| Early
in 1968, a group of young British musicians, born from the ashes
of various failed regional bands gathered together in hunger, destitution
and modest optimism in Luton, North of London. With a common love
of Blues and an appreciation, between them, of various other music
forms, they started to win over a small but enthusiastic audience
in the various pubs and clubs of Southern England. The breakthrough
came when they were offered the Thursday night residency at London’s
famous Marquee Club in Wardour Street, Soho.
The early Jethro Tull released their first Blues-oriented album,
This Was, in the latter part of 1968 before moving on to more home-grown
and eclectic efforts in 1969 with Stand Up and a flutter of single
releases, including Living In The Past, in the UK market.
Benefit, Aqualung, and Thick As A Brick followed and the band’s
success grew internationally. Various band members came and went,
but the charismatic front man and composer, flautist and singer
Ian Anderson continued, as he does to this day, to lead the group
through its various musical incarnations.
Jethro Tull were, by the mid-seventies, one of the most successful
live performing acts on the world stage, rivalling Zeppelin, Elton
John and even the Rolling Stones. Surprising, really, for a group
whose more sophisticated and evolved stylistic extravagance was
far from the Pop and Rock norm of that era.
With now some 30-odd albums to their credit and sales totalling
more than 50 million, the apparently uncommercial Tull have continued
over the next three decades to travel near and far to fans across
the world.
After forty years at the bottom, at the top and various points
in between, Tull are still performing typically more than a hundred
concerts each year. Ian Anderson and Martin Barre remain at the
centre of a group of sometimes changing but highly capable – indeed
excellent – musicians. Currently, Doane Perry, veteran Tull
drummer of some 24 years experience, together with John O’Hara
on piano and accordion, and David Goodier on bass guitar are to
be found in the line-up, delighting audiences and continuing the
legacy of Tull’s music with its rich variety and depth of
expression wherever fans, young and old, want to hear Rock, Folk,
Jazz and Classical-inspired music for grown-ups.
Rodney Quill
January 2008
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