Mostrando postagens com marcador Jethro Tull. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Jethro Tull. Mostrar todas as postagens

segunda-feira, 7 de janeiro de 2008

Jethro Tull - Living In The Past (72)

Parte 1

01 - Song For Jeffrey
02 - Love Story
03 - Christmas Song
04 - Living In The Past
05 - Driving Song
06 - Sweet Dream
07 - Singing All Day
08 - Witches Promise
09 – Inside
10 - Alive And Well And Living In
11 - Just Trying To Be
12 - By Kind Permission Of [Live]
13 - Dharma For One [Live]
14 - Wond'ring Again
15 - Hymn 43
16 - Life Is A Long Song
17 - Up The 'Pool
18 - Dr. Bogenbroom
19 - For Later
20 – Nursie

segunda-feira, 24 de dezembro de 2007

Jethro Tull - Thick As A Brick (72)

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1 Thick as a Brick 22:37
2 Thick as a Brick 21:03



Jethro Tull's first LP-length epic is a masterpiece in the annals of progressive rock, and one of the few works of its kind that still holds up decades later.

Mixing hard rock and English folk music with classical influences, set to stream-of-consciousness lyrics so dense with imagery that one might spend weeks pondering their meaning — assuming one feels the need to do so — the group created a dazzling tour de force, at once playful, profound, and challenging, without overwhelming the listener.

The original LP was the best-sounding, best-engineered record Tull had ever released, easily capturing the shifting dynamics between the soft all-acoustic passages and the electric rock crescendos surrounding them.

quarta-feira, 28 de novembro de 2007

Jethro Tull – Benefit (70)

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Benefit was the album on which the Jethro Tull sound solidified around folk music, abandoning blues entirely.

Benefit was the album on which the Jethro Tull sound solidified around folk music, abandoning blues entirely.

Beginning with the opening number, "With You There to Help Me," Anderson adopts his now-familiar, slightly mournful folksinger/sage persona, with a rather sardonic outlook on life and the world; his acoustic guitar carries the melody, joined by Martin Barre's electric instrument for the crescendos.

This would be the model for much of the material on Aqualung and especially Thick as a Brick, although the acoustic/electric pairing would be executed more effectively on those albums.

Here the acoustic and electric instruments are merged somewhat better than they were on Stand Up (on which it sometimes seemed like Barre's solos were being played in a wholly different venue), and as needed, the electric guitars carry the melodies better than on previous albums.

Most of the songs on Benefit display pleasant, delectably folk-like melodies attached to downbeat, slightly gloomy, but dazzlingly complex lyrics, with Barre's guitar adding enough wattage to keep the hard rock listeners very interested.

"To Cry You a Song," "Son," and "For Michael Collins, Jeffrey and Me" all defined Tull's future sound: Barre's amp cranked up to ten (especially on "Son"), coming in above Anderson's acoustic strumming, a few unexpected changes in tempo, and Anderson spouting lyrics filled with dense, seemingly profound imagery and statements.

As on Stand Up, the group was still officially a quartet, with future member John Evan (whose John Evan Band had become the nucleus of Jethro Tull two years before) appearing as a guest on keyboards; his classical training proved essential to the expanding of the group's sound on the three albums to come.

Benefit was reissued in a remastered edition with bonus tracks at the end of 2001, which greatly improved the clarity of the playing and the richness of the sound; the four additional tracks are "Singing All Day," "Witch's Promise," the elegant, gossamer-textured "Just Trying to Be," and the smooth hard rocker "Teacher" — which had the first truly memorable guitar/flute riff in rock music (or Tull's output).

Written and recorded prior to Benefit, they're all lighter in mood than the material from the original album, adding some greater variety but fitting in perfectly on a stylistic level.

Beginning with the opening number, "With You There to Help Me," Anderson adopts his now-familiar, slightly mournful folksinger/sage persona, with a rather sardonic outlook on life and the world; his acoustic guitar carries the melody, joined by Martin Barre's electric instrument for the crescendos.

This would be the model for much of the material on Aqualung and especially Thick as a Brick, although the acoustic/electric pairing would be executed more effectively on those albums. Here the acoustic and electric instruments are merged somewhat better than they were on Stand Up (on which it sometimes seemed like Barre's solos were being played in a wholly different venue), and as needed, the electric guitars carry the melodies better than on previous albums.

Most of the songs on Benefit display pleasant, delectably folk-like melodies attached to downbeat, slightly gloomy, but dazzlingly complex lyrics, with Barre's guitar adding enough wattage to keep the hard rock listeners very interested.

"To Cry You a Song," "Son," and "For Michael Collins, Jeffrey and Me" all defined Tull's future sound: Barre's amp cranked up to ten (especially on "Son"), coming in above Anderson's acoustic strumming, a few unexpected changes in tempo, and Anderson spouting lyrics filled with dense, seemingly profound imagery and statements.

As on Stand Up, the group was still officially a quartet, with future member John Evan (whose John Evan Band had become the nucleus of Jethro Tull two years before) appearing as a guest on keyboards; his classical training proved essential to the expanding of the group's sound on the three albums to come.

Benefit was reissued in a remastered edition with bonus tracks at the end of 2001, which greatly improved the clarity of the playing and the richness of the sound; the four additional tracks are "Singing All Day," "Witch's Promise," the elegant, gossamer-textured "Just Trying to Be," and the smooth hard rocker "Teacher" — which had the first truly memorable guitar/flute riff in rock music (or Tull's output).

Written and recorded prior to Benefit, they're all lighter in mood than the material from the original album, adding some greater variety but fitting in perfectly on a stylistic level.

»«

quarta-feira, 21 de novembro de 2007

Gnidrolog - Lady Lake (72)


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1
I Could Never Be a Soldier
2
Ship
3
A Dog With No Collar
4
Lady Lake
5
Same Dreams
6
Social Embarrassment

Twin brothers
Stewart and Colin Goldring formed the group Gnidrolog in the late '60s after having worked together in various musical projects throughout the years.

They released three albums.

The first,
In Spite of Harry's Toenail, showed their progressive rock leanings quite well.

This was the second album that Gnidrolog cut in 1972, just before going their various ways. Folky in part, jazzy in part, with lots of woodwind from recorder to saxophone, but NO Hammond organ or mellotron, the overall sound is of a quirky, intelligent, blackly humorous denizen of the abyss that lies between Steeleye Span or Jethro Tull and King Crimson or Van Der Graaf Generator.

The opener, "Soldier", oscillates between prettily lyrical and rampagingly angry, and is a great anti-war anthem.

The rest of the album ranges from almost poppy ("Same Dreams") to spooky ("Lady Lake") to elegiac ("Dog") to the boisterous "Social Embarrassment".

Due to the Goldring twins' discovering continued interest in the band on the WWW, they reformed in 1999 and recorded a new album "Gnosis", as well as re-releasing the back catalogue including 'Lady Lake".

A real gem that deserves a wider audience. NB: gorgeous cover by Bruce Pennington.