Prog

JETHRO TULL

40 years of ploughing their own furrow.

- SID SMITH

Like some lordly pied piper, Ian Anderson has led Jethro Tull’s legions of followers through many changes in style across 50 years. Having marched them from relatively simple rock songs through to extended suites and concept albums, the release of Heavy Horses followed Songs From The Wood, journeying into a folkloric landscape filled with bucolic tales and a hearty song. Appropriat­ing the kinetic energy of jigs and reels and harnessing it into Tull’s music seems natural now, but it wasn’t to some folks’ tastes back in the day. Forty years on, as this five-disc demonstrat­es, Anderson was right to follow his own instincts.

“It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see,” wrote Henry David Thoreau in Walden, his 1854 treatise on living in harmony with the land. One of the few writers in progressiv­e music tackling the complexiti­es and contradict­ions of the British class system, Anderson’s vision of a field tilled through an honest day’s work might suggest a romanticis­ed portrait of the dignity of labour, but he’s canny enough to avoid unwelcome lapses into forelocktu­gging nostalgia in his appreciati­on of times gone by.

Martin Barre’s biting tone and his impressive versatilit­y imbue the material with such presence and vitality. That he carries off this animating role with such authority, regardless of whichever direction Tull embarked upon, speaks to the guitarist’s quiet, unflashy brilliance. Annotating the songs in much the same way that Anderson’s flute inscribes each track, Barre’s work possesses a reassuring depth, providing in a way a continuity of sorts that lets you know whatever the mode or muse, this is unmistakab­ly, and authentica­lly, Tull.

Barre is just one of the beneficiar­ies of Steven Wilson’s attention. Like his previous Tull remixes, Wilson manages the delicate business of simultaneo­usly respecting the original parameters while broadening the available aural space. Delivering an impressive clarity, the elegant gallop of Rover, …And The Mouse Police Never Sleeps, and No Lullaby’s simmering percussion are especially exciting in their new, expansive settings.

The live show from Berne included in this edition packs such a terrific punch that it’s easy to understand why Anderson has been so effusive in his praise of King Crimson’s Jakko Jakszyk’s remixing efforts. While parts of 1978’s Bursting Out hailed from this performanc­e, as good as that double album is, if you want to experience the full force of Tull in concert in the comfort of your own home, either in stereo or surround, this newly expanded version is definitely the one you should be reaching for.

EXPERIENCE THE FULL FORCE OF TULL LIVE IN YOUR OWN HOME.

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