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Topic ClosedIan Anderson at Ra'anana, 16.09.2006

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Fassbinder View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Ian Anderson at Ra'anana, 16.09.2006
    Posted: September 17 2006 at 19:38

First of all, I have to say that I have no idea how to write a review. Therefore I apologise in advance if this review will be unreadable.

 

Well, Ian Anderson in Ra’anana, “near Tel-Aviv”, as was written in Jethro Tull official site. Almost every town in Israel is near Tel-Aviv… September the 16th, Saturday. Hot night. Some hundreds (maybe thousands) of visitors, waiting for the magician. One may keep in mind that the last months were not the most pleasant time in this country. Some people from the audience had their relatives hiding in bomb-proof shelters or at the military duty, some were at the shelters or even at the very war themselves… Smiling faces have become rare… Some artists have denied their arrival to Israel. But Ian Anderson has not. He has arrived and has managed to cause to some people to smile and even to feel happy, at least for some two hours… End of lyrical digression. To the show now.

 

The musicians:

Ian Anderson / flute, acoustic guitar, vocals

John O’Hara / keyboards, accordion

James Duncan / drums, percussion

David Goodier / bass

Keith Morgan / electric guitar

 

Special guest – Ann Marie Calhoun / violin

 

Ra’anana Symphonette Orchestra (conducted by John O’Hara)

 

The show had two parts; some of the pieces’ names were unfamiliar to me, so spelling mistakes are possible.

 

Part I:

1. Eurology

2. Living In The Past

3. Griminelli’s Lament

4. Life Is A Long Song

5. Blue Grass In The Backwards (Ann Marie Calhoun solo)

6. Wond’ring Aloud

7. Shafeeka’s Tango

8. Moz-Art (Mozart medley)

9. Cheap Day Return

10. Mother Goose

11. Runty (written by Ann Marie Calhoun)

12. Bourée

 

Part II:

13. King Henry’s Madrigal

14. Thick As A Brick

15. America (by Leonard Bernstein)

16. Pavana

17. Aqualung

18. God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen

19. My God

20. Budapest

 

Encore:

21. Locomotive Breath

 

Since the recent Ian Anderson’s tours are aimed to support his new double CD “Ian Anderson Plays The Orchestral Jethro Tull”, I expected the program of the show to be close to the disc contents. However, surprisingly (for me), almost a half of the first part was different from the corresponding part of the double CD. The second part remained almost the same, plus King Henry’s Madrigal, America and Thick As A Brick.

 

I never saw Jethro Tull at the stage (unfortunately), therefore I have nothing to compare the present show with. My judgements, hence, are very subjective. We all know Ian has certain problems with singing. He knows that better than anybody else, and this has an effect on the nature of the show – less singing, more playing. There were much playing. Stunning! Awesome!! Incredible!!! Unbelievable!!!! Grandiose!!!!! No doubt Ian Anderson’s musicians know how to play. So do the classically trained Ra’anana Symphonette Orchestra musicians. So does also classically trained violinist guest Ann Marie Calhoun. And Anderson, who, as always, was breathing in his fife, was crying in his fife, was spitting in his fife, was clicking in his fife, was grunting in his fife, was living in his fife… was living through his flute.

 

An incomparable showman, Ian Anderson held the whole auditory in ceaseless attention, always in motion, full of energy, joking, dancing, falling to his knees in front of Ann Marie while duetting with her (incredible pair – a violin and a flute!), making a show.

 

The first part was relatively calm, except for Shafeeka’s Tango (as far as I managed to understand, it is a piece written by a Turkish musician), with aforementioned duetting Calhoun – Anderson, and Bourée, involving the great orchestral performance, which ended this part. But the second part was a real explosion. It has begun with King Henry’s Madrigal (great instrumental!), continued with Thick As A Brick, and at that moment there were already some signs of “madness” in the public. Aqualung was changed completely. Before it, Ian Anderson said something like: “See you recognising this one…” Well, I have recognised it. But I already was familiar with this version since I have the double CD. But at the double CD Anderson is saying the same things, and I had recognised Aqualung when I was listening to this version for the first time. Very interesting orchestral arrangement, featuring also much flute playing (remember, there was not flute in the Aqualung (the album) version). Then My God, once again with Anderson virtuosic flute. Then Budapest, with great orchestra plus violin plus flute. When Anderson sang in the coda “Hot night in Budapest” I expected him one time to “slip” and to say “Hot night in Tel-Aviv”. It was not in Tel-Aviv (you know, it was near Tel-Aviv), but it was a hot night… However, it never happened. An encore, Locomotive Breath, was played with standing ovations from the audience. And by right, as it was great performance. The great show by the great artist. By the great ARTIST.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2006 at 20:56
Congratulations, you saw "the greatest show on Earth", really.
 
And the fact that Ian didn't cancel Israel concert does him credit.
Who are you and who am I to say we know the reason why... (D. Gilmour)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2006 at 21:16
Originally posted by NotAProghead NotAProghead wrote:

Congratulations, you saw "the greatest show on Earth", really.
 
And the fact that Ian didn't cancel Israel concert does him credit.
 
Thank you! The show was really great! Have you ever been at Jethro Tull or Ian Anderson show?
 
And yes, there was a fear of cancelling the gig. Luckily for us, it haven't happened.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 17 2006 at 22:05
Originally posted by Fassbinder Fassbinder wrote:

Have you ever been at Jethro Tull or Ian Anderson show?
Yes, I saw Tull twice in Moscow.
The third concert was on 1st July this year. No need to say all shows were great.
 
The latter was rather Ian's solo concert, though the band has been announced as Jethro Tull.
 
The line-up:
Ian Anderson - vocals, flute, acoustic guitar.
Jonathan Noyce - bass.
James Anderson (BTW, Ian's son) - drums. 
Florian Opahle - guitars (you can hear him on "Ian Anderson Plays Orchestral Jethro Tull" CD/DVD and the last Greg Lake DVD).
John O'Hara - keyboards, accordion. 
Lucia Micarelli - violin.

As usual, Ian joked and commented songs with his incredible humour (something like "More than 200 years ago Mozart created his music. And what now? He's dead! And I can make everything I want with his music - no copyrights").
 
In the middle of the concert Lucia Micarelli (what a nice lady Wink) played something from Sibelius, while the band had a short break.
The concert took place in the outdoor venue, it was a cold day, but the band (and partly some strong drinks) made the air hot. The sound was great, all details of music could be heard.
People in the audience were enthusiastic - they clapped, screamed and shouted between the songs.
Closer to the end of the show even 50-years old men behaved like teenagers.
 
Set list (hope I didn't forget a thing):
1. Living in the Past
2. Eurology (from "Rupi's Dance")
3. Life's A Long Song (Ian said it dedicated to Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Keith Moon etc.)
4. Scating Away On The Thin Ice Of The New Day
5. Theme from "Godfather" (in humorous, almost gipsy style)
6. Mozart medley
7. Cheap Day Return
8. Mother Goose
9. Kashmir (powerful insrtrumental version of LZ classic song)
10. Thick As A Brick (quite a big fragment)
11. Serenade to a Cuckcoo
12. My God
13. Aqualung
14. Budapest
15. Locomotive Breath. 
 
My conclusion: if Ian goes to your town - hurry for your tickets. Every concert is unique.


Edited by NotAProghead - October 01 2006 at 10:54
Who are you and who am I to say we know the reason why... (D. Gilmour)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 26 2006 at 12:27
I recorded this great performance.Smile

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 26 2006 at 12:49
Originally posted by Dragon Dragon wrote:

I recorded this great performance.Smile

 
You're lucky (if you've recorded it for yourself). Congratulations!
 
By the way, not everybody thinks it was great. I certainly do, though...Thumbs Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 27 2006 at 12:25
I've recorded it for everybody. I'm sharing it in Emule, so you can find it there.
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