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Author Topic: Listening to.......  (Read 307074 times)
ColinB
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« Reply #1360 on: April 14, 2024, 09:27:34 AM »


There were only four, the first of which, Catfish Rising, he was a session player, appearing on only a few tracks. It's an OK album, I guess, not one I play much.
Roots To Branches I like quite a bit, especially the title track.
J-Tull Dot Com I don't have, so I can't say.
The Jethro Tull Christmas Album is, as far as Christmas albums go, a good one.

Not the most celebrated of Tull eras, I think the band had run it's course by now. However, you may love it.


Thanks Mike. I watched part of an interview with Martin Barre where he talked about enjoying being leader of his own band though by the sounds of it, it took quite a lot of hard work to get the music industry interested in him after he left Tull. He didn't sound happy about Ian using the Tull name as he reckons he has as much right to the name as Ian does. But it's not the first time musicians have fallen out over who has the rights to use a band name.

As with Strawbs, I've never got round to listening to much Tull over the years. But as I'm now getting very few promo albums for my radio show, I have more time to go back and listen to old stuff.
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« Reply #1361 on: April 14, 2024, 02:54:26 PM »



There were only four, the first of which, Catfish Rising, he was a session player, appearing on only a few tracks. It's an OK album, I guess, not one I play much.
Roots To Branches I like quite a bit, especially the title track.
J-Tull Dot Com I don't have, so I can't say.
The Jethro Tull Christmas Album is, as far as Christmas albums go, a good one.

Not the most celebrated of Tull eras, I think the band had run it's course by now. However, you may love it.


Thanks Mike. I watched part of an interview with Martin Barre where he talked about enjoying being leader of his own band though by the sounds of it, it took quite a lot of hard work to get the music industry interested in him after he left Tull. He didn't sound happy about Ian using the Tull name as he reckons he has as much right to the name as Ian does. But it's not the first time musicians have fallen out over who has the rights to use a band name.

As with Strawbs, I've never got round to listening to much Tull over the years. But as I'm now getting very few promo albums for my radio show, I have more time to go back and listen to old stuff.



Tull circa 1969 is excellent.
Aqualung 71 and Thick As a Brick 72 is generally regarded as a peak period.
73 -76 is good solid stuff.
77-79, including the live Bursting Out is a second peak.

80's Tull with Peggy in the band, is good, mostly, but 80's production doesn't quite fit with the Tull sound.
A problem a lot of 70's bands suffered with. Crest Of A knave - Jethro Convention play Dire Straits, is pretty good.

After that, it tends to be 'Oh - a new Tull album with Tull Tulling on it.'
The other members, aside from Ian and Martin, don't have the personalities that seem to shape the music like previous incarnations did.

I agree with Martin pretty much, and I think Ian sort of did when they stopped working together, I'm sure he said as much, it's not Tull without Martin.
It was always the Ian Anderson band, and many people thought Ian was a bloke called Jethro Tull, if only subliminally. But with Martin as the wing man, it was more than just a solo project.

Why did Ian return to using the Tull name after stating that he promoting his own name rather than that of the seed guy ?
One can only surmise.


 
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davidmjs
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« Reply #1362 on: April 14, 2024, 05:07:15 PM »




Why did Ian return to using the Tull name after stating that he promoting his own name rather than that of the seed guy ?
One can only surmise.


  


a) money and b) 'cos his lawyers told him he could get away with it.
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« Reply #1363 on: April 14, 2024, 05:15:15 PM »

The new Sheryl Crow album -  Evolution (Valory LP, gold coloured vinyl, 2024).


It's not much over half an hour long, so CD buyers may feel  cheated.  Quality though.  
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« Reply #1364 on: April 15, 2024, 12:37:14 PM »

Listening to the 40th Anniversary edition of Aqualung with 14 bonus tracks. Very pleasant listening. Wish I'd got into Tull sooner but better late than never.

I'm guessing that Marillion are fans of the band as at times I find myself thinking, oh that reminds me of whatever Fish era song.
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« Reply #1365 on: April 15, 2024, 01:16:04 PM »

Fish-era Marillion always struck me as would-be Gabriel-era Genesis soundalikes. Very good ones at that.
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« Reply #1366 on: April 15, 2024, 03:52:10 PM »

Now listening to The Butts Band - The Complete Recordings.

Krieger and Densmore did some good stuff with that band. The first album with Jess Roden, Phillip Chen and Roy Davies is well worth a listen.
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« Reply #1367 on: April 15, 2024, 04:07:07 PM »


Now listening to The Butts Band - The Complete Recordings.

Krieger and Densmore did some good stuff with that band. The first album with Jess Roden, Phillip Chen and Roy Davies is well worth a listen.



Considering I'm a big fan of the Doors' post-Jimbo albums it's perhaps surprising that I've never delved in here.  Perhaps I should.
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« Reply #1368 on: April 19, 2024, 11:04:34 AM »

For the past couple of weeks, Mike Scott has been uploading many still unreleased treasures from The Waterboys' Fisherman's Blues sessions on their Patreon site.  If you're a fan, then do yourself a favour and cough up the dosh (six quid a month after tax).

https://www.patreon.com/waterboys/posts

Jules

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« Reply #1369 on: April 24, 2024, 06:41:09 PM »

The Secret Sisters – ‘Put Your Needle Down’.  Really gives the day a lift.  I picked this up cheaply in a market in Bridport.  Produced by T Bone Burnett (and it shows)

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« Reply #1370 on: May 02, 2024, 09:23:40 AM »

Decemberists - Joan In The Garden. I'm a few weeks late to this. Incredible track.
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ColinB
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« Reply #1371 on: May 02, 2024, 01:02:44 PM »

The ELO album Zoom that Jeff Lynne released in 2001. It was pretty much a solo Lynne record with him playing most of the instruments on it but Richard Tandy played on the opening track. Also a couple of guys called George and Ringo guested on it. It wasn't really ELO without Tandy.

I will be listening to some 70s ELO records later. RIP Richard.
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« Reply #1372 on: May 02, 2024, 01:17:01 PM »

Yes, listening to Out Of The Blue in his honour this morning here.
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« Reply #1373 on: May 02, 2024, 11:34:08 PM »

I saw Aerosmith twice, in 1989 and 1993.

I have had a memory of the second show, when somebody called out for them to play Rats In The Cellar - one of my favourite 'Smith tunes - and Stephen Tyler saying 'Good choice' and them playing it.

I'm currently listening to a naughty recording of the show which was posted on the site where these things are posted, and my memory is there for me to hear once again several decades later.

Nice to know my grey matter is still working.

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davidmjs
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« Reply #1374 on: May 03, 2024, 08:24:34 AM »


I saw Aerosmith twice, in 1989 and 1993.

I have had a memory of the second show, when somebody called out for them to play Rats In The Cellar - one of my favourite 'Smith tunes - and Stephen Tyler saying 'Good choice' and them playing it.

I'm currently listening to a naughty recording of the show which was posted on the site where these things are posted, and my memory is there for me to hear once again several decades later.

Nice to know my grey matter is still working.

\m/


Ha - it's nice when that happens.  My favourite is you can hear (if you're listening for it) me shouting out "Lemmmmmy" just before Lemmy gets announced at the Hawkwind Crystal Palace Bowl gig in '85.
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« Reply #1375 on: May 03, 2024, 10:23:26 AM »

I bought a number of CD's earlier this week from a charity shop. One was Watering The Spirit by Tom Hall (I thought it was by American singer-songwriter Tom T Hall but wasn't). Don't know who Tom Hall is or was but he seems quite a character. Part of the sleeve notes read "Mark Griffiths uses Dean Markley strings, Cozy Dixon uses Premier Drums and since the Black Lion closed Tom uses the Cricketers Arms, Northampton.  Grin
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« Reply #1376 on: May 03, 2024, 10:32:47 AM »


I saw Aerosmith twice, in 1989 and 1993.


We saw Aerosmith on their first visit to the UK. They played Reading Festival and were booed off the stage, with beer cans filled with urine being thrown at them.
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« Reply #1377 on: May 03, 2024, 11:49:33 AM »

New album from Julianne and Tim (All About Eve).  It's rather gorgeous...  Digital only so far.

https://reganbricheno.bandcamp.com/album/apparitions
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« Reply #1378 on: May 03, 2024, 01:55:26 PM »



I saw Aerosmith twice, in 1989 and 1993.


We saw Aerosmith on their first visit to the UK. They played Reading Festival and were booed off the stage, with beer cans filled with urine being thrown at them.


1977 ?
That was a bad year for them at festivals all over the States too.
They were at the height of their substance abuse then. Only four years into their recording career, too. It took ten years to clean up and get back on track.

It was a GALLON container full of used beer that smacked me on the back of the head at Reading 87, also ten years later, that lead me to have a year off festivals in '88, try Glasto in '89 and '90, and wind up in Cropredy later in '90.

Funny how things work out.
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« Reply #1379 on: May 03, 2024, 03:12:59 PM »


It was a GALLON container full of used beer that smacked me on the back of the head at Reading 87, also ten years later, that lead me to have a year off festivals in '88, try Glasto in '89 and '90, and wind up in Cropredy later in '90.

Funny how things work out.


My one visit to the Monsters of Rock at Donington was in 85 and I needed medical treatment after a bottle of used beer (nice term!) hit me on the top of my head. Fortunately I was ok and enjoyed headliner ZZ Top but there were a few guys in the First Aid tent who were out cold.

I didn't go to another festival until T in the Park in the 90s. Punters there were more likely to drink and fall over than start throwing bottles around.

We've got rather off topic here. I'm listening to Lancashire v Kent on the BBC cricket website after a day of ELO yesterday.
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