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Topic ClosedJethro Tull: hopeless devotion or hatred

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Ivan_Melgar_M View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 22 2009 at 21:23
As Micky, neither devotion or hatred, they are great, but there are too many great bands in the same level out there to swear eternal devotion to all of them.
 
Iván
 
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 22 2009 at 21:35
Originally posted by PROGMONSTER2008 PROGMONSTER2008 wrote:

I was always a bit disappointed with Warchild and thought, Tull are better than this. But when I got the remaster I listened to the 7 bonus tracks and realised the band were still producing the same great music, but the original 11 songs were done for sound track purposes for a movie. So if you want to hear the real Tull of 1974, just listen to the bonus tracks. Don't forget that Skating away and Solitaire were written in 1973 for the Chateau sessions. So what we have newly written in 1974 is 7 tull songs(bonus tracks) and 9 playful soundtrack songs(not really tull, made purposely for a movie). But I must say Queen and Country and Warchild(title track) are pretty damn cool soundtrack songs Smile


those extras are superb, 'Paradise Steakhouse' for one not to mention 'Kelpie' from Stormwatch, and if you really wanna indulge in extras try something like the Flawed Gems and the Other Sides of Tull CD from the 20 Years set

they deserve every bit of devotion they get, to continue on so long and continue to do great things, amazing





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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 22 2009 at 22:33
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

Originally posted by PROGMONSTER2008 PROGMONSTER2008 wrote:

I was always a bit disappointed with Warchild and thought, Tull are better than this. But when I got the remaster I listened to the 7 bonus tracks and realised the band were still producing the same great music, but the original 11 songs were done for sound track purposes for a movie. So if you want to hear the real Tull of 1974, just listen to the bonus tracks. Don't forget that Skating away and Solitaire were written in 1973 for the Chateau sessions. So what we have newly written in 1974 is 7 tull songs(bonus tracks) and 9 playful soundtrack songs(not really tull, made purposely for a movie). But I must say Queen and Country and Warchild(title track) are pretty damn cool soundtrack songs Smile


those extras are superb, 'Paradise Steakhouse' for one not to mention 'Kelpie' from Stormwatch, and if you really wanna indulge in extras try something like the Flawed Gems and the Other Sides of Tull CD from the 20 Years set

they deserve every bit of devotion they get, to continue on so long and continue to do great things, amazing





 
I have everything from the band. Love the bonus tracks on Stormwatch and Warchild. Everyone of them are very cool. I really like the 90s Tull too
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 23 2009 at 06:12
Originally posted by PROGMONSTER2008 PROGMONSTER2008 wrote:

Originally posted by American Khatru American Khatru wrote:

They do have a high amount of very good-to-great albums.  I just listened to Stand Up at work today.  Just thinking, following Lucas' post, I get a picture pretty well unmatched by any other band in the genre. 

If I count what I consider to be the "very good-to-great" albums I get a solid 14 years, 1969-1982.  Within that period, excepting the two year wait before Broadsword, an album was released every year!  (I leave out This Was because it's not really yet the Tull sound, and the all-important Barre isn't there; and for me the machine comes to a stop with Broadsword, though there are of course some things of merit after that.)  Throw in the stupendous Life Is A Long Song E.P. of 1971 (thank you progmonster2008) and you have 14 studio releases and very little to complain about.  You have to admit, that beez impressiveApprove.  More than most bands can say.  I love King Crimson just as much as Tull, but their prolific output does admittedly travel through quite different line ups, with of course some big gaps in there for other projects and whatever.


Edit:  Shouldn't forget the songs Sweet Dream and Witche's Promise, released 1969.  Amazing and immediate Grand sound from a band that just started!
 
Well you must include all remastered versions of each album Tongue
 
Even This Was has some real cool tunes, expecially the bonus tracks Love story, xmas song
 
I'm surprised you haven't mentioned the 90s remasters and relative outtakes Wink
 
Dotcom + it all trickles down(outtake)
Roots to branches
Catfish rising remaster( with bonus track 'night in the wilderness') + silver river turning, truck stop runner(outtakes)
 
If you have the remasters of these 3 and you add those 3 extra outtakes, then you trim those 3 albums down to the 10 best songs (including the bonus tracks and outtakes) then you have 3 very good albums which are even better than some of the 70s albums(or even revised 70s albums using the bonus tracks) Smile
 


Holy smokes!  You seem like a respectable chappy (or lass, I don't know), so if you're saying this and that means that there's even a possibility that I could agree if I heard it all, then I am one happy Tull fan to know that there is yet more material to hear!

Forgive me: though I do have cd transfers or cds bought years back (which were not then blessed with extras), my familiarity is almost all from my collection of these odd and somewhat cumbersome flat black objects which are gingerly placed on a form-fitting rotatable surface to then receive a needle to their faceBig smile.  In other words, bit of an old fart here I guess (ah, I don't guess).  Anyway, I am grateful and eager, when I can afford it, to get me paws on these extra tracks.  This music in waiting, though a small thing to some, just made life more deee-licious.Big smileBig smile



Edited by American Khatru - May 23 2009 at 06:13
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 23 2009 at 08:48
I really like the remasters with the bonus tracks.  The A with the DVD is pretty cool, too.  My latest addition is Nightcap with the Chateau.  Quite pleased with that.

Edited by Slartibartfast - May 23 2009 at 08:48
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 23 2009 at 08:58
They're incredibly hit and miss really.

Thick as a Brick and Aqualung are two stone cold five star classics, without question.

Yet albums like Passion Play and Minstrel are simply above average.

And some of the later stuff is dire.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: May 23 2009 at 09:46
Originally posted by American Khatru American Khatru wrote:

Ian Anderson can apparently be a real, er, doosh
 
Should that be the criterion of whether you like a band or not? I love Ted Nugent's music, but as a person...
 
Tull have some great albums and some that aren't so great.
"The disgusting stink of a too-loud electric guitar.... Now, that's my idea of a good time."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 08 2009 at 00:54
Hopeless devotion?  No.  Hatred?  Never.  Not even Rock Island, which is merely disappointing.  Well, very disappointing.

These days, I like when Ian writes clever songs and melodies in the limited range he can comfortably sing, especially Secret Language of Birds but also Roots to Branches.  The 70s stuff was my favorite.  Most of Stormwatch and Too Old To Rock 'n' Roll (just not the title track) still sound great to me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 08 2009 at 00:58
I think Rock Island is fine considering how much material they'd done by then, certainly beats Under Wraps and was a solid followup to Crest 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 08 2009 at 01:03
Yes, Under Wraps.  Not my career highlight either!  Still, the tour was good.  I stood on my chair and was very excited. Tongue

Edited by Bufo - June 08 2009 at 01:04
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 08 2009 at 01:08
I saw that one..I think I enjoyed the 2001 Best Of tour most of the six or so times I've seen them


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 08 2009 at 01:18
I saw Tull several times after 1984 too, but they never had as much energy.  When I saw them in 1995, Ian had virtually no singing voice that night and could barely utter a sound, so the audience talked over the entire show, except for the loud rocky bits.

Living with the Past is a good example, I think, of the band still sounding great but being none too energetic.  Comes with age, I know, but Ian looked like he'd aged 20 years between the Under Wraps and Crest of a Knave tours, IMO.


Edited by Bufo - June 08 2009 at 01:19
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 08 2009 at 01:28
Yes, in the late 90s, his singing started sounding much better, but that could be that he was no longer straining for the high notes he could no longer sing.  I think he can only comfortably handle about half an octave, which isn't much for a songwriter to work with, though what he's done on his recent Tull and solo albums is very good (and better - just so long as it isn't a cover of older material - the cover of Jack Frost and the Hooded Crow on the Christmas Album comes to mind.)

But the flute playing.  That's become simply stunning.  I guess since his daughter showed him how to finger the flute properly (!) he's truly become a master of the instrument, requisite Roland Kirk impression notwithstanding. Smile


Edited by Bufo - June 08 2009 at 01:29
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 08 2009 at 06:04
Originally posted by Bufo Bufo wrote:

...But the flute playing.  That's become simply stunning.


I'm glad you brought this up.  I was just thinking the other day, listening more intently to later Tull than I usually do, followed by a listen to Secret Language, that Anderson's flute playing seems to be greatly improving; as his voice has lost its shine and range, his flute tone has surely gained a deepened humanity.  I found myself seeking out the flute passages.  I haven't heard it more than three times so far, but I believe this may be the key to listening to Secret Language: it sounded, last listening, like Anderson himself probably wrote it more by flute passage than vocal melody, in terms of how one gets from event to event.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 08 2009 at 06:15
Wow, that could be it.  And if he's writing for his talents and around his shortcomings, then that's the smart thing to do.

Divinities is all flute, but I never found that to be feature the strongest writing or playing.

All those Bouree-type instrumentals on Christmas Album though, those are a blast and the fluting is excellent.
Stuck in the '70s
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2009 at 09:54
Fluting ?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2009 at 10:06
Eh, I place myself firmly in the "eh, don't have an opinion either way"

Edited by Roland113 - June 09 2009 at 10:07
-------someone please tell him to delete this line, he looks like a noob-------

I don't have an unnatural obsession with Disney Princesses, I have a fourteen year old daughter and coping mechanisms.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2009 at 10:09
But what about the fluting?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2009 at 13:41
Originally posted by Roland113 Roland113 wrote:

I place myself firmly in the "eh, don't have an opinion either way"


Me too

I remember making a fairly serious attempt to 'get' Jethro Tull back in, I guess, the late 70's - when they were possibly still pretty much at the top of the game. I felt they were a good-to-decent rock band, with plenty of folk stylings which did nothing for me. The big problem with them, for me, is the vocals - I just can't get on with Ian Anderson's nasal tones.

I hear his voice is a bit shot these days - but it never appealed to me even when he was supposedly in his better days.

But that's just me. I don't hate them or anything, but I just don't find them having much appeal to me
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 09 2009 at 14:26
Originally posted by Vibrationbaby Vibrationbaby wrote:

But what about the fluting?
 
The fluting's quite stylish on my neighbour's champagne glasses
It's not that I can't find worth in anything, it's just that I can't find worth in enough.
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