of logo," Anderson reflects. "But over the years, it became reinforced to the point where a lot of people don't know I actually have a real name. They think my name is Jethro Tull."

    Speaking with New Times from his London office, Anderson took time from a busy day preparing for Tull's latest American jaunt to share his thoughts on both the band and the times in which they dwell. After the jump, an extended Q&A featuring questions we couldn't fit in the print edition.

    New Times: What can we expect from a Jethro Tull concert nowadays?

    Ian Anderson: We have our flexible repertoire that we play in concert, but some of it we won't be playing in June in America because it's not appropriate for an audience that are drinking and smoking and generally looking for an upbeat experience. The music we play in different countries of the world is a little more esoteric and adventurous and not just the familiar songs Jethro Tull is expected to play. Playing outside of the mainstream of musical styles is harder for us in the U.S. in the summer when we go out as Jethro Tull. That's why I play more concerts in America as Ian Anderson, because I can play performing arts centers and I can be a little more adventurous in my musical repertoire.

    So what is the divide between Jethro Tull and Ian Anderson?

    The divide is very simple. Its whether or not I can get through a show without being shouted down by drunken lads. Frankly that's the reality, and its not only in the U.S., but also in other countries of the world where hooting and shouting is considered to be the norm. And frankly, that's the difference. When I do a show as Ian Anderson, the louts tend to stay home. When it's Jethro Tull, it's an outdoor show and even when it's an indoor show its going to be a much rowdier affair.

    It seems that "Aqualung" and "Locomotive Breath" are the inevitable show-stoppers that everyone waits for with bated breath.

    I don't have a problem playing those. They're good songs. I'm always happy to play them in concert because they're two of my best songs actually. Both of them are quite relevant in terms of the subject material. They're not about leaving my heart in San Francisco. They're not about some cultural moment in history. They're about issues rather than just love songs ... One is about homeless people and you still see them on the streets of New York and San Francisco and Washington and the other is about the relentless surge of ever more people jumping on the ride to nowhere. They're very contemporary issues in terms of population growth, immigration, all the issues that if they're not on people's lists, they're in people's lives. I tend to think nothing of immigration. I frankly don't really mind too much who my neighbors are - what color they are or what their religion is - I just mind how many of them there are.

    Do you really think people hear those two tunes as message songs, or are they relating instead to the killer riffs and refrains?

    I think that's always something you have to be aware of... that people listen to songs in different ways. There are those who hear the sound of the words, the emotion behind the words, rather than what they actually mean. But I don't think I'm a heavy writer at all. I'm a little leery of people who pour over the nuances and detail of lyrics, because I think it's easy to get too caught up in trying to figure out what really lies behind and inside the mind of the person who's writing the songs. That's a dangerous thing to assume.

    What draws you to the music you currently enjoy?

    There's a lot of foreign language music that I actually like, but I have no idea what the people are actually singing about. If I don't understand the words, I can still appreciate the emotions of the words and the melodies. I can enjoy listening to Finnish folk music or good Bollywood music, even though I have no idea what they're singing about at all. I probably listen to that more than I listen to music sung in English because frankly the words are mostly so appalling in terms of most rock and pop music. It's really repetitive and dreary and limited in terms of the vocabulary.

    Did you know that Aqualung was appropriated for both PlayStation and Rock Band?

    I have no idea. I don't do video games. Usually they seem fairly harmless. I'm quite circumspect about authorizing my music for violent video games of the shoot 'em up variety. I don't mind if they're vaguely musical or somewhat educational - giving these people a little bit of an opportunity to have a little bit of creative input into the musical world is okay I guess.

    How did you come up with that indelible riff?

    The irony is that the riff actually began with me playing it on an acoustic guitar in a hotel room in the USA back in 1970 (Sings "da da da da dah dum") and having been played on an acoustic guitar doesn't have a lot to do with the way it's been perceived. It became one of those big electric moments.

    Tull's had several archival video releases lately. When you watch these, do they put you back in the moment or does it become a detached observation?

    I'm often surprised as to the degree to which I really can identify with the moment. It is quite surprising, the little things that you do remember about particular concerts. You may not remember if out of the blue, but if you happen to see them on video or film or a TV recording or happen to hear a live recording from the early days, it does tend to sound frighteningly familiar. Generally speaking there's not a huge dissociation because I'm quite cognizant onstage. I don't drink or take drugs or whatever it is... except, um... once in my life I walked onstage not entirely focused shall we say, having imbibed a bottle of cheap chardonnay before I went on. But the reason I did it was because I had just heard that Frank Zappa had died and I was really quite upset about it because a few days before I had a message to call him and I didn't and I really, really felt bad about it so I drank some wine. And then I drank some more wine and then I realized 'holy ****, I shouldn't have because I don't feel very well...' But that's about the only occasion I can remember drinking. I think in the mid '70s I'd have a bottle of beer and sort of sip it either during the show or between when there was a lot of drum solos going on. Still, that was something I think I always felt a little bit nervous about, because you're aware if you do drink a bottle of beer... you could feel a certain loosening up. It might be okay if it's after dinner or in a bar somewhere, or sitting with a few friends. But if you're in a formula one race car or playing professional football or you're doing a rock concert, then you're aware that feeling good doesn't necessarily equate with playing well. So I've always tended to be sober and pretty much focused onstage and with a sense of alertness and heightened awareness of what's going on. So it's logical that I would remember all that stuff... or at least a lot of it.

    Early on, when you portrayed a kind of cartoon character in the long bathrobe standing on one leg, was that an attempt to make you the personification of the band's image?

    It was deliberate attempt on the part of our manager, Terry Ellis, and our record company, but at that point I wasn't all that comfortable with it because I was trying to stretch the boundaries of the band as a band. It became more and more a case of the focus being put on me as the front man and I was doing all the interviews and all the media stuff, and so it became all about me standing on one leg playing the flute. And (guitarist) Martin Barre and (drummer) Doanne Perry were considered my side men.

    At what point did you know that Tull had definitively broken through and the band had attained mega-stardom? Was Aqualung the defining measure?

    I think that the real watershed was after the Benefit album, because by then we had become quite well known in most countries of the world where we had played concerts on our own or as a headline act. I can remember at the end of recording Aqualung, at like seven o'clock in the morning when we finished the last mix at Island Studios on Basing Street, sitting with (then keyboardist) John Evans and saying, "That's it, we're done, and this one is either going to make us or break us in terms of fame and fortune, or else we've gotten as far as we're going to get and this one's going to be a relative failure and we'll be in a slow decline." I thought it was kind of a watershed album really, but being as it was new to the concept album concept and had some songs that were about stuff, rather than just love songs or whatever, we weren't sure how it was going to go down. And it wasn't that it was an enormous hit straight off, but it was a strong seller and has remained so for many years since. About ten years ago, it was up to about 12 million and I would guess it's sold a few since then, and I'm grateful that it's linked forever to the name Jethro Tull. Most people would say that's the thing they think of at the heart of Jethro Tull's career and repertoire, and interestingly it has quite a lot of songs that are just acoustic guitar and voice with a little decoration. It's not at all an all-out rock album by any means."

    What are your audiences like these days?

    That's a little difficult to tell. When we're playing a concert in Italy or whatever we'll expect to see a lot of audiences in their teens and early twenties. It seems that most of the people you see at these outdoor gigs are a lot younger. But what they see in us I don't quite know. Whether they see us as a generic classic rock band or whether they really do know specific songs and specific albums, I don't know. It may be that they've grown up with this stuff because that's what their parents listened to. Maybe they discovered the music early on in their preteen years. I think there are a lot of people who come to see Jethro Tull who might also go to see Deep Purple or any one of several classic rock bands from the early late '60s, early '70. It's an era then that clearly has quite a lot of authority and musical history.

    Jethro Tull's history dates back some 42 years. How has Tull managed to adapt to a 21st century world?

    Well, obviously times have changed dramatically and Jethro Tull's music has evolved from the blues in 1968 through the more progressive rock, folk rock and whatever the hell definitions have been applied over the years. But most of that evolution took place in a very free and creative time for young musicians that were working in the UK and the USA in particular. Of course these days, classic rock music is still on the radar because all the bands who played that music in the '70s and '80s and whatever are around playing concerts today. So it's still part of people's lives and still gets played on those blue comfort blanket radio stations in the USA.

    How would you compare the world the band came up in with the way things are now, at least as far as the music biz is concerned?

    Of course, it's a different world now and the major difference is that the music industry tends to be much more constricted. Physical product is very repetitive and while the haircuts change, the music stays very much the same. The more cutting edge rock music doesn't have much of an outlet compared to the massive preponderance of online access to music, but so much of the music that's downloaded in the world isn't paid for. So it's a pretty bleak future when it comes to making a living at it, let alone making any substantial level of income... unless you get to the stage where you can command good fees for performing live. Bit if you aren't going to sell records, you're not going to get the gigs and vice versa. So its difficult to break through. Musicians don't get the breaks and the kind of opportunities that musicians got 30 or 40 years ago. It's a tough life for young musicians and for those of us who are growing old and still performing, we look back on our early careers with a sense of good fortune at having been there at a time when you could actually achieve these things and you could achieve them on your own terms without the pressure of whatever people considered commercial.
     
  13. maddogfagin

    maddogfagin New Member

    Location:
    Cornwall, England
    Hi everyone. A plea for help :help: I've been asked to try and compile a comprehensive Blodwyn Pig and Mick Abrahams discography for possible publication and I've begun it at http://jethrotull.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=collectors&action=display&thread=1007

    Any help with it would be welcome and credit will go to anyone who helps me if this task is published either in prnt or on the internet.

    At the present I'm concentrating on the vinyl, cassette etc issues - I'll attempt the CDs at a later stage

    :cheers: Maddog
     
  14. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
  15. ZappaSG

    ZappaSG New Member

    Location:
    Philadelphia
    Any word on the Stand Up 3 disc set?
     
  16. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
  17. maddogfagin

    maddogfagin New Member

    Location:
    Cornwall, England
    It doesn't look good at the moment. I contacted EMI who seemingly know nothing about it, at least that's what the annonymous person I spoke to said, but all avenues haven't been closed yet so I'll go on looking.

    I'm assuming btw that EMI will be releasing it but who knows :(

    On another subject I've posted an article from Q magazine from 1995 in which IA selects his 9 most influential albums.
    http://jethrotull.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=general&action=display&thread=1026

    :wave:
     
  18. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
    http://www.stevehoffman.tv/forums/showpost.php?p=5554009&postcount=32

    (Ian Anderson) Recently, he was asked to write liner notes for a special three-disc version of Stand Up which will be released in the fall. It will contain an entire live 1970 Jethro Tull performance at Carnegie Hall lately discovered in the EMI vaults.
     
  19. Doctor Flang

    Doctor Flang Forum Resident

    Location:
    Helsinki, Finland
    Nice! But i find it strange that it's released as part of the Stand Up as the Carnegie Hall gig was recorded after Benefit...
     
  20. John Cantrell

    John Cantrell Active Member

    Location:
    Outta here
    *bump*

    Because today is Jethro Tull appreciation day. Or so I've heard.
     
  21. maddogfagin

    maddogfagin New Member

    Location:
    Cornwall, England
    I've seen no flags out or "bunting" hanging from trees or fences :laugh:

    Well to contribute to the Jethro Tull Appreciation Day there's now a question and answer thread with Mick Abrahams at the Tull Forum - http://jethrotull.proboards.com/index.cgi?action=display&board=questions&thread=1030&page=1
    A chance to ask the great bloke and original guitarist questions pertaining to Tull, Blodwyn Pig, life, the universe and everything :edthumbs:
     
  22. tootull

    tootull I tried to catch my eye but I looked the other way Thread Starter

    Location:
    Canada
    Is this another one of your drinking games? :laugh:

    :cheers:
    :laugh: HAHAHA I've seen no flags out or "bunting" hanging from trees or fences

    Wasted days & wasted nights: :winkgrin: Regarding the Thick as a Brick newspaper- Spot the changes:
    http://www.stevehoffman.tv/forums/showpost.php?p=5558976&postcount=69
     
  23. Rick B.

    Rick B. Senior Member

    Location:
    Toronto
     
  24. Siegmund

    Siegmund Vinyl Sceptic

    Location:
    Britain, Europe
    I saw Tull in 1990. They were great and I'd call myself a fan (own all the albums from the debut up to Catfish Rising), but have not felt the inclination to see them again.

    That I.A. record collection feature is fascinating. Thanks for the link.:wave:
     
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