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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 3, 2016 16:31:29 GMT
Jethro Tull - Live in Fox Cities PAC | Appleton, US - 02 April 2016 Live Stream Scheduled for Apr 3, 2016 Watch Concert : Jethro Tull - Live in Fox Cities PAC | Appleton, US - 02 April 2016 Live Stream For Watch streaming concert Music click or Visit Access link here ☛☛ tinyurl.com/Live-music-streaming ☚☚ Live concert at anytime through your device. Concert / Festival events filtered by our official Server HD Streaming 720p concerts Tour And you can watch anytime . stay tuned in here ahead of the start of the Concert/Events 2016. directly from the venue with HD quality video watch the event live music concerts and festivals , from your device . Live Stream : Rock and Pop Tour 2016, Country and Folk Tour 2016, Alternative And Indie Tour 2016, Punk/Rock Tour 2016, Hard Rock/Metal Tour 2016, ☛☛ tinyurl.com/Live-music-streaming I got all excited and waited for the LIVE Stream last night. The You Tube Clock began to countdown and then said 'The scheduled LIVE Stream hasn't started yet'. The other LINKS were a subscription for donnaplay and required registration. Even though it was FREE they ask you to give credit card info to complete the process. I decided to wait until the FREE You Tube became active today. Does anyone know when or why?
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Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2016 16:59:57 GMT
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 3, 2016 19:25:45 GMT
Live MusicVEVO 2016 This channel doesn't have any content According to an inside source, there was no LIVE Stream from the show in Appleton Here is another You Tube with the same FAKE advertisement... LIVE For The Music
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 4, 2016 2:03:26 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Apr 4, 2016 20:56:55 GMT
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 5, 2016 2:58:49 GMT
New JETHRO TULL Tour Coming to Omaha in 2016 TULL LINK 1 Jethro Tull's The Rock Opera: Ian Anderson in Omaha TULL LINK 2
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Post by nonrabbit on Apr 5, 2016 9:28:51 GMT
He's definitely been influenced and attracted to various forms of agriculture/farming all through his life. Does he grow anything or farm anything down in Wilts?
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Post by maddogfagin on Apr 5, 2016 13:40:14 GMT
He's definitely been influenced and attracted to various forms of agriculture/farming all through his life. Does he grow anything or farm anything down in Wilts? Extremely hot chillis
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Post by bassackwards on Apr 5, 2016 16:33:37 GMT
He's definitely been influenced and attracted to various forms of agriculture/farming all through his life. Does he grow anything or farm anything down in Wilts? Extremely hot chillis would make a good hood ornament for Ian's car.....If he had one!
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Post by Deleted on Apr 5, 2016 18:08:40 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on Apr 6, 2016 8:00:42 GMT
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 6, 2016 14:56:03 GMT
This shows a really good angle and zooms close to the stage. I love the virtual video intro
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Post by Deleted on Apr 6, 2016 15:16:17 GMT
Ian Anderson has a band and Jethro is its name-o Chris Varias, Enquirer contributor 11 a.m. EDT April 6, 2016 Ian Anderson began the English rock band Jethro Tull nearly 50 years ago, and he has been farming almost as long. The singer and rock-and-roll flutist owns a farm on which he raises livestock and plants indigenous trees. (“Somewhere in the southwest of England” is as specific as Anderson gets about the farm’s location, fearful that a Cincinnati writer might want to drop in for an unannounced visit.) An interest in farming is something Anderson shares with Jethro Tull, the 18th-century agriculturalist from whom Anderson’s band took its name. The common ground comes to the stage during “Jethro Tull – Written and Performed by Ian Anderson,” a live show mixing performances of some of the band’s best-known songs with storytelling devices to reimagine the life of Tull as if he were living in the present day or near future. “The strange coincidence is when I started to read about the life and times of Jethro Tull, which I only did for the first time really in 2014, I was struck by the similarities between elements of his life and songs that I had written over the years. So I made a list of these songs that seem to apply and thought, wow, here we have a way to tell a story using existing songs and, in a few cases, have a little rewriting of a pronoun here and a pronoun there. But mostly it takes care of itself, and musically it’s very much as those songs were recorded.” The show touches on contemporary topics relating to farming and every other walk of life, like climate change and population growth. Anderson planted 30,000 trees on his land with such issues in mind. “Nice to think that they, for future generations, will be mighty oak trees one day and be here long after I’m gone, assuming of course that I got it right with picking species that will survive the rigors of climate change. Certain things we chose not to plant because we thought it would be too risky with more volatile and warmer weather that we will expect in the years to come,” he says. Anderson laughed when asked if climate-change deniers are as prevalent in the U.K. as in the U.S. “Not really. There are very few people in Europe who are climate-change deniers. I think if you live here, it is beginning to become really quite an issue that we are really, really noticing things,” he says. “I was traveling through Romania a few months ago and looking with somewhat educated eyes at the fact that farmers were being forced to harvest long before they should have done. The crops were more or less already dead on their feet and they hadn’t grown terribly well. I think we’re all beginning to see these things on a more regular basis, and those who are in denial about climate change are probably fewer and fewer.” Anderson says it’s not really his job, or the show’s mission, to preach. “My only point is, think about it. That’s always my point. I’m a bit like a journalist, newsreader. I present things. I leave it up to other people to make their minds up,” he says. “If they want to sit there and just tap their feet and groove to the tunes and say, ‘Ah, I remember this one,’ well, that’s fine, because that’s exactly what I’m doing, too. It’s just that there are a few more layers of the onion to peel back if you want to do it.” If you go What: Jethro Tull – Written and Performed by Ian Anderson When: 8 p.m. Tuesday, April 12 Where: Aronoff Center, 650 Walnut, Downtown; 513-621-2787 Tickets: $70, $58.50, $48.50 Sound Advice: Jethro Tull – Written and Performed by Ian AndersonTuesday • Aronoff Center for the Arts By Steven Rosen · April 6th, 2016 · Sound Advice Advocates of Rockabilly, Motown or Punk may disagree, but Rock’s golden era may well be that period in the late 1960s and early 1970s when artsy, conceptual (and often British) bands influenced by the wondrous, anything-goes experimentalism of The Beatles and the debut of hip FM radio stations set out to make album-long statements filled with original songs, provocative ideas, creative production and inventive choices in instrumentation and arranging. Jethro Tull was certainly one of those bands — it was led by craggy-voiced singer and virtuosic flutist Ian Anderson, and it’s hard to imagine this ambitious Folk- and Jazz-influenced British rock ensemble arising out of any period other than the open-minded, progressive late 1960s. It’s also hard to imagine Anderson, some 45 years past the band’s commercial peak, going gently into that good night of the oldies circuit, just playing his catalog devoid of any contemporary meaning to audiences there to relive their youth. So Anderson has come up with a new, potentially clever way to showcase his old material.
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 7, 2016 1:53:53 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on Apr 7, 2016 8:04:02 GMT
I see he's still got his gardening cap on.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 7, 2016 13:33:51 GMT
Anderson to play set of classic Jethro Tull songs Monday at Akron CivicBy B.J. Lisko Repository staff writer Posted Apr. 7, 2016 at 8:00 AM Ian Anderson has been synonymous with classic rock act Jethro Tull since its inception in the early ’60s, and much to the dismay of the cast of “The Walking Dead,” he also grows a mean chili pepper. Anderson’s son-in-law, Andrew Lincoln, portrays the series’ lead character, Rick Grimes. Lincoln has been married to Anderson’s daughter Gael since 2006, and fancies himself a hot food connoisseur of sorts. At least he did until Anderson nearly debilitated he and zombie-battling co-workers. “Even my son-in-law, who thinks he likes hot food, has turned purple on occasion when he’s attempted to eat something that I’ve produced for him,” Anderson said with a chuckle from his London home. “Not only that, I think he’s also managed to incapacitate a few other members of ‘The Walking Dead’ cast! We’ve got to be careful when people are working not to give them food that’s too hot. It cannot only ruin their evening, it can ruin a day’s shooting schedule!” A vocalist, flautist and guitarist, English-native Anderson has been the major creative force behind Jethro Tull since its start. Rolling Stone dubbed the group “one of the most commercially successful and eccentric progressive rock bands” in history, and the frontman’s current tour, “Jethro Tull by Ian Anderson,” will make an area visit Monday to Akron’s Civic Theatre. “This current tour is essentially a best of Jethro Tull tour featuring some of the best-known Jethro Tull work, particularly from the ’70s,” Anderson said. “This is a concert for the toe-tappers. It’s a concert tour for Jethro Tull fans who don’t have to think too hard. They can just sit back and enjoy the music. It has to work on that level as well as have more of a complex underlying story. My job as a writer is to make it accessible to people from more than one point of view. I don’t want to be there to preach or make complicated statements, this has got to work for the toe-tappers, and I know because I’m one of them!” On the strength of albums like “Aqualung,” “Thick as a Brick,” “A Passion Play,” and “Songs from the Wood,” among others, Jethro Tull has sold more than 60 million albums worldwide, garnering 11 gold and five platinum albums in the process. An upbeat, candid and jovial Anderson chatted about his current tour and legacy in advance of Monday’s show. THE CONCEPT OF HIS CURRENT TOUR “It’s not telling the story of Jethro Tull the rock band, it’s telling the story of the 18th century English agriculturalist Jethro Tull, who invented the seed drill. I’m kind of re-imagining his story if it was set in today’s world or the near future. I’m using my classic songs to illustrate his life. Strangely and coincidentally, a lot of elements in his life are very close to songs and parts of songs that I’ve written, so it wasn’t too difficult to put together.” ONLY RECENTLY DELVING INTO THE HISTORICAL CHARACTER JETHRO TULL “The reason it took so long to truly discover Jethro Tull the man in a historical context was embarrassment and guilt at having been named by our agent in 1968 after a dead guy who invented a seed drill. It was something I was never very comfortable about when I realized who he named us after. I only knew a very little bit about him, and only when I started reading about him in the summer of 2014 did I realize things about his life and things that he wrote were surprisingly close to some of the subjects of songs that I had written. It was a very late discovery, so I thought it was a nice thing to honor the memory of Jethro Tull that we were named after at this late point in our career, and to kind of pay homage to the original character and give him the credit as perhaps the kind of guy we need with us these days. He’s someone who has a strong ethical belief in trying to manage the soil and our resources and produce more food in a more efficient way. We need somebody like Jethro Tull today. Except that he’d probably be working for (American multinational agricultural corporation) Monsanto.” THE MOST SURPRISING FIND IN HIS RESEARCH “I’ve been very geographically close to his origins for more than 80 percent of my life. There’s a geographic connection, but I suppose one of the most uncanny things I read in his book when I managed to find an early first edition copy, was that he described how he made his first seed drill from the workings of the organ. He begins his description by using the words, ‘When I was young.’ That’s exactly the way a song starts that I wrote in 1971 from the ‘Aqualung’ album. It’s a song called ‘Wind Up.’ It begins with those very words. He goes on to talk about when he was young that music was his first love, and that’s how he became interested in the organ and the machinery of making music. He had incorporated that into his early design for the seed drill. As the song ‘Wind Up’ goes, ‘When I was young, they packed me off to school and taught me how not to play the game.’ It was the same thing with Jethro Tull. He was packed off to school by his parents to study law when he really wanted to be a musician or a farmer. There were this weird little connections and uncanny parallels between things I had written and Jethro Tull.” Page 3 of 4 - GROWING SOME THE WORLD’S HOTTEST PEPPERS “This year, I have six varieties I’m growing that are amongst the hottest. There is one which is reputedly the hottest, which I’m attempting to germinate right now. We have a bit of a topsy-turvy growing season here so we can’t grow any chili peppers outside. So we grow them indoors and hope the sun still shines through the glass house windows to keep things warm enough. I got some very hot chilis last year. The trouble is, when you grow really hot chilis, it’s a bit of a waste of time, because they’re just too hot to eat. It’s just knowing you could do it. It’s a bit like climbing Everest on a cloudy day. You get to the top, but you can’t see anything when you get there. It’s a harmless enough hobby so long as I remember not to put my hot chili peppers into something somebody else might want to eat, because they won’t thank me for it one little bit!” WATCHING ’THE WALKING DEAD’ “I’m afraid I’m not watching much simply because I’ve missed so many episodes that I’m just way behind with trying to follow the plot line. For the first two or three series, I think I did manage to watch all the episodes, even though it’d be weeks or months later. But now I’m so far behind it would be impossible. Like everybody else, those that have been around for a while, we’re left wondering will they still be there at the end of this next season? I know who’s showing up for work in three weeks time, but I can’t promise any of them will be there at the end! But everybody has an enormous amount of fun on the show. That Andrew will be safe as the lead character is the assumption everybody makes, but you can never be sure. I think part of the reason the show has worked is they’ve been prepared to change the cast as they go along. There’s two, three, four people who have been there since the beginning, but I wouldn’t be at all surprised if one or two don’t make it until the end of next season. But I don’t know, and even if I did know and told you, I would have to kill you!” WHO: Jethro Tull by Ian Anderson WHEN: 7:30 p.m., Monday WHERE: Akron Civic Theatre,TICKETS: $49.50 to $65 at ticketmaster.com MORE INFO: jethrotull.com
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 8, 2016 2:27:33 GMT
104.5 WJJK welcomes Jethro Tull to Indianapolis TULL LINK 1 a performance written and performed by Ian Anderson to the Murat Theatre at Old National Centre TULL LINK 2
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Post by maddogfagin on Apr 8, 2016 13:21:38 GMT
www.tonyskansascity.com/2016/04/kansas-city-jethro-tull-review.htmlTUESDAY, APRIL 05, 2016 Kansas City Jethro Tull ReviewA word from Kansas City citizen media journalists on a recent Midtown Kansas City show . . . Review: Jethro Tull @ The UptownGot to see the Jetro Tull Rock Opera show last night at The Uptown. First thing people should know by now is, there is no one named Jethro Tull in the band and Ian Anderson, the lead singer is not Aqualung (keep in mind they were in their early thirties when they wrote "Crosseyed Mary" a song about a teenage prostitute who friends Aqualung). Amidst the old rockers with canes and oxygen bottles, the Uptown was a who's who of rock n roll survivor's (Tull had album called,"To Old To Rock/To Young To Die!"). There were a new generation of disciples who heard their dad's Tull albums. there. You heard stories at intermission like "I was born in 1971 the year Aqualung came out!" As a Cold War Kid there were several events that occurred in your young life that you will always remember where you were at the time. "Aqualung" was one of those teachable moments in history like, The Kennedy Assassination or The Apollo Lunar Landing. Jethro Tull was so far removed from Pop AM Radio and much more melodic than "Slade" (who actually had as many Top 20 Hits as the Beatles in the UK). Tull opened for acts like Led Zeppelin and the Who back in the days of "Stadium Rock". In 1976 Tull sold out 70,000 tickets at Shay Stadium. Everyone we talked to agreed the Tull/UK Show in 1978 at Kemper Arena loosened the screws on the roof and caused 8 inches of snow to collapse the roof two weeks after that sonic performance. Last nights show touched on Malthusian, Jungian, Freudian and Darwinian topics with a flute player riffin' on blues and a 15th century repetitive theme. They call it "Neo Renaissance" but always at end the band turns up the heat and your reminded the bottom of the stage is lined with 18 inch sub woofers. Anderson dealt with the question of climate change and GMO' with a multi media light show, a female guest singer that sang his high parts (Anderson lost his voice in 1981) with other band members covering his vocal parts. They'll never be an era of pop music where musicians have the time, money and luxury of writing complex music agian. Nobody walked out because "$h1t got political". And no, they didn't play Crosseyed Mary! ############# POSTED BY TONY AT 4/05/2016 04:59:00 AM
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 8, 2016 14:58:23 GMT
www.tonyskansascity.com/2016/04/kansas-city-jethro-tull-review.htmlTUESDAY, APRIL 05, 2016 Kansas City Jethro Tull ReviewA word from Kansas City citizen media journalists on a recent Midtown Kansas City show . . . Review: Jethro Tull @ The UptownLast night's show touched on Malthusian, Jungian, Freudian and Darwinian topics with a flute player riffin' on blues and a 15th century repetitive theme. They call it "Neo Renaissance" but always at end the band turns up the heat and your reminded the bottom of the stage is lined with 18 inch sub woofers. Anderson dealt with the question of climate change and GMO' with a multi media light show, a female guest singer that sang his high parts (Anderson lost his voice in 1981) with other band members covering his vocal parts. They'll never be an era of pop music where musicians have the time, money and luxury of writing complex music again. Nobody walked out because "$h1t got political". And no, they didn't play Cross-eyed Mary! ############# POSTED BY TONY AT 4/05/2016 04:59:00 AM Anonymous said... "(I'm in my late 50's) I saw Rush and Cheap Trick last year (separate shows) and both were outstanding and high energy. I've been a Pearl Jam fan for a long time after picking them up in the 1990's when a lot of the older bands left the touring circuit for a while"
"You are out of your element here Pearl Jam Fan Boy so just shut the f**k up and respect the Tull" Thanks Graham for this interesting review. Of course this was not a TULL Fan review. Everyone has their own way of interpreting what is a unique and complex form of entertainment. "Lost his voice in 1981"... Won a Grammy in 1989... Still KICKS ASS in 2016
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 9, 2016 0:24:39 GMT
Something amazing... My Fortune Cookie from tonight's dinner... 100 % TRUE !!!!
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 9, 2016 2:13:30 GMT
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Post by bunkerfan on Apr 9, 2016 12:54:58 GMT
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 9, 2016 23:52:22 GMT
A special Thank You for this video designed by my friend in the Czech Republic Milan Jethro Wisocký
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Post by maddogfagin on Apr 10, 2016 9:04:17 GMT
Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson: Candid, happy and proud of his ‘oddball’ music (except for maybe 50 songs or so)by John Sinkevics April 9, 2016 With the “Jethro Tull” show hitting Grand Rapids tonight, check out this 2001 interview with the cerebral frontman and farmer who has a lot to say about his career, touring and the mistakes rock stars make. localspins.com/52785-2/Ian Anderson gives unusual virtual reality spin to Jethro Tull in Grand Rapids (Review, photos)by John Sinkevics April 10, 2016 The flute-playing prog-rock frontman brought “Jethro Tull: The Rock Opera” to DeVos Performance Hall on Saturday night, with his vocals getting an assist from video accompanists. (Review, photo gallery) localspins.com/ian-anderson-gives-unusual-virtual-reality-spin-jethro-tull-grand-rapids/
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 11, 2016 2:13:38 GMT
Jethro Tull - Written and Performed by Ian Anderson De Vos Performance Hall 15 Photos by Jim Hill TULL LINK
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 11, 2016 14:49:38 GMT
Last week of the Spring U.S. TULL TOUR !!! TULL LINK Please note: The term Akron Civic Theatre and/or Ian Anderson: Jethro Tull's The Rock Opera as well as all associated graphics, logos, and/or other tradermarks, tradenames or copyrights are the property of the Akron Civic Theatre and/or Ian Anderson: Jethro Tull's The Rock Opera and are used herein for factual descriptive purposes only. We are in no way associated with or authorized by the Akron Civic Theatre and/or Ian Anderson: Jethro Tull's The Rock Opera and neither that entity nor any of its affiliates have licensed or endorsed us to sell tickets, goods and or services in conjunction with their events.
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 12, 2016 2:04:01 GMT
TULL TUESDAY @ Aronoff Center – Proctor & Gamble Hall Cincinnati, OH TULL LINK
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Post by Deleted on Apr 12, 2016 16:50:00 GMT
More - Ian Anderson to perform 'Jethro Tull'Nick Thomas, Special to the Advertiser 11:27 a.m. CDT April 12, 2016 Few classic rock bands have been so universally defined by their lead singer as Jethro Tull. Charismatic frontman Ian Anderson formed the band in the late 60s, and subsequently weathered a changing member lineup through 2011 when Anderson began performing under his own name. He brings his current U.S. tour to the Montgomery Performing Arts Centre on Friday. “I don’t recall performing in Montgomery, at least in the last 30 years,” said Anderson, by phone, from his Wiltshire office in southwest England. “But every tour, I try to perform in a different town and reach new audiences.” Despite the seemingly autobiographical title of his current tour – “Jethro Tull” – the show is not a musical retrospective of the band. Rather, it celebrates the achievements of Jethro Tull, an eighteenth century English agricultural pioneer who invented the seed drill and was the band’s namesake. ...Anderson turns 69 this summer and, like many singers as they age, says he tunes down some of his songs a half-step (semi-tone) or two to compensate for reduced vocal range. “Wear and tear eventually takes its toll over the years and the voice drops in pitch,” he noted. “My speaking and singing voices are quite different now compared to in my 20s.” Expect Anderson’s flute playing, however, to be as lively as ever. Known for balancing on one leg while masterfully growling into the flute’s mouthpiece, Anderson’s breathy improvised trilling popularized the flute in progressive rock music. “On stage, I tend to play a Sankyo flute with a high 0.997 silver content giving it a little more density and weight,” said Anderson. “But my backup instrument is the cheapest and lowliest model.” ...While zombies may be well-known for their reanimation, it’s unlikely any sort of revival of the original Jethro Tull band can be expected anytime soon. “While there is something very special and intimate in the chemistry of a band, there comes a time when it just doesn’t feel right anymore,” said Anderson. “I will always be gratified by the success and legacy of the group.” When the rock legend takes center stage in the Capital City, it will be the next to last stop for the April “Jethro Tull” tour. “We have a night off before coming to Montgomery,” says Anderson. “I can confidently predict that the band and crew will be suitably refreshed and in good form.”
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Post by JTull 007 on Apr 13, 2016 2:40:55 GMT
Salute to Jerry (Bassackwards) Rockin' in Nashville! Crank it up all night with JETHRO TULL written and performed by Ian Anderson TULL LINK
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Post by maddogfagin on Apr 13, 2016 7:46:26 GMT
www.kmeta.bg/legendite-jethro-tull-otkrivat-esenniq-salon-na-izkustvata-v-plovdiv-69698.html[ a sitting on a park bench google translation] Legends Jethro Tull found the Autumn Salon of Arts in PlovdivThis will be the last concert of the famous rock band 11/04/2016/12: 50 Author: Ana Yordanova The legendary art rock band Jethro Tull will find Autumn Salon of Arts in Plovdiv. The musicians will be presented by the enigmatic Ian Anderson on stage at the Ancient Theatre on 3 September. With over 60 million albums sold worldwide this is one of the most successful progressive bands in history, said Vassil Varbanov of radio "Tangra Mega Rock", organizer of the event in cooperation with the Municipality of Plovdiv. The antique scene will sound live greatest hits Living in the Past, Cross-Eyed Mary, Locomotive Breath, Aqualung, Thick as a Brick (Side 1) and others, and Anderson will charm audiences with his flute and specific voice. In 2014 the legendary group announced it was withdrawing from the scene and their manifestation in Plovdiv most likely will be their farewell concert. Information about tickets and other details will be announced on Wednesday, organizers promised. Meanwhile, in September Plovdiv will again meet is already a tradition Festival Sounds of the Ages. On 23 September proscenium out "monkey", which last year postponed the concert, and on September 24 will play Kathatonia. To be announced the names of other bands that will take part in a rock festival. A month later, on May 10, on the stage of the Ancient Theater will be the first concert in Bulgaria Chris Cornell dedicated to the 10th anniversary of radio "Tangra Mega Rock." The acoustic concert is part of a European solo tour vocalist of Soundgarden and Audioslave, who will present the wonderful songs from their entire discography.
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