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Post by nonrabbit on Jul 12, 2014 12:12:17 GMT
Please post your favourites - I'll find the video if your YT challenged
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Post by nonrabbit on Jul 12, 2014 12:23:18 GMT
with Canadian band Men Without Hats.
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Post by maddogfagin on Jul 12, 2014 16:27:25 GMT
Uploaded on 21 Nov 2008 GordonYYZ
"Great song from the album "The Big Prize" from 1986 by Honeymoon Suite. This song features guest musician Ian Anderson on the flute, the legendary frontman for Jethro Tull."
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Post by jackinthegreen on Jul 12, 2014 23:28:07 GMT
Uploaded on 21 Nov 2008 GordonYYZ "Great song from the album "The Big Prize" from 1986 by Honeymoon Suite. This song features guest musician Ian Anderson on the flute, the legendary frontman for Jethro Tull."That's pure Thick as a Brick............ The flute at 2.50 is just so obvious.......... It has to be a wind-up..... .....oops......
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Post by maddogfagin on Jul 13, 2014 9:37:35 GMT
"Great song from the album "The Big Prize" from 1986 by Honeymoon Suite. This song features guest musician Ian Anderson on the flute, the legendary frontman for Jethro Tull." That's pure Thick as a Brick............ The flute at 2.50 is just so obvious.......... It has to be a wind-up..... .....oops...... Ironic I suppose that at the very time IA was starting to lose his hair, he teams up with a Canadian "hair band"
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Post by maddogfagin on Jul 13, 2014 9:43:20 GMT
Uploaded on 4 Jun 2011 jethrotull.proboards.com/index... Brian Protheroe with Ian Anderson and Barrie Barlow with "Under The Greenwood Tree" from the album I/You. Under the greenwood tree, Who loves to lie with me, And turn his merry note Unto the sweet birds throat Come hither come hither come hither Here shall he see No enemy But winter and rough weather Who doth ambition shun And loves to live in the sun Seeking the food he eats And pleased with what he gets, Come hither come hither, come hither Here shall he see No enemy But winter and rough weather Come hither come hither, come hither If it do come to pass That any man turn ass Leaving his wealth and ease, A stubborn will to please Ducdame, ducdame, ducdame, ** Here shall he see Gross fools as he, And if he will come to me. William Shakespeare ** An invocation to call fools into a circle (according to Jaques) (2.6.49)
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Post by nonrabbit on Jul 15, 2014 5:09:43 GMT
with Saori Jo, David, Doane and Miguel.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 13, 2014 18:44:35 GMT
Moroccan Rollers: An Interview with The Tea Party’s Stuart Chatwood Posted by Aesthetic Magazine Toronto ⋅ November 12, 2014Page 1: aestheticmagazinetoronto.com/2014/11/12/the-tea-party-interview/Page 2: aestheticmagazinetoronto.com/2014/11/12/the-tea-party-interview/2/How did the collaboration with Ian Anderson happen? Well, in 1994 we were touring England for the first time, and out of the blue, during one of our soundchecks, our manager came and said “Ian Anderson from Jethro Tull is at the back, he wants to have a drink”. We went back there and Ian was just like, “I drove out to see you guys. I don’t see bands very often but you guys really captured the spirit of our music from back in the day. I wanted to hang out and have a couple of pints.” We kept the friendship going for a while, but we lost contact for a long time. But then we had this song with Mellotron flutes, and I was thinking, “How can we humanize this thing a little more?” Because a Mellotron is a keyboard instrument, and there’s probably one flute player in the world when it comes to rock music, we reached out to him, and he was happy to hear from us. I just got a text yesterday saying that he’s playing out music in between his two sets during his show. Wow, what an honour. Yes, it is. I mean, I think what we’ve done is take classic rock and moved it forward. That was our goal, anyway. Another interesting story is that my sister-in-law worked for Volkswagen in Birmingham, England, and this guy Bob calls in, saying, “I want to buy a car for my son.” She asked him to come in, and when he showed up at 2 o’ clock, it was Robert Plant! So she asked him, “Have you ever heard of my brother-in-law’s band, The Tea Party?” And he’s like “Oh yeah, I’ve got all the records. It’s like ‘Kashmir’, but it gets a little further into that world music thing.” We’ve tried to take some of the tangents from classic rock and move it forward, and we got to hear it from Robert Plant that that’s what he thinks. The Tea Party’s new album, The Ocean at the End, features a collaboration with Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson, and was self-produced by the band.
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