|
Post by geostrehl on Mar 2, 2019 22:12:17 GMT
Oh no. I remember all the tommie/ccola/etc. trolling. God I hope it's not happening again.
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Mar 3, 2019 7:30:17 GMT
Oh no. I remember all the tommie/ccola/etc. trolling. God I hope it's not happening again. I agree with you geostrehl. It's very annoying and tiresome and shows that there are still people out there attempting to disrupt others. Anyway, using a google proxy IP address is a sure give away
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Mar 3, 2019 7:48:45 GMT
|
|
|
Post by steelmonkey on Mar 3, 2019 18:31:24 GMT
Sorry to be mean to Martin but I love and respect him. Proof he didn't learn: The place he shorted last year by allowing himself to be booked a short evening slot with another gig to follow did exactly the same thing this year. he promised to come back and make up the short gig last year and instead he ended up doing the same thing...drastically shortened set (8 songs less than nights before in Mill Valley) with audience chased out to make room for next band on at 10. Next time?
Ten songs Martin should not play...Ian does them far too often already.
Locomotive Breath Aqualung Teacher Nothing is Easy New Day Yesterday My Sunday Feeling Song For Jeffrey Fat Man Back to the family Skating Away Sweet Dreams
Ten songs ( out of dozens) He and Dan should and could play
Jump Start Seal Driver Black Sunday No Lullaby El Nino Dark Ages Jesus Came to Play Rock Island Passion Play extract TAAB extract
|
|
|
Post by bunkerfan on Mar 4, 2019 10:24:14 GMT
Ten songs ( out of dozens) He and Dan should and could play Jump Start Seal Driver Black Sunday No Lullaby El Nino Dark Ages Jesus Came to Play Rock Island Passion Play extract TAAB extract Seal Driver would be top of my list just to hear Martin play this solo again
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Mar 4, 2019 14:51:52 GMT
Sorry to be mean to Martin but I love and respect him. Proof he didn't learn: The place he shorted last year by allowing himself to be booked a short evening slot with another gig to follow did exactly the same thing this year. he promised to come back and make up the short gig last year and instead he ended up doing the same thing...drastically shortened set (8 songs less than nights before in Mill Valley) with audience chased out to make room for next band on at 10. Next time? Steel Monkey/Hymn 43/Lone Wolf/Back To Steel/Back To The Family/I Want You (She's So Heavy)/Bungle In The Jungle/Nothing Is Easy/Teacher/A Song For Jeffrey/A New Day Yesterday/Aqualung /Locomotive Breath.
|
|
|
Post by JTull 007 on Mar 5, 2019 3:20:28 GMT
3 Nights of TULL in Carlsbad California ... A Private Event Martin Barre ROCKS The Museum of Making Music TONIGHT LINK
|
|
|
Post by nonrabbit on Mar 5, 2019 17:53:26 GMT
Ten songs ( out of dozens) He and Dan should and could play Jump Start Seal Driver Black Sunday No Lullaby El Nino Dark Ages Jesus Came to Play Rock Island Passion Play extract TAAB extract Seal Driver would be top of my list just to hear Martin play this solo again Oh YESSS!
|
|
|
Post by rwb192121 on Mar 6, 2019 2:55:10 GMT
Getting excited, seeing Martin on both Thursday 3/7 and Friday night 3/8 here in Southern California. First in Carlsbad on Thursday for acoustic concert, then Laguna Beach on Friday for regular concert. 2nd time for me to do a back to back, did in the 90's for Tull at House of Blues then the Greek Theatre here in Southern California. Both those shows were identical, jokes included Here's hoping these two will be quite a bit different due to the acoustic vs full band concert. It will be a good 2 nights!!!
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Mar 6, 2019 7:28:14 GMT
www.toacorn.com/articles/tull-tales-guitarist-talks-riffs-rifts-ahead-of-bogies-gig/Tull tales: Guitarist talks riffs, rifts ahead of Bogie’s gigFebruary 28, 2019 By John Loesing RAISING THE BARRE—Jethro Tull guitarist Martin Barre will mix Tull hits and solo songs when he performs with his own four-piece band on March 10 at Bogie’s bar in Westlake Village. Courtesy photoAnybody worth their rock ’n’ roll salt knows the band Jethro Tull. The group is named for an English farming pioneer from the early 18th century who invented the seed drill. He didn’t play electric guitar, but he did lend his name almost 300 years later to the British group that attained rock superstardom with such hits as “Aqualung,” “Thick as a Brick” and “Locomotive Breath.” So how are these aging stars from the hard-driving ’60s and ’70s doing today? “I ran five miles, did 50 situps and 25 pushups yesterday,” said Martin Barre, the spry 72-yearold lead guitarist for Jethro Tull who will play an intimate set at Bogie’s bar in Westlake Village on Sun., March 10. He spoke on the phone from Spokane, Wash., where he’s on tour with his own four-piece band. The original Jethro Tull played its last show together in 2011, the year Barre and Ian Anderson, the group’s lead vocalist and flutist, finally split for good. This April, Barre and his band begin a 50th-anniversary tour to honor the Jethro Tull legacy. Anderson recently embarked on his own 50th-anniversary jaunt. Barre and Anderson represent two distinct elements of the once great British supergroup. “Musically and sonically” it’s a different experience, Barre said. “If somebody wants to go see Jethro Tull, they’re going to see Ian but they won’t see me. And vice versa, when they see me they won’t get Ian. “We’ve moved on. To use an old expression, I don’t know where Ian’s head is at, but it’s not where mine is at. . . . The good thing is it’s given me a lot of freedom musically.” But fans rarely care about rifts, only riffs, and Barre’s were some of the best in the business. “Mostly in those days we just sat in a room and I would have a little germ of an idea and we’d expand on it, write it, arrange it, rewrite it,” Barre said. Thus, in 1971 came “Aqualung” with its searing guitar leads and catchy, hard-driving songs such as “Cross-Eyed Mary.” “Aqualung” was recorded in the same Island Records studio in London where Led Zeppelin was putting its album, “Led Zeppelin IV,” to bed. If only the walls could talk. At the turn of the decade Tull had already established itself as a leader of the progressive rock genre. Barre joined Tull in 1969 soon after the band was formed and debuted on “Stand Up” featuring its big hit, “Nothing is Easy.” The group had a knack for melding rock with classical music. “Stand Up” sowed the seeds of the familiar guitar-flute interplay that would persist throughout the group’s more than 40-year run. On the album, Anderson unleashed a mesmerizing flute arrangement of Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Bourée.” Tull also performed a version of Bach’s Double Violin Concerto using electrified guitar, violin and flute—and they recorded a version of “Locomotive Breath” with the London Symphony Orchestra. “We’ve never been mainstream, and the minute people think mainstream we’ll do a 180-degree turn,” said Barre, who calls classical music the “rock music of its day.” “We always had our own agenda,” he said. The 1972 album “Thick as a Brick” owns a place in rock history as Jethro Tull’s opus work: It is played as one continuous piece of music split over two sides of an LP record. Think “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” or the Who’s rock opera, “Tommy.” “We literally did record it, compose it and arrange it as a continuous piece of music, and that’s the rarest that anybody can do,” Barre said. Tull didn’t gain the full confidence of critics until 15 years later when the group won a Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock/Metal album, “Crest of a Knave.” Barre said the song mix at Bogie’s will be 60 percent Jethro Tull and 40 percent from his recently released album, “Roads Less Travelled.” It’ll be an all-electric show, Barre said, so hold on to your seats. Tickets to the March 10 show are $50. Visit bogies-bar.com.
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Mar 6, 2019 7:31:34 GMT
ocweekly.com/the-best-metal-concerts-in-march/Martin Barre 3/8 at MozambiqueThere’s a specific kind of magic that occurs when a rock legend takes over the stage at surprise, unlikely show. We can imagine most Jethro Tull fans losing their minds when they saw the band’s former guitarist Martin Barre on the calendar at Mozambique to deliver his signature brand of progressive rock. The man’s reputation as one of rock and metal’s most influential players (his solo on Jethro Tull’s “Aqualung” was rated one of the top solos of all time by Guitar Player Magazine) precedes him. Since the early ’90s his ventures as a solo artist, he’s continued with his unique classic rock style, bashing out eight albums including 2018’s Roads Less Traveled that has him sounding as fresh and vital at age 72 as he did back in the day, with plenty of soul and solos to set ablaze.
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Mar 7, 2019 7:53:34 GMT
Martin Barre Band: "A New Day Yesterday" (Jethro Tull): March 3, 2019; Moe's Alley, Santa Cruz, CA 28 views BrianMillerConcerts Published on Mar 4, 2019
Martin Barre Band: "Nothing Is Easy" (Jethro Tull song): March 3, 2019; Moe's Alley, Santa Cruz, CA 37 views BrianMillerConcerts Published on Mar 4, 2019
|
|
|
Post by JTull 007 on Mar 8, 2019 2:51:12 GMT
electricpaulob @ The Museum of Making Music LINK Had the honor of meeting Martin Barre last night. The gifted guitarist responsible for the Jethro Tull “sound”. EPIC intimate un-plugged show!
|
|
|
Post by JTull 007 on Mar 8, 2019 3:24:57 GMT
Jethro Tull’s Martin Barre (Night One) SOLD OUT !!! LINK
|
|
|
Post by JTull 007 on Mar 9, 2019 22:58:46 GMT
One more night @ Mozambique This ROCKS !!! Special thanks to Jim Stidham
|
|
|
Post by steelmonkey on Mar 10, 2019 21:16:15 GMT
My quibbles about Ianesque setlists aside, I am very happy to see current west coast tour resulting in rave reviews, satisfied tull savants, impressed newcomers and sold out venues. It bodes well for more tours, more songs and more Tull in the air.
|
|
|
Post by JTull 007 on Mar 11, 2019 1:15:36 GMT
Last night in the U.S. till April... SUNDAY March 10, 2019 Music Night at Bogies Martin Barre LINK
|
|
|
Post by JTull 007 on Mar 13, 2019 1:19:25 GMT
Lukas Was "Big Boy Who Doesn't Play Tambourine - Doane Perry and Tull's drum tech - Jay Rubin! What a nice company!"
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Mar 14, 2019 7:22:28 GMT
Martin Barre Band & Carl Verheyen from Supertramp - Live in LA 28 views
Martin Barre Published on Mar 13, 2019
|
|
|
Post by JTull 007 on Mar 15, 2019 2:53:22 GMT
Darby Todd Had a hilarious time hanging out with Jethro Tull drummer Doane Perry the last couple of days! It’s pretty cool playing these drum parts in front of the guy that spent 30 years playing them. — in Hollywood Hills.
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Mar 27, 2019 7:30:25 GMT
www.ukfestivalguides.com/news/26032019/jethro-tull-celebration-announced-for-shrewsbury-folk-festival/ JETHRO TULL CELEBRATION ANNOUNCED FOR SHREWSBURY FOLK FESTIVALA celebration to mark 50 years of one of the UK’s most iconic bands tops the latest tranche of artists to be added to the line-up of Shrewsbury Folk Festival. Jethro Tull’s legendary guitarist Martin Barre will bring his new show with former band members Dee Palmer and Clive Bunker to the event at the West Midland Showground, which runs from August 23 to 26. Other new announcements include an exclusive UK festival performance from American activist and musician Rev. Seckou; Irish band Jiggy whose video Silent Place took the internet by storm clocking up more than 30m views; Cajun Country Revival which hails from Louisiana, USA, with special guest Vera van Heeringen; American alt-country blues musician Amythyst Kiah; blues and world music trio Michael Messer’s Mitra; and the return of Jim Moray’s Kingstone Press Folk Slam as the traditional finale on the festival’s Pengwern stage. Already revealed are a host of top folk, roots and singer songwriters including Andy Fairweather Low and the Low Riders with the Hi Riders Soul Revue, Oysterband, Kate Rusby, Capercaillie, Martyn Joseph, Skerryvore, Daphne’s Flight, American trio Birds of Chicago, Gary Stewart’s Graceland, Phil Beer Band, Steve Knightley, Merry Hell, Edgelarks, Grace Petrie, Urban Folk Quartet and many more. There will also be a special day of programming on the Pengwern Stage by duo Chris While and Julie Matthews to celebrate 25 years of their musical partnership. They have chosen Blair Dunlop, Burden of Paradise, singer songwriter Charlie Dore and former Fairground Attraction lead singer Eddi Reader and another act to be announced to perform on Sunday August 25, which will be topped off with a show by the While & Matthews Big Band. Weekend tickets are already selling at its third tier price and only a handful of Saturday and Sunday day tickets remain. Friday and Monday tickets are also available. Director Sandra Surtees said: “We are over the moon to be hosting Martin Barre’s special celebration of 50 years of Jethro Tull as it’s a band that spans generations and genres and will be the most incredible show. “We always look to bring a diverse mix of music to the festival and we’ve developed a reputation in recent years for programming some of the most exciting Americana and world music alongside traditional folk. This year is no different with the new headliners we’ve just announced. “With four main music stages, there’s always lots to choose from and our visitors love to discover music that’s new to them – that’s part of the joy of the festival.” The festival also has a dedicated dance tent hosting ceilidhs, workshops and dance shows, children and youth festivals, workshops, craft fair, food village, real ale, cocktail and gin bars and on-site camping and glamping. Fringe music events take place in town pubs with dance displays in the centre and a parade through the streets on the Saturday afternoon. Published on 26 March 2019 by Ben Robinson
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Mar 28, 2019 7:33:23 GMT
www.shropshirestar.com/entertainment/shrewsbury-entertainment/2019/03/27/more-names-revealed-for-music-festival/More names revealed for music festivalBy Lucy Todman | Shrewsbury entertainment | Published: Mar 27, 2019 | Last Updated: 21 hours ago A celebration to mark 50 years of one of the UK’s most iconic bands tops the latest tranche of artists to be added to the line-up of Shrewsbury Folk Festival. Jethro Tull’s legendary guitarist Martin Barre will bring his new show with former band members Dee Palmer and Clive Bunker to the event at the West Midland Showground, which runs from August 23 to 26. Other new announcements include an exclusive UK festival performance from American activist and musician Rev. Seckou; Irish band Jiggy whose video Silent Place took the internet by storm clocking up more than 30m views; Cajun Country Revival which hails from Louisiana, USA, with special guest Vera van Heeringen; American alt-country blues musician Amythyst Kiah; blues and world music trio Michael Messer’s Mitra; and the return of Jim Moray’s Kingstone Press Folk Slam as the traditional finale on the festival’s Pengwern stage. Already revealed are a host of top folk, roots and singer songwriters including Andy Fairweather Low and the Low Riders with the Hi Riders Soul Revue, Oysterband, Kate Rusby, Capercaillie, Martyn Joseph, Skerryvore, Daphne’s Flight, American trio Birds of Chicago, Gary Stewart’s Graceland, Phil Beer Band, Steve Knightley, Merry Hell, Edgelarks, Grace Petrie, Urban Folk Quartet and many more. There will also be a special day of programming on the Pengwern Stage by duo Chris While and Julie Matthews to celebrate 25 years of their musical partnership. They have chosen Blair Dunlop, Burden of Paradise, singer songwriter Charlie Dore and former Fairground Attraction lead singer Eddi Reader and another act to be announced to perform on Sunday August 25, which will be topped off with a show by the While & Matthews Big Band. Weekend tickets are already selling at its third tier price and only a handful of Saturday and Sunday day tickets remain. Friday and Monday tickets are also available. Director Sandra Surtees said: “We are over the moon to be hosting Martin Barre’s special celebration of 50 years of Jethro Tull as it’s a band that spans generations and genres and will be the most incredible show. “We always look to bring a diverse mix of music to the festival and we’ve developed a reputation in recent years for programming some of the most exciting Americana and world music alongside traditional folk. This year is no different with the new headliners we’ve just announced. “With four main music stages, there’s always lots to choose from and our visitors love to discover music that’s new to them – that’s part of the joy of the festival.” The festival also has a dedicated dance tent hosting ceilidhs, workshops and dance shows, children and youth festivals, workshops, craft fair, food village, real ale, cocktail and gin bars and on-site camping and glamping. Fringe music events take place in town pubs with dance displays in the centre and a parade through the streets on the Saturday afternoon. Tickets: sff.gigantic.com/shrewsbury-folk-festival-tickets/shrewsbury-west-midlands-showground/2019-08-23-12-00
|
|
|
Post by JTull 007 on Apr 1, 2019 1:45:08 GMT
Martin Barre's Jethro Tull - Under The Bridge, London
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Apr 4, 2019 6:47:27 GMT
2019.04.02 Martin Barre Shout Out 26 views
Ellen Phillips Published on Apr 2, 2019
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Apr 7, 2019 6:52:15 GMT
www.959thefox.com/2019/04/04/enter-to-win-tickets-to-between-the-notes-with-martin-barre/Enter to win a pair of tickets to Between the Notes with Martin Barre at the Ridgefield Playhouse before his concert April 24th. Jethro Tull guitarist Martin Barre, renowned for his formidable mastery of historic riffs, power chords and soaring melodic solos, will be joined on this tour by a 7-piece band that includes keyboardist Dee Palmer and drummer Clive Bunker, both of whom performed with Tull for many years and were an important part of their success. The show will feature a special multi-media presentation that, together with the music, highlights the 50 years of Jethro Tull’s classic hits – “Aqualung,” “Bungle in the Jungle,” “Locomotive Breath,” “Cross Eyed Mary” and more! Link
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Apr 8, 2019 6:37:16 GMT
www.njarts.net/pop-rock/martin-barre-will-celebrate-50-years-of-jethro-tull-on-upcoming-tour/Martin Barre will celebrate 50 years of Jethro Tull on upcoming tourBy: DANNY COLEMAN | 4 HOURS AGO ShareEmail Print Martin Barre interview “I never had a eureka moment,” said legendary guitarist Martin Barre, discussing his many years with the band Jethro Tull. While Barre is now recording and touring with his own band, he will play only Tull music on his upcoming tour, in celebration of the band’s 50th anniversary. “The band never had something happen that changed our lives overnight,” Barre continued. “We just worked really, really hard every week of every month of every year for a long, long time and it developed a career. “We had good albums. We had albums that weren’t so strong, but it was always the touring that was really good. We were always known to be a live act … and it just grew. It was a really slow development, like being on the back burner of a cooker: The flavor is rich and intense. but it’s well seasoned. “I enjoyed everything. I loved the tiny clubs, the huge festivals. Live music can be really varied and it brings the same sort of joy in whatever format it is … We never had a year where we were flying around in private jets and staying in five-star penthouse hotel suites. … We were comfortable, we were successful, but it was always the music came first and the work came first. We worked hard and I think that brings a different reward.” Jethro Tull frontman Ian Anderson dissolved the band in 2011, and didn’t invite Barre back when he began touring as Jethro Tull by Ian Anderson in 2017. Jethro Tull by Ian Anderson is still out on the road celebrating five decades of some of the most memorable rock music ever created. “In retrospect it wasn’t an un-amicable split; is that a word?” said Barre, with a laugh. “It was just badly handled, and sort of left a scar. … It was a PR exercise, if you’d like, that was just badly managed when it could’ve been a lot easier and a lot softer. “I have no problem with the history of me and Ian or any of the guys who have been in Tull. I endorse the product and have … for the last seven years. I’m keeping Tull’s music alive and, as a self-promotion, I tell people they have a choice, but if you want to see the most Tull band that you can in 2019 it’s going to be my band because we’ve got three members of Tull.” Among the musicians joining Barre on his upcoming tour are his former Tull bandmates Clive Bunker, on drums, and Dee Palmer, on keyboards. “We do a really strong cross-section of music, all in the original keys,” said Barre. “We’ve picked out the best pieces of music and we’re going to play them really, really well. That’s what I do. What other people do, I don’t know, and I guess it doesn’t really matter because we’re all out there playing music and making a living and trying to make the best music we can and give the audiences the best show that we can. “I have to be very careful with the wording, and that suits me. I do say it’s ‘Jethro Tull’s Martin Barre’ and it’s not ‘Martin Barre’s Jethro Tull,’ and the difference is, in the latter version I’m saying I’m Jethro Tull and I’m not and never will be. I just tell people that really, there isn’t a Jethro Tull because, certainly in my mind, and maybe in Ian’s mind, the only true version of Jethro Tull would have the two of us in it. If that will ever happen, I don’t know, but I’ve got a great band who play the music really, really well, and I would never turn my back on what I’ve built up over the last seven years. I’ve got a great bunch of guy and my job is to feed them (laughs), musically and financially, and I enjoy doing it.” The Martin Barre Celebrates 50 Years of Jethro Tull Tour kicks off in the United States April 12-13 at the Strand Theatre in Hudson Falls, N.Y., and will also include shows at The Iridium in Manhattan, April 15 and 25; the Levoy Theatre in Millville, April 16; the Sellersville Theater in Sellersville, Pa., April 21; the YMCA Boulton Center for the Performing Arts in Bay Shore, N.Y., April 26; and the Newton Theatre, April 27. “There will be none of my (solo) music involved in it at all,” Barre said. “It’s more like a theatrical production in that it adheres to a very strict format of the music right through Tull’s career. There are video backdrops, voiceovers and an eight-piece band that includes Clive Bunker and Dee Palmer. I’ve got two girl singers. It’s a big production … completely different from normal. “The girls will do some of the acoustic songs from Tull. I’ve recorded a double CD which is only available at the gigs, and one of the CDs is them singing some re-recorded acoustic songs from Tull, and it brings something extra and something different to the table. They’ve got amazing voices.” When asked why he chose to go this route instead of doing perhaps just one set of Tull to pay homage to his past, he said: “It’s a progression, because we’re getting into the theaters and I want to get a step up from the bigger clubs and some of the gigs that I’ve been doing. I just want to up my game and I think this will be a nice way of doing it. It’s a bigger show. … “We’ve played a lot in The States. I believe the last tour was No. 7 and we’ve been to the East Coast a lot … I just felt that to come back to the east side of America again, we needed something really off the wall, something that people would make a really special effort to come and see.” With a catalog as vast as Tull’s, how does he choose the material to perform? “I’m just picking the hits,” Barre said. “I could play a three- or four-hour set but most promoters don’t want more than 2 ½ hours. So it’s difficult. We’re doing a segment from Thick as a Brick, a segment from Passion Play, most of Heavy Horses, half of Songs From the Wood, but nothing suffers because of it. It’s concise and I hope slick, very musical, and I hope people will enjoy it. I don’t want to be tied down by constraints like that, I just want a show that works really well and I think I’ve got it. “As I said earlier, I don’t want to come back with the same format and I won’t. I always change the music as much as I possibly can. It’s almost a side project of what we do, and I hope it grows and it might sit side by side with the Martin Barre Band tours.” Most bands these days have issues getting to a 10th anniversary, let alone a 50th. So what does he do in year number 51 and beyond? “I’ve got it in mind to come back and do just an acoustic tour,” he said. “Occasionally we do an acoustic show and they work really, really well. They’re a lot of work because it’s a whole set of music. One night we’re electric with a set we know, and then the next night we’re acoustic with a completely new set and it really is hard work to do both, but it’s rewarding, and the people love it. I’d like to do a dedicated tour of acoustic shows. Maybe next year … “I don’t like the idea that it’s a normal show played on acoustic guitar because that’s a different beast. It’s not ‘Unplugged.’ It’s different music, completely different and that’s where we’re maybe different from other bands because certainly I’m not interested in playing the same set with no drums or a cajón and everybody strumming on guitar. I’m not taking anything away from bands that do that, because I’m sure that they do it really well. It’s just not my cup of tea. “Again, this would be a new project, and essentially, if I had three nights in one theater, I could do all three shows and they’d be completely different.” Later in the year, the Martin Barre Band will perform at Parker Press Park in Woodbridge, June 19; the New Hope Winery in New Hope, Pa., on June 20; and the Somers Point Beach Concert Series, June 21. For more information, visit martinbarre.com.
|
|
|
Post by rredmond on Apr 8, 2019 15:09:42 GMT
Oh no!! How does one get their hands on that double CD!!!! The crappy thing is that I just started a job in Millville. The super-crappy thing is I'll be working (the second job) that evening. Man, I would've loved to go to that concert, and would dig getting my hands on the double CD. Sounds like good times! (Glad to see there's no, outward, acrimony between him and Ian too... it may not be a beautiful friendship, but it could certainly be worse.)
|
|
|
Post by rredmond on Apr 8, 2019 15:10:58 GMT
PS: Actually I'd rather the MP3s of that double CD, I'm sure they'll make it available eventually.
|
|
|
Post by bunkerfan on Apr 8, 2019 19:37:33 GMT
"“I have no problem with the history of me and Ian or any of the guys who have been in Tull. I endorse the product and have … for the last seven years. I’m keeping Tull’s music alive and, as a self-promotion, I tell people they have a choice, but if you want to see the most Tull band that you can in 2019 it’s going to be my band because we’ve got three members of Tull.”That's brilliant Martin
|
|
|
Post by maddogfagin on Apr 10, 2019 6:41:50 GMT
poststar.com/go-calendar/article_b9311a3a-42d4-5523-aa90-afd105f11420.htmlMartin Barre celebrates 50 years of Jethro Tull, 8-10:30 p.m., The Strand Theatre, 210 Main St., Hudson Falls. At the centre of Jethro Tull’s unique sound is guitarist Martin Barre. Renowned for his formidable mastery of historic riffs, power chords and soaring melodic solos, Martin is celebrating the 50th anniversary of Jethro Tull, with a “Tour of Tours.”A spectacular 2 1/2 hour all Tull show with an 8-piece band featuring Barre, Dan Crisp on lead vocals, Darby Todd on Drums, Alan Thompson on bass, Becca Langsford and Ali Hart on backing vocals, PLUS, Dee Palmer on keyboard and Clive Bunker on drums; both of whom performed with Tull for many years.The show will also feature a special multi-media presentation that, together with the music, highlights the ‘50 years of Jethro Tull.’
|
|