Classic Rock

Jethro Tull

Benefit (50th Anniversar­y Edition)

- Hugh Fielder

Tull’s third album was the bridge between their R&B beginnings and the style that would define them.

Jethro Tull’s third album, 1970’s Benefit, marked the transition from the R&Bdriven Stand Up and the defining merger of acoustic arrangemen­ts and heavy guitar riffs that would characteri­se Aqualung and beyond. As such it sometimes tends to get forgotten in the grand parade of Tull’s 70s classics. But those who worship at the altar of Aqualung will find plenty here tracing that album’s origins, particular­ly among the voluminous additional material that expands the original 46-minute album to a four-CD/two-DVD beanfeast.

Ian Anderson’s desire to give Tull a more distinctiv­e style was influenced by wanting to stand out from the hordes of British blues rockers invading America at the time, plus the realisatio­n that neither they nor anybody else could compete with Led Zeppelin.

The change is apparent from Benefit’s opening track, With You There To Help Me, where a strummed acoustic guitar is inserted into the band’s rock-solid approach and guitarist Martin Barre’s increasing­ly riff-oriented approach shows he’s been listening to Jimmy

Page. The addition of pianist John Evan also freed up Barre to focus on his own style while filling out the band’s sound.

Nothing To Say is the first of several

Aqualung ‘previews’ as it switches from a march to a ballad to an almost symphonic chorus, although the band are still grappling with applying the techniques. More convincing is the heavy-sounding Son, on which Anderson has dig at his dad

(‘Permission to breathe, sir? ’).

It’s no coincidenc­e that the tracks that look back to Stand Up – Inside, To Cry You A Song – now sound more dated. But Sossity: You’re A Woman, a sumptuous acoustic classical medieval one-off, owes little to anything that came before or after. Progmeiste­r Steven Wilson’s remix even manages to bring warmth to what was originally a somewhat clinical-sounding album.

Pick of the out-takes is a nine-minute run through My God, a song that would later be one of Aqualung’s stand-out tracks. It also shows up on both the previously unreleased live US shows from 1970 – Tanglewood (which is repeated on one of the DVDs with film footage and a surround-sound mix) and Chicago (mono). Bootlegs no longer required. ■■■■■■■■■■

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