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Tull News from Ian - August 2005 NOTE: the free "Aqualung Live" CD was not available at Foxwoods as the venue did not approve necessary contractual terms. All other venues will offer the CD.Just back from a quiet week in Switzerland where we visited a cheese factory, drove around the Alps to many a quintessentially Swiss village for raclette, fondue, rosti and – you guessed it – a veggie curry, courtesy of the Kashmir Restaurant in Glion, near Montreux.
Definitive news of the IAN ANDERSON PLAYS THE ORCHESTRAL JETHRO TULL
DVD and CD to be released in the USA October 4th. This was recorded in
December 2004 in Mannheim, Germany with the Neue Philharmonie Frankfurt
Orchestra and features solo, Classical and Tull material from me and
the “Rubbing Elbows” band. It will be released in other countries
around the same time although it winged its way to number three in the
German charts in late June where it was released early to coincide with
the German Tull tour. Live "Aqualung" CD This album was recorded in November 2004 in Washington at the studios
of XM Radio and remixed by me a couple of months ago. XM Radio’s “Then Again Live” is an original XM concept with the intention of re-creating the most important albums of all time. Offering total creative freedom for artists to re-visit their milestone recordings, the idea isn’t to rival the original, but to re-experience it. Session recording engineer: Quinton Roebuck Visit XM Satellite Radio Inc. at www.xmradio.com Visit Jethro Tull at www.jethrotull.com Visit your mother on Sunday. When veteran of Rock Radio programming, Lee Abrams, contacted me regarding having Tull take part in an XM Radio series of re-recordings of classic Rock albums, my natural inclination was to politely humour the fine gent but think of a good excuse to be doing something more urgent that day – like polishing my hair…. But the notion of re-recording the Aqualung album began to exert its charm, especially since some of the songs had never been performed since the days when they were recorded back in January 1971. And, of course, the current band line-up apart from Martin and me, were babes-in-arms; or even more embryonic in the case of bassist, Jon Noyce, when the original was made. And to do this in front of a small invited audience of fans picked from the replies to our web-site invitation gave an added impetus. Having finished up a US tour in Pennsylvania in November 2004 we journeyed
down Doane Perry was bashing the bongos in a specially soundproofed drum
booth but with I remixed the session at my studio without any
special effects – just
capturing the To put this recording on general release as a
full-price, money-grabbing “new” album Ian Anderson, The songs Patter, banter and bunkum 1 AQUALUNG 12 Riffs – another monkey IAN ANDERSON Flute, vocals, acoustic guitar
Give you the general idea? The European dates this Summer were varied and interesting. Keeping up with the setlist changes necessary to provide each audience with something different to the last time in their city is always testing, but going out on any one tour with 50 songs, or so, readily playable after a quick run-through at soundcheck seems to take care of the need to have 20 actually played on the night. Add to that another 100-ish to be considered from time to time and that only leaves about 100 NEVER TO BE PLAYED LIVE! But then I said that about Hymn 43 until last November and Living In The Past up until 1985….. But please don’t ask me to play A Passion Play. Not that bloody saxophone again. US tours and special guest Lucia Lucia Micarelli is the only violinist I have heard who plays in tune, in time and needs her feet washing on a regular basis. (Because she insists on going onstage barefoot – yes, where roadies have walked minutes before right after visiting the lavvy-loo – and we know men don’t aim too straight in their mature years. But did they ever?)
But I agreed to listen to her excellent debut CD entitled “Music From A Farther Room”, watch her appearance on the Josh Groban Live DVD and finally to journey up to London to watch her perform with one of the UK’s best-known Granny Award (sic) artists, Michael Ball. Lucia is a bubbly 21 (according to my maths) but since the gals usually lie about their ages, she may, in fact be 18, or 38 but definitely not my recently acquired 58 years of age. Trained at Juilliard College in NY and then the Manhattan School Of Music, Loosh – as she seems to be known – has been soundly schooled in the world of Classical repertoire, since the age of three. I didn’t pick up the flute until I was 20, so I guess she got a head start on the thing and now has the maturity of tone, expression and – most importantly – intonation you would associate with someone of far more advanced years. Add to that her ability to improvise and develop her music into crossover areas of Rock and Folk-oriented influenced excellence and you get someone who has both the licks and the passion to bring her love of The Who, Zeppelin, Queen and other greats of the Classic Rock era into a new context of inspired violin music. Lucia will join Tull on stage during our show and we will play some of her stuff as well as hear her play some of ours. She is NOT the opening act per se. I will walk on stage at the appointed time stated on your ticket, so don’t even think of showing up 30 minutes late as you will miss 30 minutes of Jethro Tull. Unless, of course, you are already a big Lucia fan in which case this might be the right idea. Check out Lucia at www.luciamicarelli.com. Don’t go to this site and send her naughty e-mails – I already
tried that. She doesn’t read them. Well, not the naughty ones,
anyway. We are off tomorrow to Mexico City to start our Latin American tour, taking in several countries and cities where we have never played before, so that will be a treat. Then back to the UK for me to judge a pet show, grab a rehearsal day to learn and arrange music for my solo appearance in Vienna next January to celebrate the 250 anniversary of Mozart’s birth. I will play (hopefully) a few bits and bobs of Mozart turned into a jazz-styling showing that, in spite of the protests of the purists whose howls of derision and outrage I can almost already hear, that a good tune is a good tune, regardless of context. I, for one, would always much rather hear someone doing a version of one of my pieces turn it into to something quite different and make it their own, rather than doing a clone “cover job”. I feel complimented on such occasion but am hardly impressed by the other attempts to more or less copy the original, and probably, dare I suggest, do it not as well in the process. So, I hazard a hopeful guess that Mozart, Bach, Fauré and the many forgotten worthies from the worlds of Folk music, Church Music might forgive me the presumption of noodling and doodling with their great works and that they might even cast a half-approving eye and ear on the end result.
The new puppy came today. He is a seven-week-old Belgian sheepdog, a Tervueren to be more precise, and can’t believe his luck in having several acres of garden to play in with his new-found friends, Bhajee, Kash, Roghan, TJ, Rupi et al. Shona is the dog person. Me, I have a cat thing going, but new boy (Wa)Sabi, is almost as good as a kitten. Cheerful fellah. One ear has not got its point up yet but any day now. OK, I put the picture up on the site too. What a soppy old fool I am. Speak soon. IA, at home, somewhere in the UK. |
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month > orchestral DVD > live Aqualung CD > new violinist for USA tour > Latin tour > new puppy |
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Track List for Orchestral DVD/CD Eurology |
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