An ode to the countryside, 1978's 'Heavy Horses' would be the last Jethro Tull effort of real,
genuine quality, though that's not to say that later efforts were not without their occasional
merits. Having so far navigated a highly-successful and strangely-eclectic musical course
throughout their career, from early blues-spiced beginnings('This Was'), to experimental folk-
rock('Stand Up'), full-blown progressive rock('Benefit', 'Aqualung', 'Thick As A Brick' & 'A Passion
Play') and, latterly, rootsy acoustica('Songs From The Wood'), it seemed like Jethro Tull had
pretty much touched on every conceivable style the group had to offer. With punk in the
ascendancy, group-leader Ian Anderson(him of the flute, codpiece and famed one-legged
stance) decided to add a new dimension to Tull's repertoire in the form of a hard-edged, heavy-
rock veneer that nicely-complimented the group's folk-prog-rock style, thus mixing up all the
elements that had made Jethro Tull so wonderfully diverse since their late-sixties inception.
'Heavy Horses' features thick, glutinous bass-lines, meaty guitars, fluttering flute breaks and
Anderson's trademark gruff-posh vocals, thus brewing up a darkly-toned concept album about
the green hills, crumbling train stations, sturdy animals and bucolic farmyards that make the
British countryside so appealing and so unique to those who inhabit it. However, summing up
these feelings in musical terms was never going to be easy, yet , somehow, the group's semi-
progressive sound suits tracks such as the imperious 'Journeyman' - which features some
surprisingly rock-funky bass-playing courtesy of John Glascock - right down to the (earthy)
ground. Stand-out tunes, alongside 'Journeyman', include the album's folksiest piece, in the
form of the surprisingly-catchy 'Acres Wild', the brazen, bruising 'Rover' and the sweetly-toned
album finisher 'Weathercock', which features a tour-de-force from both Anderson and guitarist
Martin Barre. Occasionally the added orchestral arrangements threaten to overshadow the
carefully-constructed tracks, but 'Heavy Horses' is still, nevertheless, a fine addition to the
Jethro Tull canon. Keeping your sound both fresh and exciting over the course of ten years and
eleven studio albums is no easy feat, yet Anderson, who is assisted ably by Glascock, Barre,
Barriemore Barlow(drums), John Evans(piano, organ) and David Palmer(keyboards),
manages yet again to find a wining formula that shows just why this winningly original group
have stayed so popular for so long. In the grand scheme of things 'Heavy Horses' doesn't quite
make 'classic' Tull status; but it comes damn close. Highly recommended.
STEFAN TURNER, LONDON, 2011
stefro |4/5 |
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