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Tull News Ticker

3/25/07 - Ian Finds the "Best of Acoustic Tull":
A hand picked selection of the best of acoustic Tull and Ian solo tracks is now hitting store shelves.  Find out why Ian's softer side is so enduring: Get the Album!

3/25/07
- Jethro Tull Gets Wired: Or rather, their back catalogue does. The band's releases have finally been given the go for distribution on iTunes and other digital Internet-based services. Visit your favorite online retailer to download your Tull fix!

5/25/06 - Ian Anderson Awarded at "Ivors": Ian Anderson walked away with the Lifetime Achievement award at the Ivor Novello Awards, a yearly songwriting awards show presented yearly by the British Academy of Composers and Songwriters.

5/25/06 - Orchestral Tull Dates in the U.S.: Ian Anderson will be performing shows with various orchestras throughout the U.S. this summer. For more, check the latest tour dates.
| Get Tour Dates |

TULL TICKER ARCHIVE

 

Jethro Tull In Concert, by David Rees

JETHRO TULL - The eccentric troupe of minstrels led by the flamboyant Ian Anderson, are one of the most successful groups in the history of rock music. Since 1968 Tull have toured incessantly, selling in excess of 40 million albums in the process. In the beginning they were the vanguard of the British blues/rock boom along with their contemporaries such as Led Zeppelin and Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac. The early 70’s saw them bracketed alongside the likes of Yes, Pink Floyd andGenesis, the kings of the dreaded progressive rock concept albums. The latter part of the decade brought a gentler, "folkier" flavor to Tull, and they were labeled incorrectly as a folk-rock band.

The 80’s saw yet another direction, with the emphasis on hi-tech keyboards and synthesis, before 1987’s ‘back to the roots’ "Crest of a Knave". That album gained Tull a Grammy for Best Hard Rock Album. No wonder people struggle to find a convenient label to pin on the wonderfully varied, eclectic music of Jethro Tull!

In 1991, when this concert was recorded, it hadn’t gotten any easier to categorize; the then new album, "Catfish Rising", was registered as a first week top ten entry in both the Folk/Roots and the Heavy Metal Charts.

The plain truth is that there is no label for them. Jethro Tull play Tull music, and there is no other band quite like them. Equally at home playing the blues, or folk, or impossibly complex and genuinely intensive, classically tinged rock, with the skill and precision that can only come with immense experience.

This album, recorded at Hammersmith Odeon in October 1991, brings a taste of the many aspects of Tull, all different but all with the distinctive driving force of Ian Anderson’s magic flute and the majestic guitar of Martin Barre, with the powerhouse rhythm of Doane Perry and Dave Pegg. Dave’s colleague in the folk rock legends Fairport convention, Maart Allcock made up the five piece on the keyboards. The breif tease of "Minstrel in the Gallery" leads into the heavy rock classic from 1971, "Cross-Eyed Mary", still a regular and essential part of AOR radio in America. "This is Not Love", recorded some 20 years later, shows that Tull have not lost their bite and aggression from those early years.

Three songs from Catfish Rising; Rocks on the Road, Tall Thin Girl and the blues based Still loving you tonight are proof that Tull is not a band to rest on their laurels and peddle the vast back catalogue; each new album is featured strongly in the live set, and is a mark of the band’s excellence that the new material can stand alongside the old favorites. Those older classics are not neglected though, and Heavy Horses from 1978 remains a firm favorite with the fans. Thick as a Brick is their as it always must be, but the original 45 minute piece is trimmed to a manageable 8 minutes or so, but still with more twists and turns than most bands could muster in a whole concert. A New Day Yesterdayoriginally on the 1969 album Stand Up is given a new lease of life, incorporating one of Ian Anderson’s dazzling flute solos, which itself leads into a healthy portion of Bach’s Bouree. Blues Jam is loosely based around Look Into The Sun, again from 1969, before Tull finish on a storming rendition of Jump Start from the Crest of a Knave album. Anyone who raised an eyebrow when Tull won the Hard Rock Grammy should listen to this track and think again! So there it is, an hour with Jethro Tull in concert. Having listened to it you still won’t know quite where their pigeon hole is, but you will know that Jethro Tull have something rather special to offer. Just what it is, is hard to define, but it has kept them in our hearts and minds (and the album charts) for some 27 years so far. Here’s to many more years to come!

Exerted from an article written for Jethro Tull In Concert

Written by Dave Rees, February 1995