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Post by steelmonkey on Feb 13, 2014 16:39:59 GMT
I agree...This IS the Golden Age...an inspired, energetic, productive ian Anderson hitting on all pistons is as Golden Age as it gets....I almost think the same thing is going to happen as 72/73...the success of TAAB 2 enboldens Ian to go darker, wider, bigger...and it's too much for the lightweights. H.E. sounds as ambitious as APP....hurry 4-14-14 !
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Feb 13, 2014 18:42:28 GMT
inagist.com/all/434020793971113984/Ian Anderson's forthcoming studio album 'Homo Erraticus' can now be pre-ordered from the Kscope store on a variety of formats. A limited edition deluxe 4 disc set (2CD + 2DVD-V) presented in a 60 page hardback book, including 'The Making of Homo Erraticus' on DVD, a bonus audio CD (featuring original hotel demos), and a 5.1 surround mix of the album on DVD - smarturl.it/HomoErraticus-DeluxeA limited 2 disc digibook edition (CD/DVD-V), including a 5.1 surround mix of the album on DVD and a 24 page booklet - smarturl.it/HomoErraticus-CDDVDVA double vinyl edition of the album pressed on heavyweight (180g) vinyl with a screen printed fourth side. Packaged in a gatefold sleeve with an 8 page booklet - smarturl.it/HomoErraticus-Vinyl'Homo Erraticus' will be released on 14th April 2014. The album release will be followed by an extensive UK tour, where 'Homo Erraticus' will be performed in its entirety followed by a selection of Jethro Tull classics updated with video and theatrics. Tickets – jethrotull.com/tour-dates/
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Post by JTull 007 on Feb 13, 2014 19:27:01 GMT
Thanks Sir Tootull for this incredible link! I just ordered this: A limited edition deluxe 4 disc set (2CD + 2DVD-V) presented in a 60 page hardback book, including 'The Making of Homo Erraticus' on DVD, a bonus audio CD (featuring original hotel demos), and a 5.1 surround mix of the album on DVD - smarturl.it/HomoErraticus-Deluxe
Total cost with shipping : $77.19 USD
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Post by nobodyspecial on Feb 13, 2014 20:11:31 GMT
I don't think I missed a posting.... The new 'album' cover; It does seem that IA is holding a staff made from a 3-tined garden hoe, and, it would appear, a middle-fingered-like 'appendage'.... Is he 'flipping off'?...'Giving the finger'
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Post by Deleted on Feb 13, 2014 20:27:26 GMT
Thanks Sir Tootull for this incredible link! I just ordered this: A limited edition deluxe 4 disc set (2CD + 2DVD-V) presented in a 60 page hardback book, including 'The Making of Homo Erraticus' on DVD, a bonus audio CD (featuring original hotel demos), and a 5.1 surround mix of the album on DVD - smarturl.it/HomoErraticus-Deluxe
Total cost with shipping : $77.19 USD You're welcome, Sir Jim. www.burningshed.com/store/jethrotull/product/446/5514/All copies come with an exclusive postcard. *The first 250 copies of the deluxe edition come with a postcard signed by Ian Anderson. The box set will be available for £34.99 for a limited period only. Pre-order for 14th April release. preorder (€43.85 EUR) Other Versions / Formats Ian Anderson - Homo Erraticus (Deluxe Edition) (2CD + 2DVD-V in a hard back book preorder) Tracks CD: 1. Doggerland [4:20] 2. Heavy Metals [1:29] 3. Enter The Uninvited [4:12] 4. Puer Ferox Adventus [7:11] 5. Meliora Sequamur [3:32] 6. The Turnpike Inn [3:08] 7. The Engineer [3:12] 8. The Pax Britannica [3:05] 9. Tripudium Ad Bellum [2:48] 10. After These Wars [4:28] 11. New Blood, Old Veins [2:31] 12. In For A Pound [0:36] 13. The Browning Of The Green [4:05] 14. Per Errationes Ad Astra [1:33] 15. Cold Dead Reckoning [5:28] DVD-V: 1. Doggerland (5.1 Mix) [4:10] 2. Heavy Metals (5.1 Mix) [1:34] 3. Enter The Uninvited (5.1 Mix) [3:36] 4. Puer Ferox Adventus (5.1 Mix) [6:57] 5. Meliora Sequamur (5.1 Mix) [3:30] 6. The Turnpike Inn (5.1 Mix) [3:03] 7. The Engineer (5.1 Mix) [3:10] 8. The Pax Britannica (5.1 Mix) [3:06] 9. Tripudium Ad Bellum (5.1 Mix) [2:47] 10. After These Wars (5.1 Mix) [4:26] 11. New Blood, Old Veins (5.1 Mix) [2:31] 12. In For A Pound (5.1 Mix) [0:36] 13. The Browning Of The Green (5.1 Mix) [4:10] 14. Per Errationes Ad Astra (5.1 Mix) [1:35] 15. Cold Dead Reckoning (5.1 Mix) [5:12] CD 2 (Commentary & Demos): 1. Doggerland (4:10) 2. Heavy Metals (1:34) 3. Enter The Uninvited (3:36) 4. Puer Ferox Adventus (6:57) 5. Meliora Sequamur (3:30) 6. The Turnpike Inn (3:03) 7. The Engineer (3:10) 8. The Pax Britannica (3:06) 9. Tripudium Ad Bellum (2:47) 10. After These Wars (4:26) 11. Spoken Introduction To Demos (3:54) 11. New Blood, Old Veins (2:31) 12. Doggerland (1:43) 12. In For A Pound (0:36) 13. Heavy Metals (1:42) 13. The Browning Of The Green (4:10) 14. Enter The Uninvited (3:40) 14. Per Errationes Ad Astra (1:35) 15. Puer Ferox Adventus (3:29) 15. Cold Dead Reckoning (5:12) 16. Meliora Sequamur (2:45) 17. The Turnpike Inn (2:12) 18. The Engineer (1:33) 19. The Pax Britannica (1:27) 20. Tripudium Ad Bellum (1:24) 21. After These Wars (3:37) 22. New Blood, Old Veins (2:04) 23. In For A Pound (0:44) 24. The Browning Of The Green (2:51) 25. Per Errationes Ad Astra (1:52) 26. Cold Dead Reckoning (3:49) DVD 2: 1. Conversations (Jerry Ewing Interview) 2. Creations (The Making Of Homo Erraticus) 3. Illustrations (Artwork With Carl Glover) 4. Articulations (Band Interviews)
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Post by nonrabbit on Feb 13, 2014 22:45:18 GMT
I don't think I missed a posting.... The new 'album' cover; It does seem that IA is holding a staff made from a 3-tined garden hoe, and, it would appear, a middle-fingered-like 'appendage'.... Is he 'flipping off'?...'Giving the finger' Well if he is I hopes it's a good story as to why
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Post by nonrabbit on Feb 13, 2014 22:48:56 GMT
That's not Doggerland that's Ballygobackwards, Co Fermanagh. My house is the one with the air-conditioned roof. On another note looking at the timings on the list of tracks In For A Pound is a talking one.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 13, 2014 23:18:05 GMT
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Post by steelmonkey on Feb 14, 2014 4:06:44 GMT
I just ordered the big boy version...will it be delivered the day of release or will I suffer with the CD in local shops and my copy on a slow boat from Britan...any experiences with burning shed?
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fjtull
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Post by fjtull on Feb 14, 2014 10:02:47 GMT
Woah... great news, great pictures and (sure!) great tour. All seems to indicate this will be a TULL year. .-)
Anyone already knows about Amazon link to purchase the deluxe 4 discs edition?
thanks, Franco
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Post by maddogfagin on Feb 14, 2014 10:33:44 GMT
Woah... great news, great pictures and (sure!) great tour. All seems to indicate this will be a TULL year. .-) Anyone already knows about Amazon link to purchase the deluxe 4 discs edition? thanks, Franco Not yet as far as I can see Franco. I think it's only pre order at Burning Shed at the moment.
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Post by maddogfagin on Feb 14, 2014 10:40:41 GMT
lectures.revues.org/13597 (translation courtesy of google) Jieun Shin, The postmodern flâneur. Between loneliness and being together. Simon Ridley 1 Man Without Qualities, homo economicus , homo sociologicus , homo Fractalis , homo erraticus... Under our masks and in the shadow of the crowd, we all chameleons lounging in the mass there would find our individuality. It is this existential paradox of postmodern man Jieun Shin seeks to highlight with the postmodern flâneur. Between loneliness and being together , work from his doctoral thesis under the direction of Michel Maffesoli, who signs the preface.. . . . . 6 The final chapter, "The flâneur as homo erraticus "is by far the most disjointed. With hospitality background, found mainly analyzes poems of Baudelaire and Rimbaud "stroll can be considered, to some extent, as a kind of sacred prostitution in Baudelaire's sense "(p. 170) . This is the figure of the foreigner, classical sociology, which is then scanned by our literary flâneuse, Camus Kristeva through the inevitable Simmel. Developments are a bit bland for those who seek the postmodern in this. Only a few pages are reserved decidedly too short to linger in groups, with the example of the famous Flashmob (mobilization flash mob) . The author speaks quickly flâneur as a "peaceful anarchist" (p. 206) c is the theme of peaceful resistance, but the author prefers to focus on self-discovery by strolling, access to the existential consciousness. Developments on the detour (ment) and the contributions made by the Situationists 4 are too terse, leaving the reader with a better sense of disappointment (Debord, mentioned on the back cover, not the subject of that a quote - what is more blurred), and at worst a deliberate omission printing theses Situationists, whose concept of "psychogeography" 5 is rewarding for those who want to study the figure of the flâneur. It is based on the classical approach of the rhizome 6 coupled to a vague quote Pierre Lévy, that Jieun Shin devotes three pages to brief " collective intelligence via the Internet "(p. 232), that the we regret, because this is something that would have been nice to deepen given the exponential growth of the virtual space. The author returns once more on existential questions abroad that we carry, "to exist as ourselves, we must first get out of oneself" (p. 247), we she said.
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fjtull
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Post by fjtull on Feb 14, 2014 10:48:07 GMT
Woah... great news, great pictures and (sure!) great tour. All seems to indicate this will be a TULL year. .-) Anyone already knows about Amazon link to purchase the deluxe 4 discs edition? thanks, Franco Not yet as far as I can see Franco. I think it's only pre order at Burning Shed at the moment. thanks mate! just asking since I never ordered until now from Burning Shed... do not know about shipping (they also charge €10!) timing and, probably, price on Amazon will be lower . But question is: will ever be the deluxe edition (no matter of the signed postcard on my side!) available on Amazon? Aaarghhh...!
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Post by revderek on Feb 14, 2014 14:46:11 GMT
We'll this is all rather exciting, isn't it? I somehow.lost my password and the board doesn't recognise my e-mail address which I've used for 19 years. So I've reregistered so I can contribute to this thread. As an old boy of Ian's school (in Blackpool) I thought I would mention that the school motto was Melioro Sequamur - in fact there's a website of that name for old boys of the school and if you look hard enough you can find Ian in there somewhere. So I'm Looking forward to the album and one track in particular...
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Post by Equus on Feb 14, 2014 15:31:09 GMT
We'll this is all rather exciting, isn't it? I somehow.lost my password and the board doesn't recognise my e-mail address which I've used for 19 years. So I've reregistered so I can contribute to this thread. As an old boy of Ian's school (in Blackpool) I thought I would mention that the school motto was Melioro Sequamur - in fact there's a website of that name for old boys of the school and if you look hard enough you can find Ian in there somewhere. So I'm Looking forward to the album and one track in particular... A warm welcome to you! Revderik!
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Post by maddogfagin on Feb 14, 2014 17:15:59 GMT
We'll this is all rather exciting, isn't it? I somehow.lost my password and the board doesn't recognise my e-mail address which I've used for 19 years. So I've reregistered so I can contribute to this thread. As an old boy of Ian's school (in Blackpool) I thought I would mention that the school motto was Melioro Sequamur - in fact there's a website of that name for old boys of the school and if you look hard enough you can find Ian in there somewhere. So I'm Looking forward to the album and one track in particular... Welcome back from all of us here at The Jethro Tull Forum revderek. Interesting observation regarding Melioro Sequamur and once again proves IA was more of a scholar than some folks make out. Unlike me, he learnt Latin at school and most probably did his homework each evening, again unlike me
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Post by maddogfagin on Feb 14, 2014 17:35:18 GMT
I just ordered the big boy version...will it be delivered the day of release or will I suffer with the CD in local shops and my copy on a slow boat from Britan...any experiences with burning shed? Same here Bernie. As far as Burning Shed are concerned with deliveries I can't help as it's the first time I've ordered through them. We wait and see amigo.
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Post by Equus on Feb 14, 2014 17:51:29 GMT
I just ordered the big boy version...will it be delivered the day of release or will I suffer with the CD in local shops and my copy on a slow boat from Britan...any experiences with burning shed? Same here Bernie. As far as Burning Shed are concerned with deliveries I can't help as it's the first time I've ordered through them. We wait and see amigo. Sí, si...Señor Graham!... and then we'll have a Grande Fiesta!!
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Post by steelmonkey on Feb 14, 2014 18:14:47 GMT
Well, if it isn't in my hands by 4-14, I'm gonna light a fire under their butts and see how their shed burns.
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Post by nonrabbit on Feb 14, 2014 18:36:50 GMT
We'll this is all rather exciting, isn't it? I somehow.lost my password and the board doesn't recognise my e-mail address which I've used for 19 years. So I've reregistered so I can contribute to this thread. As an old boy of Ian's school (in Blackpool) I thought I would mention that the school motto was Melioro Sequamur - in fact there's a website of that name for old boys of the school and if you look hard enough you can find Ian in there somewhere. So I'm Looking forward to the album and one track in particular... Hello Rev welcome back, sorry you had problems resurfacing. I remember reading about the school motto when I found the website a few years back and a picture here; Spin Me Back Down The Years.
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Post by revderek on Feb 14, 2014 18:54:17 GMT
Sorry but that photo is from 1968 which means Ian is not on it. I know this because I am in the front row and I have a printed copy of the original.
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Post by nonrabbit on Feb 14, 2014 19:09:31 GMT
Sorry but that photo is from 1968 which means Ian is not on it. I know this because I am in the front row and I have a printed copy of the original. and we thought we'd pinned him down to the middle row!! Bet it's not often you come across a Forum with your school picture in it! Many thanks for pointing that out.
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Post by JTull 007 on Feb 14, 2014 22:16:19 GMT
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Post by morthoron on Feb 15, 2014 3:32:35 GMT
lectures.revues.org/13597 (translation courtesy of google) Jieun Shin, The postmodern flâneur. Between loneliness and being together. Simon Ridley 1 Man Without Qualities, homo economicus , homo sociologicus , homo Fractalis , homo erraticus... Under our masks and in the shadow of the crowd, we all chameleons lounging in the mass there would find our individuality. It is this existential paradox of postmodern man Jieun Shin seeks to highlight with the postmodern flâneur. Between loneliness and being together , work from his doctoral thesis under the direction of Michel Maffesoli, who signs the preface.. . . . . 6 The final chapter, "The flâneur as homo erraticus "is by far the most disjointed. With hospitality background, found mainly analyzes poems of Baudelaire and Rimbaud "stroll can be considered, to some extent, as a kind of sacred prostitution in Baudelaire's sense "(p. 170) . This is the figure of the foreigner, classical sociology, which is then scanned by our literary flâneuse, Camus Kristeva through the inevitable Simmel. Developments are a bit bland for those who seek the postmodern in this. Only a few pages are reserved decidedly too short to linger in groups, with the example of the famous Flashmob (mobilization flash mob) . The author speaks quickly flâneur as a "peaceful anarchist" (p. 206) c is the theme of peaceful resistance, but the author prefers to focus on self-discovery by strolling, access to the existential consciousness. Developments on the detour (ment) and the contributions made by the Situationists 4 are too terse, leaving the reader with a better sense of disappointment (Debord, mentioned on the back cover, not the subject of that a quote - what is more blurred), and at worst a deliberate omission printing theses Situationists, whose concept of "psychogeography" 5 is rewarding for those who want to study the figure of the flâneur. It is based on the classical approach of the rhizome 6 coupled to a vague quote Pierre Lévy, that Jieun Shin devotes three pages to brief " collective intelligence via the Internet "(p. 232), that the we regret, because this is something that would have been nice to deepen given the exponential growth of the virtual space. The author returns once more on existential questions abroad that we carry, "to exist as ourselves, we must first get out of oneself" (p. 247), we she said. Interesting snippet of a lecture. Terrible translation, but interesting nonetheless. Charles Baudeliare was a 19th century poet ( Les Fleurs du Mal, or "Flowers of Evil" is a fascinating poem). He became addicted to laudanum (a distillate of opium -- think morphine, but in cough syrup form), translated both Edgar Allan Poe's work and Thomas DeQuincey's The Opium Eaters into French. He hung out with the artists Manet and Delacroix, and was certainly anti-establishment and Bohemian (hippies having not yet been invented). Anyway, having read Baudelaire's Le Vin de Chiffonniers ("The Ragpicker’s Wine") and other assorted works, I can say that Baudelaire's idea of flâneur is an urban wanderer, a leisurely stroller in the street, someone who communes with the bustle of crowds and takes it all in with an artist's eye, or as he put it: "Or we might liken him to a mirror as vast as the crowd itself; or to a kaleidoscope gifted with consciousness, responding to each one of its movements and reproducing the multiplicity of life and the flickering grace of all the elements of life." What the hell has this to do with the Homo Erraticus album? I think it is apparent in the song titled "Per Errationes Ad Astra", or as I translated it "Through Wandering (errancy, misguided straying) To The Stars". Ian, it seems, has read Baudelaire.
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Post by maddogfagin on Feb 15, 2014 9:41:53 GMT
Two US dates, as yet unconfirmed by TullCentral
Date: Wednesday, September 17th, 2014 Time: 8:00pm Venue: Fox Theater - Oakland Address: 1807 Telegraph Ave, Oakland, CA 94612, US
Date: Saturday, October 4th, 2014 Time: 8:00pm Venue: DPAC - Durham Performing Arts Center Address: 123 Vivian St, Durham, NC 27701, US
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Post by maddogfagin on Feb 15, 2014 10:02:53 GMT
lectures.revues.org/13597 (translation courtesy of google) Jieun Shin, The postmodern flâneur. Between loneliness and being together. Simon Ridley 1 Man Without Qualities, homo economicus , homo sociologicus , homo Fractalis , homo erraticus... Under our masks and in the shadow of the crowd, we all chameleons lounging in the mass there would find our individuality. It is this existential paradox of postmodern man Jieun Shin seeks to highlight with the postmodern flâneur. Between loneliness and being together , work from his doctoral thesis under the direction of Michel Maffesoli, who signs the preface.. . . . . 6 The final chapter, "The flâneur as homo erraticus "is by far the most disjointed. With hospitality background, found mainly analyzes poems of Baudelaire and Rimbaud "stroll can be considered, to some extent, as a kind of sacred prostitution in Baudelaire's sense "(p. 170) . This is the figure of the foreigner, classical sociology, which is then scanned by our literary flâneuse, Camus Kristeva through the inevitable Simmel. Developments are a bit bland for those who seek the postmodern in this. Only a few pages are reserved decidedly too short to linger in groups, with the example of the famous Flashmob (mobilization flash mob) . The author speaks quickly flâneur as a "peaceful anarchist" (p. 206) c is the theme of peaceful resistance, but the author prefers to focus on self-discovery by strolling, access to the existential consciousness. Developments on the detour (ment) and the contributions made by the Situationists 4 are too terse, leaving the reader with a better sense of disappointment (Debord, mentioned on the back cover, not the subject of that a quote - what is more blurred), and at worst a deliberate omission printing theses Situationists, whose concept of "psychogeography" 5 is rewarding for those who want to study the figure of the flâneur. It is based on the classical approach of the rhizome 6 coupled to a vague quote Pierre Lévy, that Jieun Shin devotes three pages to brief " collective intelligence via the Internet "(p. 232), that the we regret, because this is something that would have been nice to deepen given the exponential growth of the virtual space. The author returns once more on existential questions abroad that we carry, "to exist as ourselves, we must first get out of oneself" (p. 247), we she said. Interesting snippet of a lecture. Terrible translation, but interesting nonetheless. Charles Baudeliare was a 19th century poet ( Les Fleurs du Mal, or "Flowers of Evil" is a fascinating poem). He became addicted to laudanum (a distillate of opium -- think morphine, but in cough syrup form), translated both Edgar Allan Poe's work and Thomas DeQuincey's The Opium Eaters into French. He hung out with the artists Manet and Delacroix, and was certainly anti-establishment and Bohemian (hippies having not yet been invented). Anyway, having read Baudelaire's Le Vin de Chiffonniers ("The Ragpicker’s Wine") and other assorted works, I can say that Baudelaire's idea of flâneur is an urban wanderer, a leisurely stroller in the street, someone who communes with the bustle of crowds and takes it all in with an artist's eye, or as he put it: "Or we might liken him to a mirror as vast as the crowd itself; or to a kaleidoscope gifted with consciousness, responding to each one of its movements and reproducing the multiplicity of life and the flickering grace of all the elements of life." What the hell has this to do with the Homo Erraticus album? I think it is apparent in the song titled "Per Errationes Ad Astra", or as I translated it "Through Wandering (errancy, misguided straying) To The Stars". Ian, it seems, has read Baudelaire. Not a book that I've read but I may take a walk up to the local library and see if they've got it. If your ideas are correct about "an urban wanderer" then without seeing the song lyrics you may well have found the inspiration for "Per Errationes Ad Astra"
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Post by steelmonkey on Feb 15, 2014 14:34:30 GMT
Wow.....a couple miles from my house in September !!!! Fox theater in Oakland holds about 1200, I would guess....Last time they came thru they sold out closer to 3000....Okay...day count to September 17th when i find my calculator.
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Post by steelmonkey on Feb 15, 2014 14:35:42 GMT
New goal....be careful, live till September 17th .
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Post by JTull 007 on Feb 15, 2014 14:50:43 GMT
Two US dates, as yet unconfirmed by TullCentralDate: Wednesday, September 17th, 2014 Time: 8:00pm Venue: Fox Theater - Oakland Address: 1807 Telegraph Ave, Oakland, CA 94612, US Date: Saturday, October 4th, 2014 Time: 8:00pm Venue: DPAC - Durham Performing Arts Center Address: 123 Vivian St, Durham, NC 27701, US The Durham show is 4 1/2 hours drive from here. If things work out I may see a show even closer. Also, the Durham show is being promoted in this fashion... The Best Of Jethro Tull Performed By Ian Anderson
I want my "Homo Erraticus" LIVE
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Post by maddogfagin on Feb 15, 2014 15:46:19 GMT
Two US dates, as yet unconfirmed by TullCentralDate: Wednesday, September 17th, 2014 Time: 8:00pm Venue: Fox Theater - Oakland Address: 1807 Telegraph Ave, Oakland, CA 94612, US Date: Saturday, October 4th, 2014 Time: 8:00pm Venue: DPAC - Durham Performing Arts Center Address: 123 Vivian St, Durham, NC 27701, US The Durham show is 4 1/2 hours drive from here. If things work out I may see a show even closer. Also, the Durham show is being promoted in this fashion... The Best Of Jethro Tull Performed By Ian Anderson
I want my "Homo Erraticus" LIVE I don't think you'll have to worry Jim. As the above two dates are not confirmed yet I would suspect the details haven't been passed on by TullCentral.
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