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Biggles View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 23 2005 at 08:50

^Can you PLEASE post it? Or send it to me at [email protected]

The crux of the biscuit is the apostrophe.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2005 at 06:48
Just send you an e-mail.
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tremulant View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 27 2005 at 03:37
Originally posted by Chooks Chooks wrote:

Just recently saw Jethro Tull for the first time in Melbourne, Australia and I have to say that I was extremely impressed. Being a huge fan for most of my life it was just another one of those bands that I wanted to see but never thought I'd have the chance considering I was born in 1981 and lived in Perth, the most isolated city on Earth, to which no band ever visits. So when I heard JT were touring Oz there was no way I'd be missing it. 5 hour flight there for three nights to see JT with my dad.
They played a two hour set with a 5 min break. there was a good selection of mainly their early releases all was pre-too old to rock... The aqualung album featured heavily with nearly the whole album being played throughout the set. A 10-15 min Thick as a Brick was played and I must say that it was flawless. Ian delighted us with some of his solo work as did Martin (Martins solo song was a real highlight). Overall I was glad I forked out airfare, accomidation and all the other costs to see JT because for a bunch of 'old' guys they rocked harder than many of the bands of today, they could take a leaf out of JT's book. If you get a chance to see them and you never have it would be worth your while.

Whoa! I was at that exact same concert!!! (I'm actually wearing the t-shirt I got right now!)
I went with my Mum and her friend, and I have to agree with everything you said; it was the best concert I've been to!!!
My solo music: ANTHROPIATE
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 28 2005 at 08:18
Tull blew away Lansing, Michigan last night (Nov. 27, '05). Fourth time seeing him over 15 years and he is still one of the best entertainers/musicians of our lifetimes. Lucia Micarelli was astonishing and powerful.."..... the hair on the back of my neck...". Her debut album is "Music From a Farther Room." Ian seems to be driven to leave a legacy of not only his own music, but to also leave a group of quality rock classicalists. A beautiful night! Peace out, JT.
Ned in Michigan
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 30 2005 at 01:26
Originally posted by 40wnks 40wnks wrote:

Just saw Tull Friday (11/18) here in KC.  Also saw Ian about 2 years ago here for a solo tour.  Maybe I missed an explanation elsewhere in this forum but I was wondering why Ian rarely or doesn't sing the songs anymore?  Rather, he recites the lyrics as the band plays on.  Is this a personal choice of his or is it governed by a throat history of many infections?  I enjoyed both concerts but the vocals were at times distracting since he bobs his head during the vocals and they tend to fade in and out.  Anyone else know what is going on?

Curiouser and Curiouser,

Bill

I saw JT back in May in Adelaide and although the concert was great I thought the same thing with  Ians vox.I thought at the time it was a theatre accoustics problem.Obviously not.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 30 2005 at 17:11
Originally posted by Andrea Cortese Andrea Cortese wrote:

 

saw them in July 16th in Mantua (Italy): great live show!

I was there too! One of the best shows I've ever seen... I had just discovered them so I didn't know most of their songs but I enjoyed it so much... they're really great, I really fell in love with them since then  

I agree with those who wrote that Ian's voice wasn't really good but I suppose it was also because there wasn't a background voice supporting him (one of the best way to hide some mistakes )...

 


* My eyes are full but my face is empty *
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2005 at 07:43
I note they are playing 10th and 11th March at Shepherds Bush Empire.Sadly I can't go because I'll be away that weekend.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2006 at 12:51
I've seen Jethro Tull maybe 10 or 11 times since the Broadsword & The Beast tour in the mid-80's.  While the show is always entertaining, and the band sounds as good as ever, Ian's voice has deteriorated quite steadily.  So much so that I'd personally think twice about seeing them again.  At the last concert, I actually got a piece of the balloon he launches at the end of every show!
Grammy Award Winning Jethro Tull!
1989 Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance     
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 22 2006 at 19:54
Originally posted by Codis Codis wrote:

I've seen Jethro Tull maybe 10 or 11 times since the Broadsword & The Beast tour in the mid-80's.  While the show is always entertaining, and the band sounds as good as ever, Ian's voice has deteriorated quite steadily.  So much so that I'd personally think twice about seeing them again.  At the last concert, I actually got a piece of the balloon he launches at the end of every show!

I got a whole baloon!! Picture and all!!
My solo music: ANTHROPIATE
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 24 2006 at 12:51
they were in croatia couple years back
best show i EVER seen
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 13 2006 at 15:14

I saw them on Saturday at the Shepherd's Bush Empire.

Setlist (in rough order):

Life is a Long Song
Skating Away on the Thin Ice of the New Day
Living in the Past
Griminelli's Lament
Sibelius violin concerto excerpt
Mo's Art (Mozart medley)
Cheap Day Return
She's Like the Swallow
Slipstream
Wond'ring Aloud
Mother Goose
Up to Me
Bouree

Intermission

Piano and violin duet intro/Bohemian Rhapsody
Kashmir
Cross-Eyed Mary
Aqualung
Morris Minus
Budapest
Hymn 43
My God

Encore

Wind Up
Locomotive Breath

OH MY GOD.

SO f**kING GOOD.

I was very close up, too. 5th row down in the stalls. The first set was some softer songs, with a bit of electric but not too much. There wasn't any opening act, which Anderson joked about by saying "it's nice to be here again, opening up for Jethro Tull. They'll be on in a while." What I liked about it was that there was a lot of pisstaking and it wasn't all made out to be some serious EVENT like a lot of other prog bands would have done it at the time. Ian liked to joke a lot, (for example, when someone shouted out "when will the new album come out?" he said "let's see... I think ten years ago?"), and the material that was played in general took the piss every now and then. They had this amazing 22-year-old Asian-looking violinist whom they'd picked up at Juilliard and who also happened to be really hot, in a nice long frilly pink skirt. Mmmmmmm. But apart from hot, she also happened to be a ridiculously good musician, doing an excerpt of a Sibelius violin concerto and adding in some all-around violin shredding, adding new possibilities and arrangements to the music. She also did her own arrangement of "She's Like the Swallow" as a duet with Ian and with the keyboardist backing them up.

One of the highlights of the night for me was "Mo's Art." A few months ago Ian was on a TV show in Vienna and they asked him to do some Mozart and he took a bunch of Mozart pieces and just tore them apart and turned them inside out completely, so in the end it came out with 3 or 4 Mozart pieces, some of them in 5/4, some in 3/4, with a blues feel and with improvised solos and the phrasing changed. The band pulled it off amazingly, and it was the 2nd best song of the night for me ("Locomotive Breath" being the best). Ian Anderson is just an amazing flute player. BWT, anyone know if I can get a bootleg of "Mo's Art" somewhere?

The second set started with a piano and violin classical duet that, when Ian came in, quickly followed by the rest of the band, suddenly turned into "Bohemian Rhapsody," with the violinist doing Freddy's part and then playing, note for note, Brian May's solo. After that, Ian talked about how the violinist was "into old men" and that she listened to the classic rockers like Yes, Deep Purple, and "Emerson, Lake and Parker," and they were going to play her arrangement of a classic rock song. And suddenly, they bust out into "Kashmir," with the violinist doing some crazy shredding, then breaking out into the solo from "Whole Lotta Love" before going back into "Kashmir." Then the violinist went off and they proceeded to play two classics: "Cross-Eyed Mary" and "Aqualung," both executed brilliantly, before doing one of Martin Barre's solo songs, "Morris Minus," which Ian said was written to commemorate the castration of Martin's cat Morris. Martin Barre let out some awesome guitar playing all over this one. Then Ian came back on once it was over and they did "Budapest," which I'm not particularly fond of but is brilliant live. They finished off with "My God," with Ian letting rip with some amazing flute work.

They came back on and did "Wind Up" and "Locomotive Breath," both of which were amaizng. "Locomotive Breath" was probably the best song of the night.

Best concert ever.

The crux of the biscuit is the apostrophe.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 16 2006 at 18:41
I saw them tonight in Bristol.

Just as good as Biggles says, amazing infact.

Erm, Lucia Micarelli was superb, I think she made the concert for me (and her dress may have helped too!).

The setlist was slightly different to the one above, I cannot list it though.  But their version of Kashmir was quite extraordinary.  Erm, I don't remember Whole Lotta Love in their though...

Biggles, it sounds like he said the same jokes too!  Locomotive Breath was superb as an encore, it made the album version sound mediocre, hehe.  Great gig.

Just a few gripes, but that wasn't the band's fault... there were a lot of fidgety people, getting up and down... then there were some people who turned up late and were making a curfuffle behind about somebody sitting their seats.  The audience seemed somewhat rigid too, they didn't seem to be audience participators, I think they all needed alcohol inside them!

And I was also late, because my parents left late, so I think I missed only the one song, maybe two...

But yes, JT doing Queen, Mozart and Led Zeppelin!  Great work guys and Lucia!

Unfortunately I cannot do a better review, I was a tad tired throughout as well.

But yes, if you see them touring near you, go and see them, especially for Lucia Micarelli.


Edited by Geck0
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 17 2006 at 17:54

Believe it or not I had a ticket for the Bristol gig...but completely forgot it was on.  

I was hoping someone would say they were crap! I'm now well and truly pissed off ...big time.Aaarghh...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 17 2006 at 20:45
Are you in Swindon Richard?  I am sure I read someone on here you were... if so, you could have got a lift, albeit, you'd have been late and would have had to endure my parents, haha, but you were welcome to come along.

You missed a treat.  Although I have to say, Ian Anderson's voice isn't what it used to be, but that's expected I guess.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 18 2006 at 20:12

well I'm in Bath but didn't have company to go...

Richardh you should have given me your ticket...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 19 2006 at 17:20

Originally posted by Geck0 Geck0 wrote:

Are you in Swindon Richard?  I am sure I read someone on here you were... if so, you could have got a lift, albeit, you'd have been late and would have had to endure my parents, haha, but you were welcome to come along.

You missed a treat.  Although I have to say, Ian Anderson's voice isn't what it used to be, but that's expected I guess.

Yep I'm in Swindon.Still can't believe I forgot.Glad you enjoyed it.I've got Wishbone Ash coming up at the Swindon Art Centre 28th March.You going?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 19 2006 at 17:21
Originally posted by aapatsos aapatsos wrote:

well I'm in Bath but didn't have company to go...

Richardh you should have given me your ticket...

You can still have it ...and for a knock down price

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 19 2006 at 19:42
Erm, this may sound weird Richard, but I know a guy from Swindon who's brother loves IQ and saw them at Chippenham a few years back, that's not you is it?  If so, then I've met you.  The guy in question is Ian and he has a mate Andy.

My mate Martin loves Wishbone Ash, I may go, I'm not sure yet.  It would be cool to meet you, it may help any future prog adventures!

Any plans to go and see the Ozrics in Bournemouth?  £7 is cheap!

Do you drink in The Rolleston?  If so, we'll have to meet up, you probably know me anyway.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2006 at 07:49
I also saw Jethro Tull, at Peterborough a couple of nights ago.  In fact I only just discovered this forum whilst searching for a Tull messageboard to see if the tour was being discussed or reviewed (has anyone a link to the best used Tull forum BTW?)

An excellent concert as always.  I liked the idea of having the more acoustic set in the first half, and the more traditional 'rock' show after the interval.  Although Ian Anderson's voice is definitely strained to its limits, we know that anyway so it didn't detract from the overall show.

I thought that the violinist was a little over 'exposed' (no I don't mean the dress), good though she was, maybe at the expense of Martin Barre, who seemed to have less solo work than the young lady.  I must admit to cringing when the instrumental at the start of the second half turned into Bohemian Rhapsody, and then Kashmir, well I'd rather they'd have played another Tull song to be honest.

Anyhow, minor gripes at an otherwise excellent evening.  The audience here were quite civilized too, but appreciative -  lets face it, none of us are getting any younger... The band received a rousing standing ovation at the end.

Hoping to get to see Wishbone Ash too in Cambridge next month

Oh, and does anyone know why the drum kit is surrounded by a perspex screen (an acoustic thing maybe?)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2006 at 10:55

Originally posted by stelmogcx stelmogcx wrote:

I also saw Jethro Tull, at Peterborough a couple of nights ago.  In fact I only just discovered this forum whilst searching for a Tull messageboard to see if the tour was being discussed or reviewed (has anyone a link to the best used Tull forum BTW?)

An excellent concert as always.  I liked the idea of having the more acoustic set in the first half, and the more traditional 'rock' show after the interval.  Although Ian Anderson's voice is definitely strained to its limits, we know that anyway so it didn't detract from the overall show.

I thought that the violinist was a little over 'exposed' (no I don't mean the dress), good though she was, maybe at the expense of Martin Barre, who seemed to have less solo work than the young lady.  I must admit to cringing when the instrumental at the start of the second half turned into Bohemian Rhapsody, and then Kashmir, well I'd rather they'd have played another Tull song to be honest.

Anyhow, minor gripes at an otherwise excellent evening.  The audience here were quite civilized too, but appreciative -  lets face it, none of us are getting any younger... The band received a rousing standing ovation at the end.

Hoping to get to see Wishbone Ash too in Cambridge next month

Oh, and does anyone know why the drum kit is surrounded by a perspex screen (an acoustic thing maybe?)

 

I was at Peterborough too. Yes, Ian Anderson was making a lot of his young violinist, Lucia Micarelli and gave her a couple of solo spots, plus lead on several group numbers. Indeed she
played solo, some of the violin part of Sibelius's Violin Concerto - which seems
incongruous for a Jethro Tull Show. Personally there was a gringe factor every
time the amplified acoustic violin's high string was struck by the bow
during this piece, because of distortion and other amplification problems. And
while there was a strong element of virtuosity, there was a stiffness
of playing which you would never expect from Jerry Goodman or Eddie Jobson.
Apart from the JS Bach piece original heard on Stand Up, there was a arrangement
of three well known Mozart themes in a single tune (incl Rondo Alla Turca, Einer
Kleiner Nacht Music) essentially for rock group and classic violinist. Anderson,
reckoned Kashmir was the violinist's favourite piece of rock and she did half
loosen up playing the lead - although Anderson (on Wednesday at his scatological best for stage announcements)  had to pretend he was reading his notes  in announcing the piece was by a rock
combo called Zed Leppelin. BTW there was a very tongue in the cheek absorption
of part of Bohemia Rhapsody in the middle of another instrumental (at the start of
the second set), on which Anderson blow the simplest of notes on his flute presumably in mock contempt. Otherwise a most enjoyable experience although with my geriatic hearing the increase of dbs between set halves, was unnecessary.  (We too wondered about the acrylic screen around the main drumkit - was he doing a Wakeman and eating a particularly pungent curry when not hitting the skins?). But I haven't seen so many old farts (and some looked very sad old farts) congregated in one space.

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