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Why is Tull's "A Passion Play" rated so low?

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Topic: Why is Tull's "A Passion Play" rated so low?
Posted By: Sandro28grizz
Subject: Why is Tull's "A Passion Play" rated so low?
Date Posted: October 02 2019 at 18:07
Not talking about the PA rating, just in general. Even among prog fans the album seems to be a bit divisive, but why? On the surface it would seem to have everything that a prog fan would love...it's got a wide variety of instruments, styles, and time signatures, the band's playing is killer throughout, and almost all the individual sections are great songs in their own right. Yeah "The Hare..." section is pretty stupid, but it's meant to be...it's just a light-hearted break from the dense material surrounding it and the absurdity of it is good for a chuckle. The album's concept is a bit convoluted, sure, but so is TLLDOB's concept, and that one is considered a classic of the genre. So what gives?



Replies:
Posted By: Barbu
Date Posted: October 02 2019 at 18:38
Inaccessible music and repulsive at first listen. I love it today but it was hard work, took me many spins before I start enjoying it.

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Posted By: kenethlevine
Date Posted: October 02 2019 at 18:49
like Oldfield's Amarok, it seems averse to exploring its good ideas, instead bounding from one to the next.  Unlike you Martin, I gave up after a couple of listens, and so I pretty much concur with your original assessment


Posted By: Progosopher
Date Posted: October 02 2019 at 22:55
I love APP. It is a wild ride of styles and images. It also has a rather strange sound to it thanks to the saxophones and synthesizers used, and yes, it is dense to the point of obscurity. Not an easy album for most to get into, which is why it tends to be rated so low. Repeated listens yields rewards though. After decades, it is still revealing nuances and subtleties to me. Still, if it does not grab the listener on a first or second listen, most will abandon it.

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The world of sound is certainly capable of infinite variety and, were our sense developed, of infinite extensions. -- George Santayana, "The Sense of Beauty"


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: October 02 2019 at 23:50
because it's just an opinion.

There are 1000's of great prog albums so not everything can be at the top. The PA list is just a list of albums and the order is not that important really although I'm glad that CTTE is top. Beyond that I'm not really fussed.


Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 02:22
Originally posted by Progosopher Progosopher wrote:

I love APP. It is a wild ride of styles and images. It also has a rather strange sound to it thanks to the saxophones and synthesizers used, and yes, it is dense to the point of obscurity. Not an easy album for most to get into, which is why it tends to be rated so low. Repeated listens yields rewards though. After decades, it is still revealing nuances and subtleties to me. Still, if it does not grab the listener on a first or second listen, most will abandon it.
 
 
mmmhhh!!!... my current APP review on PA  was rewritten after a forced strong exposure, but I still couldn't manage to permeate what it's about (even not worrying about that stupid Hare piece), probably because of its inn-density (rather than intensity)Wink 
 
Clearly, the Mad Flauter thought he couldn't go wrong after TAAB's immense (and surprising to many) success and his grandiosely ambitious ideas would start to crumble with the D'Ysaster thing and the War Child fiasco. He forgot to make an accessible storyline for APP
 
Interesting to note that The Who's Pete Townshend suffered also a crush in his overly-ambitious Lifehouse project, squashed around that same time.


Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 03:10
4 stars (4.02) is not a bad/low rating...


Posted By: Atavachron
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 03:23
Heck I gave it five


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"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy


Posted By: progaardvark
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 05:16
I sometimes wonder if it suffered because it followed Thick as a Brick. I don't believe I rated it yet on this site, but I would give it a five too (I did on RYM).

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i'm shopping for a new oil-cured sinus bag
that's a happy bag of lettuce
this car smells like cartilage
nothing beats a good video about fractions


Posted By: Manuel
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 05:55
Since music is subjective, as is art in general, it depends on perception and not mainly on quality. And if you add the bad publicity it got when released, is understandable why is rated so low. I personally love it, from the first time I heard it, and have learned to appreciate it more and more over the years.


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 06:58
Originally posted by Barbu Barbu wrote:

Inaccessible music and repulsive at first listen. I love it today but it was hard work, took me many spins before I start enjoying it.

I am of the opinion that this is so, because we hear the same things over and over and over again, and our brain gets comfortable with this and that, and when you hear something different, it won't stick ... and it will be tough to get past that, and is the main reason why I dislike the "classics" and the "top ten", because for the most part many listeners simply "needle" a bit here and there (as we used to do) and not listen to the whole thing properly and correctly.

Many of the comments on a lot of things are exactly like that ... because if someone had a comment BEYOND their "like" they would tell you why! Instead all you get is the push of the post to the top in replies. many of which are devoid of any indication that it was even listened to.

This is something that you find out real quick, when listening to ... for example ... SPACE PIRATE RADIO ... when the difference and the weirdness and the unusual come together, and you can not define it, and neither do you know how to feel about it ... except that ... you don't get it! ... and in the end ... there is nothing to get ... just enjoyment to appreciate, and it is something that most can not do or have, because they are so conditioned to a specific top ten sounding thing ... that prevents you from listening to new things ... 

PP, just like TFTO, deserve a lot more respect ... and likely would ... if we weren't so damn washed out with just one type of sound and song ... then, and only then, might we ever come to understand what "progressive" really means, instead of a meaningless word wasted on nothing!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 07:00
Originally posted by Manuel Manuel wrote:

Since music is subjective, as is art in general, it depends on perception and not mainly on quality. And if you add the bad publicity it got when released, is understandable why is rated so low. I personally love it, from the first time I heard it, and have learned to appreciate it more and more over the years.

When I first heard it I thought it was the best JT ever! So, I'm not surprised when the folks that only played top ten sounding material (as was the case in Santa Barbara) did not like it ... it was so obvious that you could smell the stink 10 floors down!

What is more scary is that 46 years later, EXACTLY the same thing happens here on many conversations!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 07:06
Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

because it's just an opinion.
...

But that's like saying that someone's opinion is more important than yours ... specially when it has "numbers" behind it suggesting a falsehood that was fabricated by commercial interests to help sell their product ... something that we continually refuse to see and then realize how bad it can be to most arts, in general.

The opinion is NOT THE ART.

The fan is NOT THE ART.

So, why would "opinion" matter to anyone ... SPECIALLY IN A PROGRESSIVE BOARD ABOUT PROGRESSIVE MUSIC!

The irony hurts!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 07:42
^ Regarding art as intrinsic: Is it just a thing, is it intention, is it perception, or all of the above? I might say that the fan and the opinion factor into the art, as what is art isn't just an object, it's a perception, and it's an interaction, and it's an intention. I think that the interaction between the observer/listener and the object creates the art in a sense (it must be not only seen or heard, but processed by our brains to be perceived as art) and of course what is art can be in the eyes and ears of the beholder (and of course the brain).

Different brains process information differently, one is not just hearing music, one processes it, and each person will process it a little differently (as well as variance in hearing), so in a sense, even if we are listening to the same recording, we are not "hearing" the same music. So I would say that art in a sense is the interactive process, or art is, or art happens at the intersection/ interstice, the relationship between the art and the admirer.

EDIT: Or to put it another way, art is experiential and what is art depends, at least in part, on the observer. Artists matter, audiences matter, perception matters.

To be ridiculous, if "a Picasso" coalesces in the forest, and no one is around to observe it, is it really art?

As for that JT, only heard it once all the way through, and I don't know it well enough to have much of an opinion.

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https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts


Posted By: Dervish D
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 08:04
I think its great. Knew it was great first time I heard it and I still listen to it today. It helped when I saw it performed in Nashville. Still one of the best concerts I have ever been to...


Posted By: Snicolette
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 08:13
I think some of it was that TAAB already took the fully available long format and this one did also, it was also more "serious," in the sense of not quite poking as much fun at itself as TAAB.  

I quite enjoy the recording and the live show at the time.... and can remember it being played in full before it's release on the radio (I was on a first date with 1st husband, his father drove us to the pier where we had very sophisticated espressos...got to hear the whole thing on the way, as it was a bit of a drive....June 15, 1973.  Also a very bad Topanga fire started on that day.....

Perhaps part of why I remember it so clearly, it played a part in a memorable day and time in my life.


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"Into every rain, a little life must fall." ~Tom Rapp


Posted By: ForestFriend
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 09:33
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

because it's just an opinion.
...

But that's like saying that someone's opinion is more important than yours ... specially when it has "numbers" behind it suggesting a falsehood that was fabricated by commercial interests to help sell their product ... something that we continually refuse to see and then realize how bad it can be to most arts, in general.

The opinion is NOT THE ART.

The fan is NOT THE ART.

So, why would "opinion" matter to anyone ... SPECIALLY IN A PROGRESSIVE BOARD ABOUT PROGRESSIVE MUSIC!

The irony hurts!


You do realize that the rating and reviews section of this website is entirely based on people's opinions, right?

Almost nobody on this website is under the impression that the cumulative rating an album receives, or any individual review for an album is an objective viewpoint on the album, nor are the ratings "the art". It's nothing more than getting a sense of how the prog community receives a particular release, which can be both interesting to read and help guide people towards other albums they might be interested in checking out.

This is not a particularly "progressive" board (nor does it have to be)... And it's about "prog rock", not "progressive music" - there is a distinction, in my opinion.


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https://borealkinship.bandcamp.com/releases" rel="nofollow - My prog band - Boreal Kinship


Posted By: Barbu
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 10:20
Originally posted by Snicolette Snicolette wrote:

got to hear the whole thing on the way, as it was a bit of a drive.....June 15, 1973

^

I too perfectly remember my first APP hearing: in an hotel room on a Sunday afternoon, May 22 1994. (lol)

(I'll be back on that soon)

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Posted By: Snicolette
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 10:38
 I have a feeling 'tis a bawdy tale.....  Wink  Or maybe one involving drinking, judging from your earlier post. 



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"Into every rain, a little life must fall." ~Tom Rapp


Posted By: Barbu
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 11:23
Naaah this is a very serious anecdote. Now please stop bothering me, I'm trying to concentrate writing it.



(kidding)

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Posted By: Snicolette
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 11:26
Smile

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"Into every rain, a little life must fall." ~Tom Rapp


Posted By: dougmcauliffe
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 12:02
It’s boring and dull


Posted By: Barbu
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 12:16
Originally posted by Barbu Barbu wrote:

Originally posted by Snicolette Snicolette wrote:

got to hear the whole thing on the way, as it was a bit of a drive.....June 15, 1973

^

I too perfectly remember my first APP hearing: in an hotel room on a Sunday afternoon, May 22 1994. (lol)

(I'll be back on that soon)


Saturday, May 21, 1994. A bunch of friends drove to the big city for some action and a good time.
The next morning we went downtown, direction 'the big music shop' (berri-uqam). At the time I was familiar with only two Tull records (A little Light Music & Thick as a Brick), I was enjoying them both greatly and decided it was a good opportunity to get some more.
In less than an hour I spent $500 (a small fortune for me at the time) on a good fifteen Tull studio albums + the 25th anniversary 4 cd box set.
Back at the hotel, while some were taking a nap, I pick up A Passion Play on the pile, headed for the bathroom and locked the door.
I slowly unwrapped it with trembling hands...maaan - one song/45 minutes, Thick as a Brick part 2 I thought with a sense of trepidation.
I put the cd in the discman, sat back comfortably, lit up a cigarette and pressed play:

Heartbeat...full band intro with (yuk) saxophone then piano and that strange singing style (hmmm?), full band again and more sax (wtf! where's the damn flute?).
I vomited for the first time during 'The Hare' and before the end of side 2 I was sobbing like a baby.

When I came out three quarters of an hour later, my girlfriend gave me a look and said: 'Are you feeling alright? you look rather pale'.
'It's okay', I said, 'everything's right'. Man, it was not since I had the impression that I had just threw five hundred bucks
out of the hotel room window. I only hope that they're not all horrible like this, I thought.

Around 7:30pm the same day we were all seated in the parterre at the Montréal Olympic Stadium sharing a joint and when the first notes of
'Astronomy Domine' started, that first repulsive A Passion Play experience was just a vague and distant memory.

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Posted By: Man With Hat
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 12:22
The Story Of The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles 

I would also give it a 5. I suppose it's not as varied/exciting/ballsy as TAAB, but its every bit as good. 


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Dig me...But don't...Bury me
I'm running still, I shall until, one day, I hope that I'll arrive
Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.


Posted By: Rednight
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 13:11
Originally posted by Dervish D Dervish D wrote:

I think its great. Knew it was great first time I heard it and I still listen to it today. It helped when I saw it performed in Nashville. Still one of the best concerts I have ever been to...
It WAS my first concert, providing me a very cherished memory of how great that rendition of the band was. The album itself was beautifully designed with its faux playbill that's still good for a laugh. The music is densely constructed with a satisfying segue around every corner. Not bad for a concept album that was thrown together on a whim after a troublesome previous project was abandoned.

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"It just has none of the qualities of your work that I find interesting. Abandon [?] it." - Eno


Posted By: Snicolette
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 14:45
Originally posted by Barbu Barbu wrote:

Originally posted by Barbu Barbu wrote:

Originally posted by Snicolette Snicolette wrote:

got to hear the whole thing on the way, as it was a bit of a drive.....June 15, 1973

^

I too perfectly remember my first APP hearing: in an hotel room on a Sunday afternoon, May 22 1994. (lol)

(I'll be back on that soon)


Saturday, May 21, 1994. A bunch of friends drove to the big city for some action and a good time.
The next morning we went downtown, direction 'the big music shop' (berri-uqam). At the time I was familiar with only two Tull records (A little Light Music & Thick as a Brick), I was enjoying them both greatly and decided it was a good opportunity to get some more.
In less than an hour I spent $500 (a small fortune for me at the time) on a good fifteen Tull studio albums + the 25th anniversary 4 cd box set.
Back at the hotel, while some were taking a nap, I pick up A Passion Play on the pile, headed for the bathroom and locked the door.
I slowly unwrapped it with trembling hands...maaan - one song/45 minutes, Thick as a Brick part 2 I thought with a sense of trepidation.
I put the cd in the discman, sat back comfortably, lit up a cigarette and pressed play:

Heartbeat...full band intro with (yuk) saxophone then piano and that strange singing style (hmmm?), full band again and more sax (wtf! where's the damn flute?).
I vomited for the first time during 'The Hare' and before the end of side 2 I was sobbing like a baby.

When I came out three quarters of an hour later, my girlfriend gave me a look and said: 'Are you feeling alright? you look rather pale'.
'It's okay', I said, 'everything's right'. Man, it was not since I had the impression that I had just threw five hundred bucks
out of the hotel room window. I only hope that they're not all horrible like this, I thought.

Around 7:30pm the same day we were all seated in the parterre at the Montréal Olympic Stadium sharing a joint and when the first notes of
'Astronomy Domine' started, that first repulsive A Passion Play experience was just a vague and distant memory.

I commend you on your bravery and also for coming around to listen again, and to Tull and, obviously, have a fondness for the band.  :)  Funny the perspectives of other generations, I find it wonderful that there are so many that didn't grow up with it that have discovered it on their own, delved on their own and found what they enjoy, that takes a different kind of interest than it's being handed to you on a silver (well, usually, black) platter over the current airwaves (or netwaves or whatever, these days).



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"Into every rain, a little life must fall." ~Tom Rapp


Posted By: Barbu
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 17:34
^

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Posted By: Barbu
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 17:42
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

As for that JT, only heard it once all the way through, and I don't know it well enough to have much of an opinion.

You should get a physical copy and give it a fair chance. Trust me, brother, it's a monument of progressive music and it could become as important to you as is Pawn Hearts. I will always prefer Thick as a Brick but I'll never argue with somebody who's saying that A Passion Play is the better of the two.

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Posted By: siLLy puPPy
Date Posted: October 03 2019 at 18:02
Why are any exceedlngly challenging masterpieces rated low? Because there seems to be a threshold of tolerance for many who don't have the ambition to accept the challenge of what the album has to offer. 

Did the complexities of prog have to stop in 1973 as the peak year? Of course not, but due to the rift in the few that wanted to create these perceived pompous overweening difficult listens and those who were paying the bills by purchasing the music, it seems to have hit a brick wall. 

5 star album for me too but i've paid my dues in working my way up to totally getting where the album is going. Yeah, there are some albums that are just bad and complex doesn't necessarily mean good but in the case of "Passion Play," i'm a huge fan. In fact i'm gonna listen to it right now!!!!!


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https://rateyourmusic.com/~siLLy_puPPy


Posted By: richardh
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 00:20
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

because it's just an opinion.
...

But that's like saying that someone's opinion is more important than yours ... specially when it has "numbers" behind it suggesting a falsehood that was fabricated by commercial interests to help sell their product ... something that we continually refuse to see and then realize how bad it can be to most arts, in general.

The opinion is NOT THE ART.

The fan is NOT THE ART.

So, why would "opinion" matter to anyone ... SPECIALLY IN A PROGRESSIVE BOARD ABOUT PROGRESSIVE MUSIC!

The irony hurts!
 

He was asking why the rating is low not whether anyones opinion is valid. Clearly you don't believe in opinion but the guy who started the thread does. Stop telling people what they should or not think. You are not the thought police. I am fed up with you to be honest. You are a monstrous pain in the butt.


Posted By: M27Barney
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 01:38
Incidentaly. Does a prog album played in a sealed bunker with nobody in that bunker, have a nominal (quantum) rating? I think it does...

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Play me my song.....Here it comes again.......


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 06:11
Why is it rated so low? Because it sucks.

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This message was brought to you by a proud supporter of the Deep State.


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 07:00
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

...
Different brains process information differently, one is not just hearing music, one processes it, and each person will process it a little differently (as well as variance in hearing), so in a sense, even if we are listening to the same recording, we are not "hearing" the same music. So I would say that art in a sense is the interactive process, or art is, or art happens at the intersection/ interstice, the relationship between the art and the admirer.
...

This is where the "definition" of the word ART is a problem. And then, how do we make out who fits and doesn't fit.

I tend to look at the complete history of their work ... not just one album, mind you ... before I consider them an artist, and in this sense, yes, JT fits, even if a lot of his music was more radio inclined (even when FM was almost dead in America!!!), than otherwise, and sometimes (this is just me -- but I have not kept up with IA or JT ... there are way too many others out there doing better NOW!), this is not for my tastes ... I have that feeling that because his "concept" albums (PP/Minstrel) originally did not do as well, and the critics did not like it compared to Aqualung, that it took a little out of Ian, enough to come back with songs for the radio ... which got played enough to sell some, but it was not the monster that his early albums had been.

Anyone, can make a piece of music ... anyone can paint a picture ... anyone can write a novel ... but doing so consistently is another story ... and this is where I have an issue ... is Stephen King an artist even though I do not care for his material or work? I have to take my "personal" view away ... and this is important ... and then go ... it is better than a lot of pulp fiction, even if a lot of it is ... mostly what appears to be just weird twists and turns to create a story, and further take it somewhere else.

So in this sense, a lot of bands, JT included, have to have the appreciation for their ART, even if it is not perfect, and I will tend to be a bit more detailed on new things, and hope that they can also come back strong, so to "fortify" their ability and standing ... the obvious question would be ... as was the case with Mozart ... how many pieces are you going to see, before you realize that this guy is strong and talented?

My only concern, again, is that we tend to believe this "top ten" stuff and in effect turn off some listeners to anything else by that artist ... and I don't think that's fair ... I have listened to all the newer stuff by Dream Theater, and although I did not deem it necessary to review ... I'm not going to doubt their ability to put something together, even if it seems a bit duplicated for my tastes ... like saying that you and I do not feel like that about Tchaikovsky or Beethoven beyond the pieces that we know ... in fact, sometimes you can tell right off the bat who is who ... 

But I am not sure that the "listener" has anything to do with the work itself ... you see ... Stephen King writes off his "movie mind" (for lack of a better description), just as Mozart did off his movie mind (nicely pre-viewed in the well known movie!), just as Huxley kept a diary and track of his "inner" experiences to put together an incredible amount of literature ... to many of these, it is not about the "public" ... maybe their wife/friend and what not, but I doubt that is a whole lot beyond that except on some occasions.

The main problem with publicity and the media is that it thinks it has a right to make a decision, and one of these days, as artist is going to hang himself/herself in a concert to make their point ... I am not here to write for you ... and you can not stop me from being myself and instead be your slave! Get fudged! And we're still going to sit there and be sordid and upset that someone had the guts to take us down a step that should have been done earlier ... but that person/artist didn't know any better, as is the case with many of these women out there ... exposing something they are not, and in some cases, trying to be a teenager, when they are no longer one! And no one gets that it's a lie disguised in publicity!

It's just too weird ... and one of the reasons why I have such a disdain for "top ten" ... heck I got to see FM radio come up, and then 6 years later the station was bought by Texaco and a year later ... it was all dots and you could not play blah and blah from 8 to 8 kind of thing and no weird stuff before midnight so we don't "alienate" the audience ... never mind that we're playing the same ten songs each hour! Let's now even consider, discuss what happened to KMET in Los Angeles ... the greatest crime that the FCC has ever committed and allowed to happen ... on a station that was very highly rated because they ... whatevahhhh!!!

When you have seen those kinds of things, you remember them ... but too many folks here, have no idea what all this meant, and how it hurt the "progressive scene" that many think DIED in the 80's ... it didn't die ... it just got "censored" as I like to call it, and we bought into it and NEVER EVER said anything about it like good boys and girls!

How much sicker is that?


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: M27Barney
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 08:00
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:


Why is it rated so low? Because it sucks.

I haven't heard the music, but somehow I think I must obtain a copy and give it a spin..mind you since i'm not a massive fan of the saxophone, perhaps that may put me off...

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Play me my song.....Here it comes again.......


Posted By: BrufordFreak
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 08:07
I received it as a member of the Columbia Record Club as the "Selection of the Month" when it first came out. I had not been a Tull fan though I liked some of their songs, but Passion Play mesmerized me for days. I couldn't figure out why it was that such an intricately crafted and obviously virtuosic musical experience was so difficult to get into! I finally gave up and have felt the exact same each and every time I have returned to it. The music or engineering or something is too dense and the story is virtually inaccessible because it's so colloquially Brit-lit and, therefore, meaningless to an unsympathetic American like me. 

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Drew Fisher
https://progisaliveandwell.blogspot.com/


Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 10:02
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Why is it rated so low? Because it sucks.

Don't hold back...tell us how you really feel.
LOL


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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: Rednight
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 11:54
Originally posted by M27Barney M27Barney wrote:


I haven't heard the music, but somehow I think I must obtain a copy and give it a spin..mind you since i'm not a massive fan of the saxophone, perhaps that may put me off...[/QUOTE] Those sopranino saxophones really livened things up though.

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"It just has none of the qualities of your work that I find interesting. Abandon [?] it." - Eno


Posted By: dr prog
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 15:50
It’s not smothered in dated mellotron and full of melody. How can it be rated by proggers?

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All I like is prog related bands beginning late 60's/early 70's. Their music from 1968 - 83 has the composition and sound which will never be beaten. Perfect blend of jazz, classical, folk and rock.


Posted By: BarryGlibb
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 17:56
The first time I heard APP it left me cold.

The second time I listened to it... I was lukewarm in my affection.

The 3rd time I concentrated and actually listened to it I was "coming around".

At about 10 listens, I was fully converted.

Some 46 years later I still discover instrumental sections in the layers on music that I wasn't aware of before.

From dud (initial listenings) to masterpiece (after ~10 listenings).

Be patient.


Posted By: AFlowerKingCrimson
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 18:53
I haven't heard it in a while but it's even more of a hardcore prog album than TAAB. Very dense. CTTE is to TAAB what Tales is to APP imo. It's still good but like tales takes a while to digest.


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 19:58
For a rock album, it is actually quite well-researched and a brilliant modernized rendition of the Passion Plays (better referred to as Mystery Plays) of the late Middle-Ages/early Tudor epoch, when such "Morality Plays" would be seen in town streets and squares prior to the playhouses and actual dramas and comedies of Elizabethan England. Springing originally from Easter Pageants, where indeed the devil and the Resurrection were integral parts of "Passion Plays", the Mystery/Morality Plays expanded on the theme to include prostitutes, criminals and various other reprobates who eventually were "saved" by divine intervention. 

It would be rude of me to say that perhaps the subject matter and presentation is well above a few folks' heads here, but it is what it is, even if you don't quite get it; yet as a Medievalist I have always found the album fascinating. Rather than a Renaissance Faire approximation of early music, Ian Anderson instead takes the actual bones of the original play concept and gives it a modern take, with modern, progressive music, rather than lute and tabor mimicry. Even the name "Ronnie Pilgrim" is a nod to early English narrative poetry featuring the "Everyman" as an allegorical character (such as Langland's The Vision of Piers Plowman), and his journey from death to rebirth is an ironic twist on the crucifixion and resurrection of the early Passion Plays.

"The Story Of The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles" rather than being misjudged as some bizarre oddity plopped in the mid-section of the album by modern critics is actually a fair representation of a Mystery Play's Interlude, a break in the more serious play that often featured a humorous or absurd fable to keep the commoners and groundlings from drifting off from the heavier sermonizing.

That A Passion Play ends not in the Lord's Resurrection but Ronnie Pilgrim's reincarnation is another ironic twist and a punch to the gut of the religiosity Ian Anderson loved to skewer.

A splendid album, well worth a serious listen. Particularly if you take the whole in context and realize this release was far beyond the trite and rehashed hedonism of most rock albums in 1973.  


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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 04 2019 at 20:28
Hi,

^^^^^^ Very nice and thank you DE


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: dr prog
Date Posted: October 05 2019 at 00:32
The Wilson remix is just another classic box for tull. The extra minute is cool and the extras such as Left right, Audition, Big top sound great. A strong hour worth of tunes. I don't really bother about the early versions that made Passion and Warchild albums though.

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All I like is prog related bands beginning late 60's/early 70's. Their music from 1968 - 83 has the composition and sound which will never be beaten. Perfect blend of jazz, classical, folk and rock.


Posted By: someone_else
Date Posted: October 05 2019 at 03:11
It's a three star album in my book. Some fine moments, but as a whole rather incoherent to my ears. It was released in the middle of a decline with the masterpiece TaaB as the high and the disappointing Warchild as a low.

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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 05 2019 at 10:45
Originally posted by someone_else someone_else wrote:

It's a three star album in my book. Some fine moments, but as a whole rather incoherent to my ears. It was released in the middle of a decline with the masterpiece TaaB as the high and the disappointing Warchild as a low.

The big issue here is, as DE showed, the album is only as good as one is educated and knowledgeable, to appreciate what Ian did on this album, which was against all the rock anything ideas, and he stuck to the "idea" and "concept" beautifully ... and this is the part that most folks here can not handle ... they need their "concept to be given with breakfast, lunch dinner and a _____________ in other words they have to be TOLD that this is what they are about ... its exactly the same thing with the "Christian" rock bands, many of which have no idea what the whole thing means and all they can do is use a quote frivolously.

PROGRESSIVE MUSIC, made a serious attempt to ELEVATE the quality of the music, and there are a lot of GREAT examples out there, but it only takes an idiot like RW to put down the work of his band, to get fans to think that the whole thing was just a laundry list and had nothing to do with anything else. For fans, even here, this is perfect, of course ... because ... how dare an artist try to be smarter and more educated than their audience, whose level is quite questionable many times.

It's a serious problem in America and it got worse since the Reagan/Bush days when they began cutting off completely any moneys for schools to do the arts ... and what you got now is people that believe their top ten, because they have never seen, studied or appreciated something else ...

PP is only rated low by those that won't make the effort to find out what the whole thing is about ... plain and simple! Where do you stand?


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: someone_else
Date Posted: October 05 2019 at 12:16
^I like DE's interesting explanation of the piece. I know little more of mystery plays than their existence, but the point is... I don't listen to music on an intellectual level, with the attitude of those pedantic self-declared art lovers who are used to frequent musea and talk pseudo-exalted poppycock about what they see... never did and never will. So here I prefer to take my due place among those consuming plebeians and stay in tune with my questionable level.

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Posted By: M27Barney
Date Posted: October 05 2019 at 13:26
Handbags at dawn....

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Play me my song.....Here it comes again.......


Posted By: Tapfret
Date Posted: October 05 2019 at 14:37
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

For a rock album, it is actually quite well-researched and a brilliant modernized rendition of the Passion Plays (better referred to as Mystery Plays) of the late Middle-Ages/early Tudor epoch, when such "Morality Plays" would be seen in town streets and squares prior to the playhouses and actual dramas and comedies of Elizabethan England. Springing originally from Easter Pageants, where indeed the devil and the Resurrection were integral parts of "Passion Plays", the Mystery/Morality Plays expanded on the theme to include prostitutes, criminals and various other reprobates who eventually were "saved" by divine intervention. 

It would be rude of me to say that perhaps the subject matter and presentation is well above a few folks' heads here, but it is what it is, even if you don't quite get it; yet as a Medievalist I have always found the album fascinating. Rather than a Renaissance Faire approximation of early music, Ian Anderson instead takes the actual bones of the original play concept and gives it a modern take, with modern, progressive music, rather than lute and tabor mimicry. Even the name "Ronnie Pilgrim" is a nod to early English narrative poetry featuring the "Everyman" as an allegorical character (such as Langland's The Vision of Piers Plowman), and his journey from death to rebirth is an ironic twist on the crucifixion and resurrection of the early Passion Plays.

"The Hare That Lost It's Spectacles" rather than being misjudged as some bizarre oddity plopped in the mid-section of the album by modern critics is actually a fair representation of the Interlude, a break in the more serious play that often featured a humorous or absurd fable to keep the commoners and groundlings from drifting off from the heavier sermonizing.

That A Passion Play ends not in the Lord's Resurrection but Ronnie Pilgrim's reincarnation is another ironic twist and a punch to the gut of the religiosity Ian Anderson loved to skewer.

A splendid album, well worth a serious listen. Particularly if you take the whole in context and realize this release was far beyond the trite and rehashed hedonism of most rock albums in 1973.  

Always, even in my youth, the music just spoke to me. It seems just a complete and well rounded piece that shaped my future expectation of what an album should be. I appreciate your analysis and definitely find a new lens to see APP through with it in mind. But given that I consider it a masterpiece prior to being provided such a replete picture of the backstory, I am left unconvinced that it is essential to appreciating the album. 

But of course, personal experience is only ever anecdotal.   

On the question put forth by the OP, I can only return a question: Is it really rated that low? To me, anything over 4 stars is pretty highly rated. In addition, the box set, APP: An Extended Performance is the 2nd highest rated box set on PA @ 4.9. I personally rated them both a 5. 

However, I can assure you this is one of the most divisive albums on PA. Most people who like it, love it. And those that don't would likely frame it for murder if they could.  


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https://www.last.fm/user/Tapfret" rel="nofollow">
https://bandcamp.com/tapfret" rel="nofollow - Bandcamp


Posted By: Snicolette
Date Posted: October 05 2019 at 14:44
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

For a rock album, it is actually quite well-researched and a brilliant modernized rendition of the Passion Plays (better referred to as Mystery Plays) of the late Middle-Ages/early Tudor epoch, when such "Morality Plays" would be seen in town streets and squares prior to the playhouses and actual dramas and comedies of Elizabethan England. Springing originally from Easter Pageants, where indeed the devil and the Resurrection were integral parts of "Passion Plays", the Mystery/Morality Plays expanded on the theme to include prostitutes, criminals and various other reprobates who eventually were "saved" by divine intervention. 

It would be rude of me to say that perhaps the subject matter and presentation is well above a few folks' heads here, but it is what it is, even if you don't quite get it; yet as a Medievalist I have always found the album fascinating. Rather than a Renaissance Faire approximation of early music, Ian Anderson instead takes the actual bones of the original play concept and gives it a modern take, with modern, progressive music, rather than lute and tabor mimicry. Even the name "Ronnie Pilgrim" is a nod to early English narrative poetry featuring the "Everyman" as an allegorical character (such as Langland's The Vision of Piers Plowman), and his journey from death to rebirth is an ironic twist on the crucifixion and resurrection of the early Passion Plays.

"The Hare That Lost It's Spectacles" rather than being misjudged as some bizarre oddity plopped in the mid-section of the album by modern critics is actually a fair representation of the Interlude, a break in the more serious play that often featured a humorous or absurd fable to keep the commoners and groundlings from drifting off from the heavier sermonizing.

That A Passion Play ends not in the Lord's Resurrection but Ronnie Pilgrim's reincarnation is another ironic twist and a punch to the gut of the religiosity Ian Anderson loved to skewer.

A splendid album, well worth a serious listen. Particularly if you take the whole in context and realize this release was far beyond the trite and rehashed hedonism of most rock albums in 1973.  
Thank you....This.


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"Into every rain, a little life must fall." ~Tom Rapp


Posted By: dr prog
Date Posted: October 05 2019 at 14:50
Listen to side 2 of the remix. It’s a very solid 4.3 stars. Side 1 is pretty good at 4 stars. The 15 minutes of extras which aren’t on the Passion and Warchild albums is a pretty good 4+ stars. Not far off Thick which is 4.5 stars. Warchild would have been a 4.3 star album if it wasn’t a soundtrack. Several cool tunes on the double album remix. As I’ve said countless times Tull are the best going around. The remixes prove they should have made a great album every year of the 70s apart from sh*te Minstrel lol. Even Too old could have been cool. Warchild and Too old weren’t cool because they were soundtracks. Otherwise we would have heard more of Tulls new gems on those . Aqualung, Thick, Passion, Warchild, Songs, Horses, Stormwatch remix sets are stunners. Warchild has gone from an average pop album to a proggy triple album of goodness. When you have more quality surroundings you really appreciate a song such as Bungle more. But Sealion and Two fingers are a bit crap

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All I like is prog related bands beginning late 60's/early 70's. Their music from 1968 - 83 has the composition and sound which will never be beaten. Perfect blend of jazz, classical, folk and rock.


Posted By: uduwudu
Date Posted: October 06 2019 at 00:06
I find it a tremendous listen. Not pop or conventional rock (how many say '80s Genesis haters find sl*g.ing of Genesis as their material is more easy to understand in order to hate - therefore not prog while APP is too much prog and there fore generating resentment). Hare's losing their spectacles.

An allegory of death and rebirth - not too far from the cycle of rebirth at the essence of it's peer from Yes _Tales From Topographic Oceans.). Musically it moves on often and quickly. I'm sure the detail obsessed prog fan who hates repetition will find a huge mount to absorb in it's 45 minute length.

No, it's not an obvious album - there are no radio hits or an edit to use as faux prog - such as the live arrangements and edits of TAAB. It has historical depth as the earlier post from Dark Elf related. The band are in fine form and the massive concept works for them. IA in his finest voice ever and the intrigue deep; the atmosphere dark.

To me TAAB and APP are to each as the earlier Stand Up And Benefit albums are to one another. Absolute classic music.


Posted By: omphaloskepsis
Date Posted: October 06 2019 at 06:14
I prefer it by a tuppin to TAAB.  I like the stark darkness.  The puns and humor.  The soprano and sopranino sax.  The ebb, flow, and intensity.  Yeah, I like PP a lot!  


Posted By: Barbu
Date Posted: October 06 2019 at 16:00
not as good as the Hérouville sessions though.

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Posted By: noni
Date Posted: October 06 2019 at 16:14
It's OK 


Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: October 07 2019 at 06:36
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

For a rock album, it is actually quite well-researched and a brilliant modernized rendition of the Passion Plays (better referred to as Mystery Plays) of the late Middle-Ages/early Tudor epoch, when such "Morality Plays" would be seen in town streets and squares prior to the playhouses and actual dramas and comedies of Elizabethan England. Springing originally from Easter Pageants, where indeed the devil and the Resurrection were integral parts of "Passion Plays", the Mystery/Morality Plays expanded on the theme to include prostitutes, criminals and various other reprobates who eventually were "saved" by divine intervention. 

It would be rude of me to say that perhaps the subject matter and presentation is well above a few folks' heads here, but it is what it is, even if you don't quite get it; yet as a Medievalist I have always found the album fascinating. Rather than a Renaissance Faire approximation of early music, Ian Anderson instead takes the actual bones of the original play concept and gives it a modern take, with modern, progressive music, rather than lute and tabor mimicry. Even the name "Ronnie Pilgrim" is a nod to early English narrative poetry featuring the "Everyman" as an allegorical character (such as Langland's The Vision of Piers Plowman), and his journey from death to rebirth is an ironic twist on the crucifixion and resurrection of the early Passion Plays.
"The Story Of The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles" rather than being misjudged as some bizarre oddity plopped in the mid-section of the album by modern critics is actually a fair representation of a Mystery Play's Interlude, a break in the more serious play that often featured a humorous or absurd fable to keep the commoners and groundlings from drifting off from the heavier sermonizing.

That A Passion Play ends not in the Lord's Resurrection but Ronnie Pilgrim's reincarnation is another ironic twist and a punch to the gut of the religiosity Ian Anderson loved to skewer.

A splendid album, well worth a serious listen. Particularly if you take the whole in context and realize this release was far beyond the trite and rehashed hedonism of most rock albums in 1973.  
 
Ok, I will give it another listen in the +/- near future, because it might've flown above my head, probably because it's even more English-y than then modern-day England, but probably thatb the wholev thing was also too obtuse for its designated audience... Maybe it would've been wiser to make a fukk-)blown Tudor-Renaissance musicproject
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

PP is only rated low by those that won't make the effort to find out what the whole thing is about ... plain and simple! Where do you stand?
Soooo, it would be a failed attempt at elevating the average TAAB fans??
 
Originally posted by Tapfret Tapfret wrote:

On the question put forth by the OP, I can only return a question: Is it really rated that low? To me, anything over 4 stars is pretty highly rated. In addition, the box set, APP: An Extended Performance is the 2nd highest rated box set on PA @ 4.9. I personally rated them both a 5. 
 
However, I can assure you this is one of the most divisive albums on PA. Most people who like it, love it. And those that don't would likely frame it for murder if they could.  
 
First, with such a debate as to PA's ratings, I wouldn't trust them, because many APP lovers would probably be tempted to skew the raztings by giving it 5 (instead of 4) to give it that absurd above-4  compended rating.
 
Look at RYM (a more prog-neutral site), and see that APP is hovering at a much-more reasonable 3.5 and in Gnosis2000, there is more than a full point (12.6 against 11.3) with TAAB 
 
as for those individual boxsets, they're out of limits, AFAIAC, especially with so few ratings (any stats can't be valid with such a small numbers of answers.


Posted By: chopper
Date Posted: October 07 2019 at 06:58
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

PP is only rated low by those that won't make the effort to find out what the whole thing is about ... plain and simple!
 
I'm quite sure it's possible for someone to fully understand the background to the album and still not like the music. It might give you a better understanding about the concept as a whole but that doesn't mean your opinion of the music will necessarily change.


Posted By: miamiscot
Date Posted: October 07 2019 at 08:05
I love it but, like Tales From Topographic Oceans released the same year, it followed a true masterpiece that had some mainstream appeal. AAP and Tales were just way over people's heads. Then as now. Same with Tales.


Posted By: HolyMoly
Date Posted: October 07 2019 at 08:47
I’ve always felt it was way more enjoyable than Thick as a Brick. So I’m puzzled by its general reputation too.

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My other avatar is a Porsche

It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle if it is lightly greased.

-Kehlog Albran


Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: October 07 2019 at 13:10
Originally posted by M27Barney M27Barney wrote:

Handbags at dawn....


LMAO... LOL


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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: October 07 2019 at 13:14
Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

PP is only rated low by those that won't make the effort to find out what the whole thing is about ... plain and simple!
 
I'm quite sure it's possible for someone to fully understand the background to the album and still not like the music. It might give you a better understanding about the concept as a whole but that doesn't mean your opinion of the music will necessarily change.

That's about how I feel....very clever concept and lyrics................Anderson's take on 'theology' or the problem with it at least.
Musically....TAAB appeals more to me.



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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: October 07 2019 at 17:33
Originally posted by chopper chopper wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

PP is only rated low by those that won't make the effort to find out what the whole thing is about ... plain and simple!
 
I'm quite sure it's possible for someone to fully understand the background to the album and still not like the music. It might give you a better understanding about the concept as a whole but that doesn't mean your opinion of the music will necessarily change.

The sad part of it all is the post about someone not interested in "intelectual" this and that ... and in the end, it's like saying that no one in their time appreciated Shakespeare for its intelect ... and some were drunk and some of those folks weren't ... but the plays and the words survived and are remembered fondly.

I have this weird idea that someone posts that thinking that there is an intelligent bunch of listeners and an ignorant bunch of listeners, and that different ideas and "concepts" are not wanted or cared about, specially now that everyone (even here!!!) is so dang converted to "commercial" everything ... meaning that a Passion Play, or a Siddartha, or some esoteric Summerian Literature is not a fit subject for smoking dope and enjoying the fluff and snuff and puff that ... some lower class uses, instead of the supposedly better educated higher class ... that is so wrong ... people are people, and it doesn't matter the color the race and anything else ... and someone just posting that all they are interested in is their beer and their this and that ... just about takes the sails out of Progressive Music ... and makes me wonder ... why is that person even here? They likely belong with the Kiss crown, not, in this case, on a Jethro Tull discussion ... 

And this is something that hurts a lot of musicians out there, all of whom grow in many ways, and want to try different things ... only to be told by some folks that they can't ... you belong to me, and I don't like these smart stuff you are doing ... there is no artist out there that is not going to tell you where to stuff it! Or, as one guy here in Portland perfectly put it, right in front of the audience ... you are obviously in the wrong place ... if you want your money back, simply talk to James over there and kindly leave!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Barbu
Date Posted: October 08 2019 at 01:13
I want my titties and I want my beer and I want my (post meddle) floyd concert and I want my joint.

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Posted By: Lewian
Date Posted: October 08 2019 at 10:03
I can identify with the thread starter here. I mean, it's clear that it's a matter of taste and I can get why somebody may not like the album, but I don't really get why many who think of TAAB as a masterpiece find Passion Play disappointing. I think it's actually a great follower of TAAB in being similar in some respects and following up on some of TAAB's strengths, but also having many new ideas and twists, so one can certainly not say that it's just cheap rehash. Also its cohesion isn't worse in my view than TAAB. For me it all makes sense (I'm speaking music here, lyrics I don't mind much), great album! And the Hare is fun, if silly.

On allmusic Passion Play has a weak looking 3 stars, but the review actually reads like 4 or more. No idea what's wrong with people when it comes to the Passion Play.



Posted By: dr prog
Date Posted: October 09 2019 at 14:22
I played side 2 yesterday from the remix. Cool melodies for 20 minutes. Love the extra minutes. I removed the Hare also. A strong 8.5/10 for Side 2. With quality music it comes down to taste? Yeah whether you have good taste or sh*te taste lol

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All I like is prog related bands beginning late 60's/early 70's. Their music from 1968 - 83 has the composition and sound which will never be beaten. Perfect blend of jazz, classical, folk and rock.


Posted By: HackettFan
Date Posted: October 09 2019 at 16:09
I hadn’t listened to APP in a long time. I just did. I warmed up to it a bit. It had good stretches and bad stretches. It was definitely not cohesive. Poorly thought out. The cohesion in TAAB is far superior. TAAB is not a masterpiece. Aqualung is.




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A curse upon the heads of those who seek their fortunes in a lie. The truth is always waiting when there's nothing left to try. - Colin Henson, Jade Warrior (Now)


Posted By: dr prog
Date Posted: October 09 2019 at 16:21
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

I hadn’t listened to APP in a long time. I just did. I warmed up to it a bit. It had good stretches and bad stretches. It was definitely not cohesive. Poorly thought out. The cohesion in TAAB is far superior. TAAB is not a masterpiece. Aqualung is.




Aqualung isn’t because Wind up is crap. Wish up the pool and wondring again was on it.

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All I like is prog related bands beginning late 60's/early 70's. Their music from 1968 - 83 has the composition and sound which will never be beaten. Perfect blend of jazz, classical, folk and rock.


Posted By: HackettFan
Date Posted: October 09 2019 at 23:02
Originally posted by dr prog dr prog wrote:

Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

I hadn’t listened to APP in a long time. I just did. I warmed up to it a bit. It had good stretches and bad stretches. It was definitely not cohesive. Poorly thought out. The cohesion in TAAB is far superior. TAAB is not a masterpiece. Aqualung is.




Aqualung isn’t because Wind up is crap. Wish up the pool and wondring again was on it.

I actually agree Wind Up is crap. Aqualung is a masterpiece to me because of everything else on it, which is that good. But that’s the thing with Ian Anderson. His songwriting and composition can be exceptionally penetrating and poignant, or tedious and ponderous to a point of exhaustion.   






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A curse upon the heads of those who seek their fortunes in a lie. The truth is always waiting when there's nothing left to try. - Colin Henson, Jade Warrior (Now)


Posted By: M27Barney
Date Posted: October 10 2019 at 02:32
Shakespeare? Complete and utter w**k! I prefer the "principia" every day of the week. A true work of Genius...as is "Origin of Species"....

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Play me my song.....Here it comes again.......


Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: October 10 2019 at 16:01
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

I hadn’t listened to APP in a long time. I just did. I warmed up to it a bit. It had good stretches and bad stretches. It was definitely not cohesive. Poorly thought out. The cohesion in TAAB is far superior. TAAB is not a masterpiece. Aqualung is.



I re-listened to both TAAB and APP yesterday and I agree....TAAB is more melodic with better song structures....both are lyrically interesting  but TAAB is simply a better album musically.
And I agree...I also prefer Aqualung to both of those.


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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: cstack3
Date Posted: October 10 2019 at 16:15
My damned college roommate use to torment me by playing APP endlessly.  I exacted revenge by playing "Foxtrot" endlessly.  He couldn't stand Gabriel's "mincing Brit" lilting lyric style!!  

Eventually, we came to understandings, and he became one of the biggest Gabriel/Genesis fans I know of.  

I eventually warmed up to APP but much prefer other works, including TAAB and "Minstrel."  

BTW, I am so damned old that I saw Tull perform TAAB in concert!  10 October, 1972!  Amazing show!


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I am not a Robot, I'm a FREE MAN!!


Posted By: O666
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 04:10
I don't know why you ask this question! I don't care about what people think about it. I don't want to know another guys reasons about their votes. I don't need "Album Rates" to enjoy music. 

I like to know people opinions about music and I love to discuss about musicians and albums and songs and ... but "Rates" never show value or quality... IMO and I don't carious about people votes!!!


Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 04:26
again 4.02 is NOT a low rating.


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 05:02
Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

again 4.02 is NOT a low rating.
It is if one thinks the album is a masterpiece like the OP does. I think it's rated too highly and deserves a 2.5-3.0.

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This message was brought to you by a proud supporter of the Deep State.


Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 05:07
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

again 4.02 is NOT a low rating.
It is if one thinks the album is a masterpiece like the OP does. I think it's rated too highly and deserves a 2.5-3.0.


if the OP thinks it's a masterpice, then he should rate it a 5 stars.

4 stars still means essential album, so, I don't get it I guess...


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 06:03
Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

again 4.02 is NOT a low rating.
It is if one thinks the album is a masterpiece like the OP does. I think it's rated too highly and deserves a 2.5-3.0.


if the OP thinks it's a masterpice, then he should rate it a 5 stars.

4 stars still means essential album, so, I don't get it I guess...
It is simply because "essential" does not equal "masterpiece". 4 does not equal 5.

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This message was brought to you by a proud supporter of the Deep State.


Posted By: Cristi
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 06:10
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

again 4.02 is NOT a low rating.
It is if one thinks the album is a masterpiece like the OP does. I think it's rated too highly and deserves a 2.5-3.0.


if the OP thinks it's a masterpice, then he should rate it a 5 stars.

4 stars still means essential album, so, I don't get it I guess...
It is simply because "essential" does not equal "masterpiece". 4 does not equal 5.


like i said, i don't get it... but then again I rarely rate albums 5 stars or a perfect rating (other sites have different rating systems). When it rarely happens, it's either me never getting enough of that album or being blown away (it's rare, but it does happen). Big smile

So to me 4 stars is a high, positive rating. Complaing about that seems strange (for lack of a better word).

Now if APP was rated much lower, I would understand the complaint.


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 06:26
Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

again 4.02 is NOT a low rating.
It is if one thinks the album is a masterpiece like the OP does. I think it's rated too highly and deserves a 2.5-3.0.


if the OP thinks it's a masterpice, then he should rate it a 5 stars.

4 stars still means essential album, so, I don't get it I guess...
It is simply because "essential" does not equal "masterpiece". 4 does not equal 5.


like i said, i don't get it... but then again I rarely rate albums 5 stars or a perfect rating (other sites have different rating systems). When it rarely happens, it's either me never getting enough of that album or being blown away (it's rare, but it does happen). Big smile

So to me 4 stars is a high, positive rating. Complaing about that seems strange (for lack of a better word).

Now if APP was rated much lower, I would understand the complaint.
Yes, I know someone who will argue to the death that Born To Run is the greatest rock album ever made and gets crazy and defensive when someone disagrees. What can you do? I'm not saying that of the OP but these people exist.

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Posted By: dr prog
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 15:16
The albums remix sets are rated 4.5 star average. The 12th is coming out next week. That’s where Tull stand. 9/10 band equals best band of the 70s

-------------
All I like is prog related bands beginning late 60's/early 70's. Their music from 1968 - 83 has the composition and sound which will never be beaten. Perfect blend of jazz, classical, folk and rock.


Posted By: Sandro28grizz
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 17:50
Originally posted by Cristi Cristi wrote:

4 stars (4.02) is not a bad/low rating...

I specifically said that I was not talking about the site rating ( I did not even know what the number rating was tbh), rather the fact that the album has so many detractors, even among prog fans.


Posted By: Sandro28grizz
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 18:02
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

I hadn’t listened to APP in a long time. I just did. I warmed up to it a bit. It had good stretches and bad stretches. It was definitely not cohesive. Poorly thought out. The cohesion in TAAB is far superior. TAAB is not a masterpiece. Aqualung is.



See, I can sort of agree with you, to my ears APP has a few transitions that seem a bit abrupt (mostly very early on), but for the most part it makes sense to me. I could say the same about TAAB though, there are a few clunky stop-start transitions in there as well, I don't really see how TAAB is so much better than APP.


Posted By: Sandro28grizz
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 18:31
Originally posted by someone_else someone_else wrote:

It's a three star album in my book. Some fine moments, but as a whole rather incoherent to my ears. It was released in the middle of a decline with the masterpiece TaaB as the high and the disappointing Warchild as a low.

The ironic thing is that WarChild would not likely not turned out the way it did if not for the shelling that APP took in the press. It's well-known that Ian took the criticism of APP to heart, and so made sure the next album was the polar opposite. If APP was rated highly by the critics of the day, it's likely we would not have gotten anything close to WarChild as we know it.


Posted By: Sandro28grizz
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 18:39
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

For a rock album, it is actually quite well-researched and a brilliant modernized rendition of the Passion Plays (better referred to as Mystery Plays) of the late Middle-Ages/early Tudor epoch, when such "Morality Plays" would be seen in town streets and squares prior to the playhouses and actual dramas and comedies of Elizabethan England. Springing originally from Easter Pageants, where indeed the devil and the Resurrection were integral parts of "Passion Plays", the Mystery/Morality Plays expanded on the theme to include prostitutes, criminals and various other reprobates who eventually were "saved" by divine intervention. 

It would be rude of me to say that perhaps the subject matter and presentation is well above a few folks' heads here, but it is what it is, even if you don't quite get it; yet as a Medievalist I have always found the album fascinating. Rather than a Renaissance Faire approximation of early music, Ian Anderson instead takes the actual bones of the original play concept and gives it a modern take, with modern, progressive music, rather than lute and tabor mimicry. Even the name "Ronnie Pilgrim" is a nod to early English narrative poetry featuring the "Everyman" as an allegorical character (such as Langland's The Vision of Piers Plowman), and his journey from death to rebirth is an ironic twist on the crucifixion and resurrection of the early Passion Plays.

"The Story Of The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles" rather than being misjudged as some bizarre oddity plopped in the mid-section of the album by modern critics is actually a fair representation of a Mystery Play's Interlude, a break in the more serious play that often featured a humorous or absurd fable to keep the commoners and groundlings from drifting off from the heavier sermonizing.

That A Passion Play ends not in the Lord's Resurrection but Ronnie Pilgrim's reincarnation is another ironic twist and a punch to the gut of the religiosity Ian Anderson loved to skewer.

A splendid album, well worth a serious listen. Particularly if you take the whole in context and realize this release was far beyond the trite and rehashed hedonism of most rock albums in 1973.  

Interesting post. Never knew anything about medieval "mystery plays" but always loved this album. 

You wouldn't happen to be Morthoron from the Tolkien boards, would you? Your avatar and general way of posting reminds me of him.


Posted By: dr prog
Date Posted: October 11 2019 at 23:33
Originally posted by Sandro28grizz Sandro28grizz wrote:

Originally posted by someone_else someone_else wrote:

It's a three star album in my book. Some fine moments, but as a whole rather incoherent to my ears. It was released in the middle of a decline with the masterpiece TaaB as the high and the disappointing Warchild as a low.


The ironic thing is that WarChild would not likely not turned out the way it did if not for the shelling that APP took in the press. It's well-known that Ian took the criticism of APP to heart, and so made sure the next album was the polar opposite. If APP was rated highly by the critics of the day, it's likely we would not have gotten anything close to WarChild as we know it.


Yeah it would have been more of a prog rock album. Could have been a double album but the band planned to do two albums plus the orchestral score. Imagine the movie came out with 3 albums worth of tunes. John Cleese was involved too

-------------
All I like is prog related bands beginning late 60's/early 70's. Their music from 1968 - 83 has the composition and sound which will never be beaten. Perfect blend of jazz, classical, folk and rock.


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 12 2019 at 11:35
If the popular expectation of prog is a boring meandering mess, then APP should be ranked higher.

-------------
This message was brought to you by a proud supporter of the Deep State.


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: October 12 2019 at 14:09
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

If the popular expectation of prog is a boring meandering mess, then APP should be ranked higher.

You're wrong, of course. But I will defend your right to be wrong. Because wrong opinions are the building blocks of Prog Archives. It's what has made this site what it is. 


-------------
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 12 2019 at 14:16
^ Greg, you're wrong to say I'm wrong but I'll defend you're right to say I'm wrong when you're wrong.

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This message was brought to you by a proud supporter of the Deep State.


Posted By: someone_else
Date Posted: October 12 2019 at 15:12
Originally posted by Sandro28grizz Sandro28grizz wrote:

Originally posted by someone_else someone_else wrote:

It's a three star album in my book. Some fine moments, but as a whole rather incoherent to my ears. It was released in the middle of a decline with the masterpiece TaaB as the high and the disappointing Warchild as a low.

The ironic thing is that WarChild would not likely not turned out the way it did if not for the shelling that APP took in the press. It's well-known that Ian took the criticism of APP to heart, and so made sure the next album was the polar opposite. If APP was rated highly by the critics of the day, it's likely we would not have gotten anything close to WarChild as we know it.
 

Well, this makes obvious that Ian should have done his own way instead of giving an ear to the critics.


-------------


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 13 2019 at 12:46
My 3 star PA review of APP:

The trouble I find with APP is not that it is a bad album but simply that's it's only half a good album. After the stunning success of Thick As A Brick, Anderson and co. decided to push the long suite album epic even further. But the first side of APP is a veritable dirge filled with verbose lyrics that narrowly fill every dragged out beat of the depressing narrative in a queasy sing song style with music supported by Anderson's sub par saxophone. A flute, a flute, my Kingdom for a flute! Why Anderson decided to focus on the sax and discard his superlative flute playing is beyond me. When the slow minor key verses and musically clumsy narrative verses cease, the band lunches into dramatic faux jams with loud drums and bass that never venture past punctuated staggered notes and rhythms. This would normally signify a change to some wonderfully melodious music that, for whatever reason, never happens, as if Anderson is driving this musical car yelling "Left turn, right turn, left turn" while missing the road to the better more coherent music to follow. It's as if the catchy rhythms and melodies that lie just around the bend are always being bypssed. This is some of the most unappealing prog rock that I've ever encountered but the lyrics that accompany this dirge are no saving grace either.
 
Lines like "the ice cream lady wet her draws" and "and your little sister's immaculate virginity wings away on the bony shoulder of a young horse named George", while interesting and cute, are a far cry from anything that would be considered poetry and offer no deeper meanings, metaphorical or otherwise, and are certainly not close to any type of profound theological thought or comment. No great loss really as prog was never known for great lyrics but any help that they could have given to the music would have been welcome.

The mock theatrical debacle that is The Story Of The Hare That Lost His Spectacles (one of the worst fillers to be found in an album of any genre) is so poor and appalling that the least said about it, the better. An unfunny story with garish "acting" by sidemen Evan and Hammond-Hammond. In fact, it makes the myriad of ELP's "humorous songs" like Benny The Bouncer seem almost Shakespearian. Luckily, good songwriting, arranging and musical sense return for the album's concluding 18 minutes. We are returned the APP narrative which now boasts deft melodies and syncopated rhythms, particularly on the driving "Lucifer" section which boasts some very modern, for the time, sounding sythn accompaniment from Evan. This much needed bombast is too short but following suites offer beautiful near Flamenco type acoustic guitar from Anderson, as well as the return of his wonderful concert flute, which signals the feeling that one is back on safe and familiar Tull musical ground. Right after, Martin Barre interjects some of the most jaggered and brash sounding guitar chords he's ever played (or that I've ever heard!). The dramatic shift in the music is welcome and enjoyable until Old Ian ends this epic with slow acoustic strums and a plaintive last verse. The last 18 minutes of APP are some of the best music that Tull ever put on tape. But at what cost to the listener?

No one would be expected to consume a burnt entree only to get to a fantastic dessert. The same standard holds true for music. The last half of APP is quite a musical dessert, but no one should have to suffer through the main course in order to get to it. 3 stars.



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Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 08:30
Originally posted by Sandro28grizz Sandro28grizz wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

For a rock album, it is actually quite well-researched and a brilliant modernized rendition of the Passion Plays (better referred to as Mystery Plays) of the late Middle-Ages/early Tudor epoch, when such "Morality Plays" would be seen in town streets and squares prior to the playhouses and actual dramas and comedies of Elizabethan England. Springing originally from Easter Pageants, where indeed the devil and the Resurrection were integral parts of "Passion Plays", the Mystery/Morality Plays expanded on the theme to include prostitutes, criminals and various other reprobates who eventually were "saved" by divine intervention. 

It would be rude of me to say that perhaps the subject matter and presentation is well above a few folks' heads here, but it is what it is, even if you don't quite get it; yet as a Medievalist I have always found the album fascinating. Rather than a Renaissance Faire approximation of early music, Ian Anderson instead takes the actual bones of the original play concept and gives it a modern take, with modern, progressive music, rather than lute and tabor mimicry. Even the name "Ronnie Pilgrim" is a nod to early English narrative poetry featuring the "Everyman" as an allegorical character (such as Langland's The Vision of Piers Plowman), and his journey from death to rebirth is an ironic twist on the crucifixion and resurrection of the early Passion Plays.

"The Story Of The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles" rather than being misjudged as some bizarre oddity plopped in the mid-section of the album by modern critics is actually a fair representation of a Mystery Play's Interlude, a break in the more serious play that often featured a humorous or absurd fable to keep the commoners and groundlings from drifting off from the heavier sermonizing.

That A Passion Play ends not in the Lord's Resurrection but Ronnie Pilgrim's reincarnation is another ironic twist and a punch to the gut of the religiosity Ian Anderson loved to skewer.

A splendid album, well worth a serious listen. Particularly if you take the whole in context and realize this release was far beyond the trite and rehashed hedonism of most rock albums in 1973.  

Interesting post. Never knew anything about medieval "mystery plays" but always loved this album. 

You wouldn't happen to be Morthoron from the Tolkien boards, would you? Your avatar and general way of posting reminds me of him.
Mellyn istar enith dîn. Ah i goth geritha rîn, ir geveditha chethyl a bing vín.


-------------
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 08:58
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by Sandro28grizz Sandro28grizz wrote:

Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

For a rock album, it is actually quite well-researched and a brilliant modernized rendition of the Passion Plays (better referred to as Mystery Plays) of the late Middle-Ages/early Tudor epoch, when such "Morality Plays" would be seen in town streets and squares prior to the playhouses and actual dramas and comedies of Elizabethan England. Springing originally from Easter Pageants, where indeed the devil and the Resurrection were integral parts of "Passion Plays", the Mystery/Morality Plays expanded on the theme to include prostitutes, criminals and various other reprobates who eventually were "saved" by divine intervention. 

It would be rude of me to say that perhaps the subject matter and presentation is well above a few folks' heads here, but it is what it is, even if you don't quite get it; yet as a Medievalist I have always found the album fascinating. Rather than a Renaissance Faire approximation of early music, Ian Anderson instead takes the actual bones of the original play concept and gives it a modern take, with modern, progressive music, rather than lute and tabor mimicry. Even the name "Ronnie Pilgrim" is a nod to early English narrative poetry featuring the "Everyman" as an allegorical character (such as Langland's The Vision of Piers Plowman), and his journey from death to rebirth is an ironic twist on the crucifixion and resurrection of the early Passion Plays.

"The Story Of The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles" rather than being misjudged as some bizarre oddity plopped in the mid-section of the album by modern critics is actually a fair representation of a Mystery Play's Interlude, a break in the more serious play that often featured a humorous or absurd fable to keep the commoners and groundlings from drifting off from the heavier sermonizing.

That A Passion Play ends not in the Lord's Resurrection but Ronnie Pilgrim's reincarnation is another ironic twist and a punch to the gut of the religiosity Ian Anderson loved to skewer.

A splendid album, well worth a serious listen. Particularly if you take the whole in context and realize this release was far beyond the trite and rehashed hedonism of most rock albums in 1973.  

Interesting post. Never knew anything about medieval "mystery plays" but always loved this album. 

You wouldn't happen to be Morthoron from the Tolkien boards, would you? Your avatar and general way of posting reminds me of him.
Mellyn istar enith dîn. Ah i goth geritha rîn, ir geveditha chethyl a bing vín.
Anderson's numerous references from Blake to Pilgrim, if understood by the lay person, are nothing more than rehashed theology, at best. But not understood, they are nothing more then a tale full of sound and fury signifying nothing.

-------------
This message was brought to you by a proud supporter of the Deep State.


Posted By: deafmoon
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 09:10
I like the album...I don't love the album. I think the biggest drawback for A Passion Play or any Tull album that would have followed TAAB is just that. TAAB was such a complete concept album that anything Tull would have done right after it would be rated lower. Unfair? Maybe, but that's for listeners to decide. The second drawback was radio airplay, at least in the USA. WPLJ & WNEW in New York City played nothing from that album. Cuts from Stand Up, Benefit, Aqualung and the radio version TAAB dominated the airwaves for Tull in The States until Warchild came out. And even there, how great his Back Door Angels, and yet the radio stations played Skating Away & The Third Hoorah every hour. But this is why the internet now is so great because what radio didn't bring me in  the 70's, 80's, 90's and on...I can hear about from this site or any others that propagate ONLY GOOD MUSIC or BAD. And we all stay away from THE BAD, but Mainstream Entertainment just keeps shoveling it at us. Apologies for the rant.

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Deafmoon


Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 11:05
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Anderson's numerous references from Blake to Pilgrim, if understood by the lay person, are nothing more than rehashed theology, at best. But not understood, they are nothing more then a tale full of sound and fury signifying nothing.

And yet, here you are mentioning "Blake to Pilgrim" -- in the context of a rock album, and in an ass-backwards manner acknowledging APP's worth. 

But I suppose the term "progressive" to the stereotypical "lay person" you refer to is merely the perceived ability to fluff a three chord song into 20 or 30 minutes of doodling, rather than actually challenging the intellect of the listener. Or, god forbid, actually write lyrics that require more than the blithe acceptance of the crotch sniffing lines found in "Whole Lotta Led Zeppelin". You sound like Emperor Joseph II in Amadeus when he offered the blank summation "there are simply too many notes" to Mozart. What exactly was the point of "progressive rock" if not to go beyond the 12 bar blues-influenced structures of the 1950s and 1960s?

"Rehashed theology" is rather revisionist, don't you think? We are talking 1973, when women were still burning their bras and Catholic priests were allowed to fondle altar boys without the impedance of any legal authority -- or moral authority, for that matter. Coming from a Catholic school upbringing myself (I would say "reared" but that might give the wrong impression), the albums Aqualung, Thick as a Brick and A Passion Play were integral puzzle pieces in allowing a young teenager, such as myself, to go from a feeling of solitary unease and distaste about my indoctrination, to realizing that others felt the same way, and a rock band, no less, singing about it. Religion, and more precisely the Catholic religion, was a sham of Latinate mumbo-jumbo and archaic rituals, a facade to hide the nothingness behind the silken screen. 

I discussed this in another forum, but in part it can apply here. There was more to Ian Anderson's lyrical take on Mystery Plays than just a "Rehashed theology". Surprisingly, for a rock star perhaps, Anderson actually put in some research for the writing of the piece, rather than just crib some Willie Dixon lyrics and call it a day.

As a Medievalist in both a literary and historical sense (yes, degrees that never remotely impinged on what I actually accomplished career-wise), I was researching a poem by William Langland (b. 1332 - d. 1400) titled "The Vision Concerning Piers Plowman" (a famous 14th century work of allegorical satire), and the text I was using referenced an old and anonymous English morality play "Hickscorner" printed by Wynken de Worde (who died in 1534, and was partner of John Caxton, the first printer in England -- but you, of course, knew that).

A word in the reference material immediately struck me. Here is the section of the "Hickscorner" play in question:

What, sirs, I tell you my name is Freewill,
I may choose whether I do good or ill;
But for all that I will do as me list.
My condition ye know not, perdé,
I can fight, chide, and be merry;
Full soon of my company ye would be weary
An ye knew all.
What, fill the cup and make good cheer,
I trow I have a noble here!


Why is this so goddamned important, you ask? 

Well, there has been a long debate regarding the meaning of "Magus Perdé " in the final part of A Passion Play. After researching the word further based on the usage in the play, I can say unequivocally that "perdé " in this instance means "by God".

When the character says "My condition ye know not, Perdé ", he is, in effect, using a mild expletive as emphasis. He is saying "My condition ye know not, by God!"

Perdé is cognate with Middle English spellings of the same word, such as "perdie" or "pardie": 1200- 50; late Middle English pardie, Middle English parde < Old French par De < Latin per Deum by God.

Now, many folks say the word "magus" means magician or wizard; however, the original meaning comes from Persia to define the Zoroastrian priest caste (hence in the bible the "Magi" are wise men, not wizards).

So, Magus Perdé most likely means "priest by/of God". Telling a priest of God to "take your hand from off the chain" may infer back to the anti-religious, anti-clerical rhetoric of Aqualung. Priests of the Anglican or Catholic persuasion do not accept reincarnation, which of course is what Ian is referring to in that section of A Passion Play.

Therefore, it seems likely that Ian came across this "morality play" (which grew out of the English tradition of 14th and 15th century "mystery plays" and "miracle plays") when doing a bit of research on his "Passion Play". And the fact that reincarnation is not an acceptable tenet of the Church of England, gives credence that the line

Magus Perdé, take your hand from off the chain

is a demand from Ian that the Church loose the chains that bind religion to other concepts, particularly when one looks at the lyrics that follow:

The passengers upon the ferry crossing, waiting to be born,
renew the pledge of life's long song rise to the reveille horn.


-and-

Here am I! Roll the stone away
from the dark into ever-day.


It would seem that Ian is equating the resurrection of Jesus to the reincarnation of Ronnie Pilgrim.

P.S. And so, Steve, I am delighted that such an album as A Passion Play exists, and I am unconcerned if people "don't get it". But just as you stated: "The mock theatrical debacle that is The Story Of The Hare That Lost His Spectacles (one of the worst fillers to be found in an album of any genre) is so poor and appalling that the least said about it, the better"; however, in context as an absurd fable used as an Interlude in an actual and historically correct Passion or Mystery Play, it is meant for the groundlings (or as Ben Jonson might refer to them as "Penny-stinkers") who may drift off from the more headier theological offerings (much like Shakespeare's absurd asides by gravediggers commenting on the mundane).

I would quote Ian Anderson directly in regards to critics: "But you're wrong, Steve: you see it's only solitaire."





-------------
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: Snicolette
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 11:41
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:


And yet, here you are mentioning "Blake to Pilgrim" -- in the context of a rock album, and in an ass-backwards manner acknowledging APP's worth. 

But I suppose the term "progressive" to the stereotypical "lay person" you refer to is merely the perceived ability to fluff a three chord song into 20 or 30 minutes of doodling, rather than actually challenging the intellect of the listener. Or, god forbid, actually write lyrics that require more than the blithe acceptance of the crotch sniffing lines found in "Whole Lotta Led Zeppelin". You sound like Emperor Joseph II in Amadeus when he offered the blank summation "there are simply too many notes" to Mozart. What exactly was the point of "progressive rock" if not to go beyond the 12 bar blues-influenced structures of the 1950s and 1960s?

"Rehashed theology" is rather revisionist, don't you think? We are talking 1973, when women were still burning their bras and Catholic priests were allowed to fondle altar boys without the impedance of any legal authority -- or moral authority, for that matter. Coming from a Catholic school upbringing myself (I would say "reared" but that might give the wrong impression), the albums Aqualung, Thick as a Brick and A Passion Play were integral puzzle pieces in allowing a young teenager, such as myself, to go from a feeling of solitary unease and distaste about my indoctrination, to realizing that others felt the same way, and a rock band, no less, singing about it. Religion, and more precisely the Catholic religion, was a sham of Latinate mumbo-jumbo and archaic rituals, a facade to hide the nothingness behind the silken screen. 

I discussed this in another forum, but in part it can apply here. There was more to Ian Anderson's lyrical take on Mystery Plays than just a "Rehashed theology". Surprisingly, for a rock star perhaps, Anderson actually put in some research for the writing of the piece, rather than just crib some Willie Dixon lyrics and call it a day.

As a Medievalist in both a literary and historical sense (yes, degrees that never remotely impinged on what I actually accomplished career-wise), I was researching a poem by William Langland (b. 1332 - d. 1400) titled "The Vision Concerning Piers Plowman" (a famous 14th century work of allegorical satire), and the text I was using referenced an old and anonymous English morality play "Hickscorner" printed by Wynken de Worde (who died in 1534, and was partner of John Caxton, the first printer in England -- but you, of course, knew that).

A word in the reference material immediately struck me. Here is the section of the "Hickscorner" play in question:

What, sirs, I tell you my name is Freewill,
I may choose whether I do good or ill;
But for all that I will do as me list.
My condition ye know not, perdé,
I can fight, chide, and be merry;
Full soon of my company ye would be weary
An ye knew all.
What, fill the cup and make good cheer,
I trow I have a noble here!


Why is this so goddamned important, you ask? 

Well, there has been a long debate regarding the meaning of "Magus Perdé " in the final part of A Passion Play. After researching the word further based on the usage in the play, I can say unequivocally that "perdé " in this instance means "by God".

When the character says "My condition ye know not, Perdé ", he is, in effect, using a mild expletive as emphasis. He is saying "My condition ye know not, by God!"

Perdé is cognate with Middle English spellings of the same word, such as "perdie" or "pardie": 1200- 50; late Middle English pardie, Middle English parde < Old French par De < Latin per Deum by God.

Now, many folks say the word "magus" means magician or wizard; however, the original meaning comes from Persia to define the Zoroastrian priest caste (hence in the bible the "Magi" are wise men, not wizards).

So, Magus Perdé most likely means "priest by/of God". Telling a priest of God to "take your hand from off the chain" may infer back to the anti-religious, anti-clerical rhetoric of Aqualung. Priests of the Anglican or Catholic persuasion do not accept reincarnation, which of course is what Ian is referring to in that section of A Passion Play.

Therefore, it seems likely that Ian came across this "morality play" (which grew out of the English tradition of 14th and 15th century "mystery plays" and "miracle plays") when doing a bit of research on his "Passion Play". And the fact that reincarnation is not an acceptable tenet of the Church of England, gives credence that the line

Magus Perdé, take your hand from off the chain

is a demand from Ian that the Church loose the chains that bind religion to other concepts, particularly when one looks at the lyrics that follow:

The passengers upon the ferry crossing, waiting to be born,
renew the pledge of life's long song rise to the reveille horn.


-and-

Here am I! Roll the stone away
from the dark into ever-day.


It would seem that Ian is equating the resurrection of Jesus to the reincarnation of Ronnie Pilgrim.

P.S. And so, Steve, I am delighted that such an album as A Passion Play exists, and I am unconcerned if people "don't get it". But just as you stated: "The mock theatrical debacle that is The Story Of The Hare That Lost His Spectacles (one of the worst fillers to be found in an album of any genre) is so poor and appalling that the least said about it, the better"; however, in context as an absurd fable used as an Interlude in an actual and historically correct Passion or Mystery Play, it is meant for the groundlings (or as Ben Jonson might refer to them as "Penny-stinkers") who may drift off from the more headier theological offerings (much like Shakespeare's absurd asides by gravediggers commenting on the mundane).

I would quote Ian Anderson directly in regards to critics: "But you're wrong, Steve: you see it's only solitaire."



I have really loved reading your informed posts on this topic....I remember at the time, learning about the context and references of this LP when it was released and right you are on the subject regarding the passion plays.  Thank you!  Smile

-------------
"Into every rain, a little life must fall." ~Tom Rapp


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 11:43
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Anderson's numerous references from Blake to Pilgrim, if understood by the lay person, are nothing more than rehashed theology, at best. But not understood, they are nothing more then a tale full of sound and fury signifying nothing.

And yet, here you are mentioning "Blake to Pilgrim" -- in the context of a rock album, and in an ass-backwards manner acknowledging APP's worth. 

But I suppose the term "progressive" to the stereotypical "lay person" you refer to is merely the perceived ability to fluff a three chord song into 20 or 30 minutes of doodling, rather than actually challenging the intellect of the listener. Or, god forbid, actually write lyrics that require more than the blithe acceptance of the crotch sniffing lines found in "Whole Lotta Led Zeppelin". You sound like Emperor Joseph II in Amadeus when he offered the blank summation "there are simply too many notes" to Mozart. What exactly was the point of "progressive rock" if not to go beyond the 12 bar blues-influenced structures of the 1950s and 1960s?

"Rehashed theology" is rather revisionist, don't you think? We are talking 1973, when women were still burning their bras and Catholic priests were allowed to fondle altar boys without the impedance of any legal authority -- or moral authority, for that matter. Coming from a Catholic school upbringing myself (I would say "reared" but that might give the wrong impression), the albums Aqualung, Thick as a Brick and A Passion Play were integral puzzle pieces in allowing a young teenager, such as myself, to go from a feeling of solitary unease and distaste about my indoctrination, to realizing that others felt the same way, and a rock band, no less, singing about it. Religion, and more precisely the Catholic religion, was a sham of Latinate mumbo-jumbo and archaic rituals, a facade to hide the nothingness behind the silken screen. 

I discussed this in another forum, but in part it can apply here. There was more to Ian Anderson's lyrical take on Mystery Plays than just a "Rehashed theology". Surprisingly, for a rock star perhaps, Anderson actually put in some research for the writing of the piece, rather than just crib some Willie Dixon lyrics and call it a day.

As a Medievalist in both a literary and historical sense (yes, degrees that never remotely impinged on what I actually accomplished career-wise), I was researching a poem by William Langland (b. 1332 - d. 1400) titled "The Vision Concerning Piers Plowman" (a famous 14th century work of allegorical satire), and the text I was using referenced an old and anonymous English morality play "Hickscorner" printed by Wynken de Worde (who died in 1534, and was partner of John Caxton, the first printer in England -- but you, of course, knew that).

A word in the reference material immediately struck me. Here is the section of the "Hickscorner" play in question:

What, sirs, I tell you my name is Freewill,
I may choose whether I do good or ill;
But for all that I will do as me list.
My condition ye know not, perdé,
I can fight, chide, and be merry;
Full soon of my company ye would be weary
An ye knew all.
What, fill the cup and make good cheer,
I trow I have a noble here!


Why is this so goddamned important, you ask? 

Well, there has been a long debate regarding the meaning of "Magus Perdé " in the final part of A Passion Play. After researching the word further based on the usage in the play, I can say unequivocally that "perdé " in this instance means "by God".

When the character says "My condition ye know not, Perdé ", he is, in effect, using a mild expletive as emphasis. He is saying "My condition ye know not, by God!"

Perdé is cognate with Middle English spellings of the same word, such as "perdie" or "pardie": 1200- 50; late Middle English pardie, Middle English parde < Old French par De < Latin per Deum by God.

Now, many folks say the word "magus" means magician or wizard; however, the original meaning comes from Persia to define the Zoroastrian priest caste (hence in the bible the "Magi" are wise men, not wizards).

So, Magus Perdé most likely means "priest by/of God". Telling a priest of God to "take your hand from off the chain" may infer back to the anti-religious, anti-clerical rhetoric of Aqualung. Priests of the Anglican or Catholic persuasion do not accept reincarnation, which of course is what Ian is referring to in that section of A Passion Play.

Therefore, it seems likely that Ian came across this "morality play" (which grew out of the English tradition of 14th and 15th century "mystery plays" and "miracle plays") when doing a bit of research on his "Passion Play". And the fact that reincarnation is not an acceptable tenet of the Church of England, gives credence that the line

Magus Perdé, take your hand from off the chain

is a demand from Ian that the Church loose the chains that bind religion to other concepts, particularly when one looks at the lyrics that follow:

The passengers upon the ferry crossing, waiting to be born,
renew the pledge of life's long song rise to the reveille horn.


-and-

Here am I! Roll the stone away
from the dark into ever-day.


It would seem that Ian is equating the resurrection of Jesus to the reincarnation of Ronnie Pilgrim.

P.S. And so, Steve, I am delighted that such an album as A Passion Play exists, and I am unconcerned if people "don't get it". But just as you stated: "The mock theatrical debacle that is The Story Of The Hare That Lost His Spectacles (one of the worst fillers to be found in an album of any genre) is so poor and appalling that the least said about it, the better"; however, in context as an absurd fable used as an Interlude in an actual and historically correct Passion or Mystery Play, it is meant for the groundlings (or as Ben Jonson might refer to them as "Penny-stinkers") who may drift off from the more headier theological offerings (much like Shakespeare's absurd asides by gravediggers commenting on the mundane).

I would quote Ian Anderson directly in regards to critics: "But you're wrong, Steve: you see it's only solitaire."



Greg, any Tom, Dick, and Harry, or even a Steve, can steal quotes or motifs from Blake, Milton and Pilgrim. You're only one I know that would call it as an act of genius. And if anything you wrote above (baring your explanation of the penny-stinker) is not rehashed theology, then what is?

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 12:00
Confused  After pondering all this, perhaps my 3 star rating for the album is too high.

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Posted By: The Dark Elf
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 13:14
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

 
Greg, any Tom, Dick, and Harry, or even a Steve, can steal quotes or motifs from Blake, Milton and Pilgrim. You're only one I know that would call it as an act of genius. And if anything you wrote above (baring your explanation of the penny-stinker) is not rehashed theology, then what is?

If taking a hero's journey from Joseph Campbell, or more to the point Dante, turning it on its head, and have the Pilgrim reject the afterlife offered by both God and Lucifer as not his cup of tea, and so return to life as a corporeal manifestation is rehashed theology, then Moby Dick is just a rehash of sailors' tales. I love how folks on here get Herculean erections over Gabriel and Genesis borrowing reams of material from Greek mythos or simply retell a legend of King Canute, and consider it bloody brilliant, yet Tull actually attacks the church establishment and religion in 1973 and it's "rehashed theology".  

Next time Tom, Dick, Harry or Steve can "steal quotes" from Revelations, Mark Ch. 2, v.9, Shakespeare, Aleister Crowley, Blake, Dante, Voltaire or Milton (might as well offer a fuller list of references in APP), compose an entire 45 minute concept album around them based on historical dramas of pre-Tudor England (complete with an Aesopian allegorical interlude that borders on pagan pageantry -- precisely as an Interlude would have appeared in a Mystery Play), have the piece not contain a 45 single for mass radio consumption, have the critics like yourself largely condemn it, and still have the album go to #1 on the charts in the U.S. and Canada, get back to me.... 

I'll wait. And while we wait for something that will never happen again, let's watch something Pythonesque for the penny-stinkers. They'll like the colorful scenes and the anthropomorphic animals:




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...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined
to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...


Posted By: dr prog
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 15:36
Try listening to side 2 first from the remix with the extra minute. Starting with Forest dance 2. It’s similar quality to Thick side 1

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All I like is prog related bands beginning late 60's/early 70's. Their music from 1968 - 83 has the composition and sound which will never be beaten. Perfect blend of jazz, classical, folk and rock.


Posted By: dr wu23
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 16:23
For those who wish to take the time to read.....2 points of view..one positive and one negative.
https://www.popmatters.com/183769-ripe-with-rich-attainments-a-passion-play-reassessed-2495638737.html" rel="nofollow - https://www.popmatters.com/183769-ripe-with-rich-attainments-a-passion-play-reassessed-2495638737.html
https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/a-passion-play-202824/" rel="nofollow - https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/a-passion-play-202824/




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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
Haquin


Posted By: Snicolette
Date Posted: October 14 2019 at 17:00
Note that they are from different perspectives, however. One was from the time and the other fairly recent, so in retrospect.  Just noting that they are not from the same period.  

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"Into every rain, a little life must fall." ~Tom Rapp


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: October 15 2019 at 04:18
Originally posted by The Dark Elf The Dark Elf wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

 
Greg, any Tom, Dick, and Harry, or even a Steve, can steal quotes or motifs from Blake, Milton and Pilgrim. You're only one I know that would call it as an act of genius. And if anything you wrote above (baring your explanation of the penny-stinker) is not rehashed theology, then what is?
Next time Tom, Dick, Harry or Steve can "steal quotes" from Revelations, Mark Ch. 2, v.9, Shakespeare, Aleister Crowley, Blake, Dante, Voltaire or Milton (might as well offer a fuller list of references in APP), compose an entire 45 minute concept album around them based on historical dramas of pre-Tudor England (complete with an Aesopian allegorical interlude that borders on pagan pageantry -- precisely as an Interlude would have appeared in a Mystery Play), have the piece not contain a 45 single for mass radio consumption, have the critics like yourself largely condemn it, and still have the album go to #1 on the charts in the U.S. and Canada, get back to me.... 

 


 
Let's put the remarkable (initial) sales success of APP into perspective, shall we? In 1972, Thick As A Brick was released to big commercial sales, mostly critical acclaim, monster live appreciation and both edited and unedited  FM radio play. The large initial sales of APP, in 1973, were from those who bought the album sight unseen, or unheard to be precise, expecting more of the same quality as that offered by TAAB. As soon as the public actually heard the album there was nothing but disappointment. Tull's live presentation of the album was quickly sh*t canned and the group reverted back to playing their back catalogue along with an edited version of TAAB on stage. The negative popular and critical condemnation of the album forced the group to stage a mock "break up" over it and the "story" was published, forgive me if I'm wrong, in the New Musical Express. I don't see anything note worthy about any of this, do you? I think it's quite conceivable that the same could happen again. When it does, I'll be sure to let you know.

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