It’s hard to exaggerate just how big Jethro Tull were in America in 1974. They’d just come off the back of two Number One albums – Thick As A Brick and A Passion Play - and a stage show that milked ...
What if Jethro Tull never turned prog? That question got its answer in 2002 when the original blues quartet lineup regrouped for the career-spanning Living With the Past film. It was a sight many fans ...
Before Jethro Tull became a renowned progressive rock group in the early 1970s, they were a blues band, and their guitarist, Mick Abrahams, was a master blues player. When Abrahams left in the late ...
Ian Anderson is understandably pleased Jethro Tull — the pioneering progressive-rock band he founded and has led since 1967 — has sold more than 60 million albums worldwide and is now embarked on the ...
Ian Anderson is ensconced in his home office in the English countryside, “where no one can find me.” It’s a fitting introduction to the dryly witty centerpiece of Jethro Tull who, since the late '60s, ...
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Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson on the obscure jazz record which helped kickstart the British prog boom of the ‘70s
Jethro Tull may very much be considered a cornerstone of Britain’s ‘70s prog boom, but Ian Anderson’s outfit was always ...
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