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Jethro Tull Full Concert - Tanglewood Concert - 1970

Jethro Tull   Full Concert -  Tanglewood Concert - 1970

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TitleJethro Tull Full Concert - Tanglewood Concert - 1970
Authorstudioag1
Duration1:23:03
File FormatMP3 / MP4
Original URL https://youtube.com/watch?v=7qdVML78vA4

Description

Jethro Tull Full Concert Tanglewood Concert - 1970
Superb!!!!

1 Introduction
2 Nothing Is Easy
3 My God
4 With You There To Help Me / By Kind Permission Of
5 Dharma For One
6 We Used To Know
7 Guitar Solo
8 For A Thousand Mothers



Ian Anderson: vocals, acoustic guitar, flute; Martin Barre: electric guitar; John
Evan: piano, organ; Glenn Cornick: bass; Clive Bunker: drums

During the summer of 1970, Bill Graham presented an extraordinary series of

concerts at Tanglewood, the renowned classical music venue located in the scenic

Berkshire Hills of western Massachusetts. At the time, presenting rock music in a

classical venue was a surprising and precarious step to take. To many, hearing The

Fillmore and Tanglewood in the same sentence equated to "when worlds collide." Much

like his approach at the Fillmores, Graham's "The Fillmore at Tanglewood" series

presented diverse handpicked triple bills, but with the added advantage of a

beautiful open-air venue and plenty of informal lawn seating. With the Fillmore

East crew providing technical support, these concerts would be hailed as a

technical and artistic triumph and would entertain the largest Tanglewood audiences

to date. In a year plentiful with memorable concerts, these Tanglewood performances

truly stand out.

The July 7th presentation at Tanglewood, featuring the Who as headliners (also

available here in the Convert Vault) was certainly one of the most highly

anticipated of the three concerts presented during the 1970 series. Also on the

bill that night were San Francisco's It's A Beautiful Day and an up and coming

English group Jethro Tull, then in the midst of their first tour of America as

headliners.

1970 was a pivotal year for Jethro Tull, when their relentless roadwork and

perseverance began paying off. The group's third album, Benefit was their most

ambitious and original work to date. In terms of the band's profile in America,

1970 was the year Jethro Tull had truly arrived. The previous album, Stand Up

introduced guitarist Martin Barre to the fold and found the band stretching well

beyond the parameters of the blues-based debut. Both albums conveyed Anderson's

growing confidence as a songwriter and with Barre on board, the group's originality

and style had come into sharper focus. By the time of the Tanglewood concert,

Anderson was becoming a prolific songwriter with increasing range and depth.

The 1970 American tour would find the group expanding to a quintet, with Anderson's

longtime cohort John Evan joining the group on keyboards, further expanding the

sonic palette. With Evan on board, the group's sound became more compelling.

Classical elements now entered the already heady brew of blues, jazz, traditional

English folk, and hard rock that defined the band's sound. Extended soloing, often

featuring an extraordinary amount of spontaneous improvisation, became a major

ingredient on stage. This tour would primarily focus on choice material from the

group's first three albums. The one notable exception was the introduction of a new

song, more scathing than anything Anderson had written before, titled "My God."

Destined for the center position on Aqualung," the most popular album of Tull's

career, this new number wouldn't see a release until the following year, and then

in considerably shorter form.


Written by Alan Bershaw

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