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Post by maddogfagin on May 30, 2022 16:22:30 GMT
The Martin Barre Band Tupelo Music Hall, Derry, NH February 5th 2022 (Original Date September 24, 2020 - rescheduled to April 22, 2021, then again to Febuary 5th 2022) Hezekiahx2 recording: Gear: Roland 5 w/ SP-CMC-8 + SP-SPSB-11 + SanDisk 32GB Memory Card: 24/96 Recording. Transfer: Audacity (Normalization, Fade in/outs, reduced the loud clapping + banshee screams ect, 16/44), CDwave for tracking, TLH. Martin Barre: Electric and Acoustic Guitars Dan Crisp: Lead vocals, Electric Guitar, Alto Recorder Alan Thomson: Bass Darby Todd: Drums Alex Hart: Backing Vocals, Acoustic Guitar, Alto Recorder Becca Langsford: Backing Vocals, Washboard, Egg Shaker with former Jethro Tull band member: Clive Bunker: Drums, Congas 1st Set: 1. Opening Intro 2. Hunting Girl 3. A New Day Yesterday 4. Back to Steel 5. Martin Talks 6. After You After Me 7. Love Story 8. Minstrel in the Gallery 9. Steel Monkey 10. Band Intros....Clive Bunker Joins Band on Stage for the remainder of the performance 11. For a Thousand Mothers 12. Martin Talks 13. Heavy Horses 14. Fat Man 2nd Set 15. Opening Intro 16. Dharma for One 17. Nothing Is Easy 18. A Song for Jeffrey 19. Aqualung 20. Cross-Eyed Mary 21. Slipstream 22. Wond'ring Aloud 23. Some Day the Sun Won't Shine for You 24. Life Is a Long Song 25. Cheap Day Return 26. Mother Goose 27. Up to Me 28. My God --> Palladio --> My God 29. Hymn 43 30. Wind Up 31. Locomotive Breath Encore: 32. Teacher Support the Artists: ia802501.us.archive.org/9/items/MartinBarre2022-02-05TupeloMusicHallDerryNH/MartinBarre2022-02-05TupeloMusicHallDerryNH.mp3?cnt=0martinbarre.comwww.alexhart.com/www.beccalangsford.com/www.dancrispmusic.comwww.darbytodd.com/alanthomsonbass.com/
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Post by maddogfagin on May 30, 2022 16:05:27 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 30, 2022 5:45:01 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 30, 2022 5:36:25 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 29, 2022 14:08:45 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 29, 2022 14:04:19 GMT
technotrenz.com/Keith Richards once gave hysterical reviews of ten other rock bands, including The Band (‘a Little Too Perfect’) and the Bee Gees (‘All Kids Stuff’).Kurt Micheal Kurt 1 day ago Even The Rolling Stones’ fаvorite bаnd, Jethro Tull, wаs not immune to Richаrds’ scаthing аssessment of how difficult it is to mаke it in Americа. “It’s very eаsy to become а pаrody of yourself,” he explаined, expressing hope thаt “Iаn Anderson doesn’t get into а cliché thing with his leg routine.” link
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Post by maddogfagin on May 29, 2022 5:58:20 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 29, 2022 5:45:38 GMT
Jethro Tull Live in Chile TV Broadcast March 6th, 1996Remy Tena 26.3K subscribers Jethro Tull, March 6th, 1996, Estadio Chile, Santiago de Chile. Shown on 'Live At Creations', broadcasted on Chilean National TV. Line-up / Musicians - Ian Anderson / flute, acoustic guitar, harmonica, vocals - Martin Barre / guitar - Doane Perry / drums and percussion - Andrew Giddings / keyboards, accordion - Jonathan Noyce / bass Track-list: Intro., Roots To Branches, Rare And Precious Chain, Thick As A Brick, In The Grip Of Stronger Stuff Dangerous Veils Aqualung, Nothing Is Easy Bourée In The Moneylender's Temple My God Locomotive Breath Incomplete concert, as broadcasted on TV, from the second tour of the band that includes Chile. www.tullianos.com/Music in this video Learn more Listen ad-free with YouTube Premium Song Roots to Branches Artist Jethro Tull Album Living With The Past Writers Ian Anderson Licensed to YouTube by UMG (on behalf of Eagle Rock Entertainment Ltd); MINT_BMG, CMRRA, ARESA, Abramus Digital, ASCAP, LatinAutorPerf, LatinAutor - PeerMusic, BMG Rights Management (US), LLC, and 3 Music Rights Societies Song In the Grip of Stronger Stuff Artist Ian Anderson Album Ian Anderson Plays the Orchestral Jethro Tull Licensed to YouTube by Aviator Management GmbH (on behalf of ZYX Music); LatinAutorPerf, ASCAP, MINT_BMG, SOLAR Music Rights Management, Sony Music Publishing, CMRRA, and 5 Music Rights Societies
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Post by maddogfagin on May 28, 2022 16:01:04 GMT
Thanks for that review 'adospencer'. You have just saved me upwards of £15.00. I do have a copy of 'Minstrels In The Gallery' which I loved. This is the only book I own about 'Tull'. I would be interested in any other Jethro Tull Book recommendations, if anybody can point me in the right direction. As well as owning a copy of 'Minstrels in the Gallery', I also have a copy of 'A Passion Play' by Brian Rabey which I like very much Read all about it...... jethrotull.proboards.com/thread/3033/passion-play-brian-rabeyAt the very least these four And if you have deep pockets
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Post by maddogfagin on May 28, 2022 5:50:54 GMT
Premieres May 28th at 5:00 PM
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Post by maddogfagin on May 28, 2022 5:43:06 GMT
www.boulderweekly.com/special-editions/red-rocks-the-music-the-myths-the-magic/Red Rocks: the music, the myths, the magicColorado music historian G. Brown sets the story straight about the beloved venue By Caitlin Rockett - May 26, 2022 As he sits down at a patio table at The Point Cafe, G. Brown slides a heavy tome in my direction: Red Rocks: The Concert Years. The book is a collection of more than 200 interviews the veteran Denver Post music journalist conducted over nearly three decades with an array of performers who’ve graced the landmark stage: Jerry Garcia, Dave Matthews, Bono, Paul McCartney. I flip through and stop at a picture of Icelandic polymath Bjork, who took the stage in May 2007, and wonder how fantastic that show must have been. “It was,” Brown says with a smile. Brown, who is the founding director of the Colorado Music Hall of Fame, is preparing to update his Red Rocks book. In celebration of the beginning of the summer—prime Red Rocks season—Brown took some time to talk about the history of the stunning amphitheater: the music, the myths, the magic. ---------------------------------- Jethro Tull: ‘Bungle in the Jungle’ becomes a Ruckus on the RocksThere’s no discussion of riots at Red Rocks without talking about Jethro Tull. The prog rock band was booked by storied Colorado agent Barry Fey, who was responsible for bringing the Grateful Dead, the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, Van Morrison, Jefferson Airplane, Frank Zappa and more to the Centennial State. “I’ve always said what (Fey) did is worth something; how he did it I’ll never acquiesce to,” Brown says, referring to the “cartel methodology” that is still employed today to bring musicians to the area, including radius clauses that prevent musicians from playing at other venues within sometimes hundreds of miles. “But back in the ’70s, Denver was just a fly over city,” Brown says. “Kansas City was 600 miles one way, Salt Lake the other, and neither of those were developed markets, and (Fey) made Denver a stop.” Fey had orchestrated a show at Mile High Stadium several months before Woodstock in 1969, which devolved into tear-gas-soaked rioting. “So, one and done with that,” Brown says, “but it gave him the footing to start booking shows up in Red Rocks: Steve Miller Band; Hendrix famously played there opening for Vanilla Fudge.” In 1971, Fey booked Jethro Tull at the Morrison-based venue. “He should have booked Jethro Tull for two shows, of his own admission,” Brown says, because a large number of ticketless fans had showed up. “It was a different time: Music was free, cops are pigs, you know, the whole counterculture thing coming to roost in Colorado. There were a bunch of rabble rousers outside (Red Rocks), probably just a couple 100, but they decided they were gonna get in, and the cops used tear gas that the wind blew inside the venue where no one knew what was going on.” “Always a fan of that guy for what he did,” Brown says. “If he’d have just bagged it, there’d have been a riot that we’re still talking about. But they kept playing; (Anderson) gagged his way through a set like a whirling dervish madman and kept the show going on, otherwise it would have been really brutal.” The venue was eventually evacuated that evening, and rock music was banned from Red Rocks for a number of years. Of course Fey was instrumental in bringing that back: He sued the city and won the right to bring rock music back. In 1983, Fey promoted a show at Red Rocks for a little known Irish band called U2, who ended up filming a portion of Under the Blood Red Sky at that concert.
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Post by maddogfagin on May 28, 2022 5:32:17 GMT
Jethro Tull live audio 1994-05-29 Basingstoke Dave Pegg's last concert with Tull
Jethro Tull Collection 2.34K subscribers Dave Pegg's final concert with Jethro Tull at Basingstoke Anvil May 29, 1994 on 'The Best Of Jethro Tull 25th Anniversary Tour', spanning the globe through 1993 and 1994. I was there for his first concert in Toronto on October 5, 1979, but, alas, was not there for his last. The accompanying photos are my favourite ones of Dave over the years. I especially love the 1982 photo in Boulder, Colorado.
0:00 Intro (tape) 1:29 1. My Sunday Feeling 5:28 Introduction, Helloooooo, Doane 7:13 2. For A Thousand Mothers 11:01 3. Living In The Past 14:43 Introduction 15:50 4. Bourée (incl Soirée) 19:25 Introduction 21:38 5. So Much Trouble 24:00 Introduction 25:25 6. With You There To Help Me 31:38 7. In The Grip Of Stronger Stuff 32:40 8. Steal (Martin Barre instrumental) 37:27 9. Farm On The Freeway 44:39 10. Thick As A Brick 53:44 11. Beggar's Farm 59:34 Introduction to Martin and Andy 1:01:16 12. Sossity: You're A Woman (instrumental) 1:02:54 13. Reasons For Waiting 1:05:51 Introduction 1:06:42 14A. Songs From The Wood 1:09:56 15. Too Old To Rock'N'Roll 1:11:40 16. Heavy Horses 1:14:28 14B. Songs From the Wood (reprise) 1:15:05 17. Later That Same Evening (instrumental) 1:18:13 18. Budapest 1:28:36 Introduction 1:29:39 19. Passion Jig (incl. Seal Driver) 1:33:54 20. A New Day Yesterday (incl Kelpie) 1:42:27 21. Aqualung 1:47:11 22. Locomotive Breath 1:51:30 Thank you, Band Introduction, Applause 1:53:32 23. Cross-Eyed Mary 1:55:42 24. Dharma For One 2:00:42 Strauss Waltz (tape)
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Post by maddogfagin on May 27, 2022 16:32:05 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 27, 2022 16:25:15 GMT
I remember this very well. All was quiet on the Tull front after IA had damaged his voice on the "Under Wraps " tour. This was to be the only gig of 1985 ,and I managed to get a copy on videotape just after it was broadcast. I was shocked how unhealthy our hero appeared. He obviously hadn't trimmed the big grey beard for ages, and a baseball cap set at a silly angle, (along with ill advised onstage antics), made him seem like the village idiot. He also looked and sounded ,very old. The obviously non Tull audience applauded politely but seemed baffled throughout. Its still pretty uncomfortable viewing (although the music is excellent of course). I really thought that this was the end of Tull ,and the long silence for the rest of this year and most of 86 seemed to confirm this. The "summer raid" mini tour of 86 was welcome, but again had our man struggling vocally and still looking like Santa after a bad night. Who could of thought that the quite wonderful "Crest of a Knave" would be next? What a pleasant surprise (and relief) that was! Yes I too had a VHS copy of Bach Rock which I got from Charlie Pritchard and was vaguely amused by the angle of the baseball hat but appalled at the persona Ian had adopted for such a show. He seemed a lot better at Milton Keynes and then as you say, along came Crest . . . .
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Post by maddogfagin on May 27, 2022 7:57:18 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 27, 2022 5:52:51 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 27, 2022 5:40:27 GMT
Jethro Tull - BBC In Concert 1991 (FM BROADCAST)93 views Premiered 8 hours ago FRANKNZAPPA2 1.5K subscribers 00:00 Minstrel In The Gallery/Cross Eyed Mary 04:08 This Is Not Love 09:12 Rocks On The Road 15:54 Heavy Horses 25:11 Tall Thin Girl 28:51 Still Loving You 33:34 Thick As A Brick 41:22 A New Day Yesterday 47:11 blues jam 50:27 Jump Start
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Post by maddogfagin on May 26, 2022 15:51:16 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 26, 2022 6:34:02 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 26, 2022 5:49:38 GMT
www.ratherrarerecords.com/standing-up/this was a time when it would benefit an artist to stand up September 12, 2018 by Neal Umphred I WAS ONE OF THOSE TEENS who prided themselves in having a really cool record collection, bragging about albums and singles few of my clueless high school peers had ever heard of. So, of course, I was a big fan of Warner/Reprise Records in the late ’60s. Aside from championing my beloved Kinks (and Grommett save them!), by 1970 they had signed one of my heroes, the all-but-unknown Neil Young, and the group that was fast becoming my new obsession, the Beach Boys. So, of course, I was one of the first to send off my $2 for THE 1969 WARNER/REPRISE SONGBOOK, the two-record sampler of artists on their catalog who weren’t selling millions of records. When I received the album in the mail, I immediately put it on my record player. After getting past the ridiculous opening track by Wild Man Fischer, there was this brilliant thing called My Sunday Feeling lifted from the 1968 album THIS WAS by Jethro Tull.1 As brilliant as the track was, it wasn’t brilliant enough to get me to spend what little money I had on an album by Tull. Then came THE 1969 WARNER/REPRISE RECORD SHOW with the excellent Fat Man from Tull’s new STAND UP album (1969). Later in the year, THE BIG BALL included Nothing Is Easy, again from STAND UP. Jethro Tull should have been inducted into the bloody Rock & Roll Hall of Fame twenty years ago!By now it was 1970 and I was in college and had my own apartment, which quickly turned into a refuge for the hippie wannabes and countercultural hangers-on. One day one of whom brought the new Jethro Tull album over to hear on my stereo. 2 On my first hearing of BENEFIT, I was hooked! I bought my own copy and played it regularly for visitors. Then I got around to buying the first two Tull albums, but they didn’t move me like the third one. In 1971, I awaited AQUALUNG but was hugely disappointed when I finally heard it. I really can’t say why: I just didn’t connect emotionally, intellectually, or spiritually with the songs. Or maybe I just didn’t grok the group and their new direction. I was in the minority here, as AQUALUNG was the album that broke Jethro Tull and opened up a whole new audience, selling millions of copies to those clueless former peers of mine. Which brings us to this morning’s batch of emails and a request from Shaun Roberts to answer the question, “Where does Jethro Tull fit into rock history.” As I like to keep my answers on Quora short and sharp, here’ is what I wrote as my answer (indented between the two images below): The 1969 Warner/Reprise Songbook was the first of the company’s loss leaders series. It was a two-record set that featured twenty-eight tracks by artists that weren’t selling as many records as the company believed they should be. It was here that I heard my first Jethro Tull track.Jethro Tull and the Hall of Fame Thanks to Shaun Roberts for requesting that I answer the nagging question, “Where does Jethro Tull fit into rock history.” I even ventured further and addressed the unanswered question, “Should Jethro Tull be in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame?” • Jethro Tull was critically and commercially successful in four decades (five if you want to be generous). • Jethro Tull released almost thirty albums during that time (counting live sets but not compilations), several of which are at least 4-star records. • Sixteen individual Jethro Tull albums have RIAA Gold Record Awards, making them one of the most certified artists to emerge from the ’60s. 3 It’s hard not to arrive at the conclusion that Jethro Tull should be taken seriously by any history of rock music as a major creative force for almost twenty years. I have no idea why Jethro Tull wasn’t inducted into the bloody Rock & Roll Hall of Fame twenty years ago! Maybe they need to make a few rap records to impress the folks on the Hall’s nominating committee. 3 The 1970 album BENEFIT was the first Jethro Tull album that I owned and remains my favorite of their albums almost fifty years later. Summing things up That sums things up neatly, I should think. What can one say about the music of the late ’60s and early ’70s? This was a time when an artist could benefit from standing up, from saying something different, from sounding different. Jethro Tull certainly stood out, sounding nothing like any other artist at the time. Fifty years later, I still have a fondness for the first three Tull albums with BENEFIT remaining my fave. I still don’t care much about the music that Tull made afterward, much of which continued to sell in large quantities. Fortunately, the world doesn’t revolve around my taste . . . I have no idea why Jethro Tull wasn’t inducted into the bloody Rock & Roll Hall of Fame twenty years ago!CLICK TO TWEET JethroTull Devonshire1970 1000 FEATURED IMAGE: The photo at the top of this page of was taken at Devonshire Downs in 1970. As British as that sounds, the Downs were located in Northridge, California. Bass player Glenn Cornick backs flutist and vocalist Ian Anderson.
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Post by maddogfagin on May 25, 2022 14:57:19 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 25, 2022 14:42:11 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 25, 2022 5:52:08 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 25, 2022 5:50:21 GMT
www.bootleglps.com/BLOG/jethro-tull-flute-cake-tmoq-71044Vintage Vinyl From The UndergroundJohn's Bootleg LP Blog JETHRO TULL FLUTE CAKE TMOQ 71044 After reviewing three real dogs, it was nice to put a great one on my turntable and sit back and enjoy. Jethro Tull "Flute Cake" is sort of a bootleg classic, if such a thing exists. It first came out on TMOQ, my copy claims to be from TMOQ, but a check of Hot Wacks shows it is European copy pressed from the original plates. My LP is on red vinyl. Flute Cake was recorded at the Anaheim Convention Center in 1972 and has a paper insert. Stamped covers and other insert artwork exists. Side One: Nothing Is Easy / My God / We Used To Know Side Two: Wish You Were There To Help Me / A Song For Jeffery / Sossity, You're A Woman Rating: A minus. I am only giving this a "minus" because it is audience recording, but it really is a great LP. The fidelity is very good considering it did not come from a soundboard, and there's not a lot of distracting singing along and screaming from the audience like on the Monkees LP I reviewed earlier this week. I would definitely recommend this one, it is a classic. It is being sold for $25 - $150 out there, so you just need to dig around a bit.
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Post by maddogfagin on May 25, 2022 5:41:07 GMT
25th May1977 The first Star Wars film is released. George Lucas' epic space opera is one of the most popular works in movie history. 1968 Simon And Garfunkel scored their second US No.1 album with 'Bookends'. The album featured four US singles: 'A Hazy Shade of Winter', 'At the Zoo', 'Fakin' It' and 'Mrs Robinson'. 1985 Dire Straits scored their second UK No.1 album with 'Brothers In Arms', also No.1 in the US and 24 other countries. 'Brothers In Arms' was one of the first albums to be directed at the CD market, and was a full digital recording (DDD) at a time when most popular music was recorded on analog equipment. The album won two Grammy Awards at the 28th Grammy Awards, and also won Best British Album at the 1987 Brit Awards, and has gone on to sell over 30 million copies worldwide. 1969 A benefit concert was held for Fairport Convention at The Roundhouse, London to raise money for the families of the band's drummer Martin Lamble, Richard Thompson's girlfriend and clothes designer Jeannie Franklyn who were all killed in an accident driving back from a gig. Also on the bill, Family, Pretty Things, Soft Machine and John Peel
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Post by maddogfagin on May 24, 2022 14:47:50 GMT
wblm.com/bangor-police-department-came-up-with-hilarious-new-slogan-for-blinker-awareness/Look who is up to their up old tricks again. It's everyone's favorite community of cops (well, I guess not your favorite if you live a life of crime), the Bangor Police Department. The often-viral department has hit Facebook once again. Bangor PD's own Lieutenant (and noted author) Tim Cotton decided to post the message to remind the masses of what's important...and something that Mainers are notoriously known to not do, use blinkers. The Bangor PD have decided to bring more awareness to using the blinker. They even came up with the amazing slogan of "Try using it. I mean, it's right there on the steering column." You can't make this stuff up, folks. Hey, it's a good campaign. Mainers are absolutely horrendous about using blinkers. Out-of-state family and friends love to point it out when visiting. Even worse, I'm pretty sure I didn't use my blinker twice on the way to work today. It's a real epidemic in these parts. I'm happy that the Bangor Police put this out. In all seriousness, it's a very important message that many Mainers need to be pay more attention to, including yours truly. This is another wonderful, yet very informative post from Lt. Cotton and the Bangor Police Department. They continue to embrace new media and find ways to interact with the community for the better. This type of interaction is a great example of the forward-thinking leadership that the Bangor community should be very proud of. Every Classic Rock Artist Ever At The Old Bangor Auditorium These classic rock artists and their history with Bangor go back to the early '70s. Check out everyone who played the old Bangor Auditorium. ------------------------------ Jethro Tull - 10/15/1972Jethro Tull came to town back on October 15th, 1972... Approximately 27 years before they would go on to steal Metallica's first metal Grammy. Yes, that happened...
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Post by maddogfagin on May 24, 2022 14:35:54 GMT
Closer! C’mon New Jersey, though I’ll take Philly. martinbarre.com/martin-barre-tour/Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker29 June 2022Uxbridge, Ontario Canada Uxbridge Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker30 June 2022Uxbridge, Ontario Canada Uxbridge Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker02 July 2022Oakville, Ontario Canada Oakville Centre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker03 July 2022Oakville, Ontario Canada Oakville Centre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker06 July 2022Ottawa Ontario Canada Shenkman Arts Centre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker07 July 2022Cornwall, Ontario Canada Aultsville Theatre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker08 July 2022Belleville, Ontario Canada The Empire Theatre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker09 July 2022London, ON Canada Centennial Hal Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker10 July 2022Barrie, Ontario CanadaGeorgian Theatre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker11 July 2022Peterborough, Ontario Canada Showplace Performance Centre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker12 July 2022Brantford, Ontario Canada Sanderson Centre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker13 July 2022St Catharines, Ontario Canada Partridge Hall Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker15 July 2022Brampton, Ontario Canada The Rose Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker16 July 2022Windsor, ON Canada Chrysler Theatre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker21 July 2022Victoria, BC Royal Theatre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker22 July 2022Campbell River, BC Tidemark Theater Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker24 July 2022Nanaimo, BC Port Theatre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker25 July 2022Surrey, BCSurrey Bell Performing Arts Centre Aqualung 50th Anniversary with Clive Bunker26 July 2022Vernon, BCVernon District Performing Arts Centre Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show16 Nov 2022Košice, Slovakia Collosseum Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show17 Nov 2022Nove Mesto nad Vahom, Slovakia Blue Note Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show17 Nov 2022Bratislava, Slovakia MMC Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show19 Nov 2022Olomouc, Czech Republic Bounty Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show20 Nov 2022Prague, Czech Republicto be announced Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show21 Nov 2022Reichenbach, Germany Bergkeller Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show23 Nov 2022Bielsko Biała, Poland BCK Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show24 Nov 2022Warsaw, Poland Progresja Club Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show27 Nov 2022Võru, Estonia Võru Culture Center Kannel Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show28 Nov 2022Tallinn, Estonia Vaba Lava Performing Arts Centre Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show29 Nov 2022Espoo, Finland Tapiolasali Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show30 Nov 2022Pori, FinlandValidi Karkia Club Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show02 Dec 2022Stockholm, Swedento be announced Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show03 Dec 2022Sala, SwedenRockland Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show04 Dec 2022Oslo, NorwayKjetil Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show06 Dec 2022Gothenburg, Sweden Musikens Hus Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show07 Dec 2022Malmö, Sweden Babel Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show08 Dec 2022Copenhagen, DenmarkHotel Cecil Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show09 Dec 2022Bordelsholm, Germany Savoy Kino Martin Barre Band - Aqualung 50th Anniversary Show10 Dec 2022Isernhagen, Germany Blues Garage
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Post by maddogfagin on May 24, 2022 5:49:54 GMT
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Post by maddogfagin on May 24, 2022 5:39:49 GMT
Jethro Tull - Locomotive Breath -Göteborg 2022 17 views May 23, 2022
bobosfilmer 128 subscribers Impressive Ian Anderson at his best in Gothenburg.
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Post by maddogfagin on May 24, 2022 5:32:41 GMT
windsorite.ca/events/jethro-tulls-martin-barre-aqualung-50th-anniversary-tour/JETHRO TULL’S MARTIN BARRE AQUALUNG 50TH ANNIVERSARY TOURwith Original Band Member, Clive Bunker Date Saturday July 16th, 2022 Time7:30pm Introduction… In 1969, a band of four English musicians arrived in New York and literally took America by storm. Over the next 50 years, this legendary band accumulated over 65 million record sales and a following of loyal fans that are the envy of rock bands worldwide! This band was Jethro Tull. Aqualung, probably the most famous and celebrated of all of Jethro Tull’s albums, is now celebrating 50 years since its release in 1971. At the centre of Tull’s unique sound is guitarist Martin Barre, who is renowned for his formidable mastery of historic riffs, power chords and soaring melodic solos. Martin is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the release of the iconic and legendary album Aqualung with a worldwide tour throughout 2021. Territories will include South America, USA, Canada and Europe.. He will be bringing a spectacular show playing the album in its entirety with his touring band The Martin Barre Band – featuring Dan Crisp on lead vocals, Alan Thomson on keyboard, and Darby Todd on drums; together with former Jethro Tull band member Clive Bunker on drums and percussion. Martin says: “Aqualung was the album that defined Tull. Sumptuous melodies, big dynamics and power riffs galore. Acoustic met electric…and it all worked.” The anniversary tour will be a once in a lifetime opportunity to sit back and relive this legendary album, being played in full and in sequence for the first time. About Martin Barre: Martin Barre was Jethro Tull’s guitarist for over 43 years. His sound and playing was a major factor in their success. Album sales have exceeded 60 million units and they continue to be played worldwide, representing an important part of classic rock history. Martin’s guitar playing has earned him a high level of respect and recognition. His solos were voted 25th best solo ever in the USA and 20th best solo ever in the UK for his playing on ‘Aqualung’ . His playing on the album ‘Crest of a Knave’ earned him a Grammy award in 1989. As well as numerous Jethro Tull albums, Martin has worked with many other artists including Paul McCartney, Phil Collins, Gary Moore, Joe Bonamassa and Chris Thompson and has shared the stage with such legends as Jimi Hendrix, Fleetwood Mac, Pink Floyd, and Led Zeppelin. About Special Guest: Clive Bunker – was the original drummer with Tull and played on Stand Up, Benefit & Aqualung he was part of the original band that stormed the USA from 1969. ALL AGES Proudly presented by Ghostfinger Productions and Cool 100.7
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