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Jethro Tull Concert Tickets

Jethro Tull is a progressive rock / folk rock band which formed in Blackpool, Lancashire, England in 1967. Their music is marked by the initially soulful and bluesy, and later expressively idiosyncratic, vocal style and unique lead flute work of frontman Ian Anderson; and by unusual and often complex song construction. Their music, though starting with blues rock with an experimental flavour, has incorporated elements of classical and celtic folk music, as well as art rock and alternative rock. Check our available Jethro Tull concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Jethro Tull Reviews

Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Does Steven Wilson eversleep? The Porcupine Treeoverlord is the most soughtafterin the business when itcomes to deftly unstitchingcherished old masters andpainstakingly remixing themfor 5.1 Surround Sound andsexier stereo. The latest albumto benefit - if you will - fromhis ministrations is the 1970third album by Jethro Tull,herein presented with a bonusCD of associated recordings(Sweet Dream, The Witch'sPromise, Teacher, et al) anda DVD containing all the 5.1 audiophile gubbins...
- recordcollectormag.com
Showing Tull playing and IanAnderson hopping, skippingand jumping "around theworld" was never going toclock in at anything less thanfour discs - and even so,choosing what made the cutmust have been tricky.Running chronologically, fromtheir imperious performanceat the now-legendary Isle OfWight Festival of 1970 toa gig in Lugano, Switzerlandin 2005, this is a career-spanningdip into Tull asa mostly consistent live draw.
- recordcollectormag.com
Let's all hum it together - the marvelous opening guitar riff to Aqualung's epic title track is undoubtedly one of the most recognizable in the history of rock music. And with good reason: In the 40 years that have passed since the release of Jethro Tull's classic fourth album, it's difficult to pinpoint a melody more imaginative, more capable of transporting a listener to another world - even if this particular universe conjured by Aqualung's flute-driven folk-prog is filled with gritty,...
- www.americansongwriter.com
Forty years after the release of Thick As A Brick, it's difficult to comprehend why the album should have proved so very divisive. Mind you, that dividing line couldn't have been clearer: garlands from exultant fans on one side, critical flak from cynical music journos on the other. Ian Anderson's prickly, prog-parodying motives may have been largely misunderstood by the gentlemen of the press - but it seems just as likely that the album contained simply too much information to process for mere...
- recordcollectormag.com
Accustomed as we are to defining Jethro Tull as a dependably polished eclectic-prog franchise, it's easy to forget the raffish charm and sheer brute force which made the early Tull such a riveting live draw. Salvo's iteration of the oft-reissued Nothing Is Easy memorialises the band's 1970 Isle Of Wight Festival appearance on CD and DVD together in one package for the first time - and a pugnacious pearl it is...
- recordcollectormag.com
Sound: The sound is very unique. Ian Smith (Vocals, Acoustic Guitars, Flute) was way ahead of his time. This 1971 album combines elements of Hard Rock (obvious in Aqualung), folk (the flute is an active instrument in Jethro Tull. Check out Mother Goose and other songs to see what I mean), blues (alot of the solos have some spicy blues licks in them) and progressive rock. Once again, Jethro Tull were way ahead of their time, creating a sound that is all their own...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Whatever one's feelings about progressive rock, Jethro Tull's Aqualung is a rare album that remains at once part of, and above, the fray. It is, to be certain, a cornerstone of the then-nascent prog-rock canon, but it did--and does--exist wholly on its own terms as a great rock album, period. One of the many reasons prog-rock is controversial, and taken less-than-seriously by the so-called serious critics, is because fairly or not it frequently gets associated with sci-fi and fantasy...
- www.popmatters.com
You've already got Aqualung, right? The 1971 album on which Jethro Tull fulfilled their early promise and struck the perfect balance between agile, sparky musicianship and literate but heartfelt songcraft that addressed honest-to-goodness issues such as homelessness, religion and infirmity? If you're undecided as to whether you should buy it yet again, EMI has pulled out every stop known to mankind for the album's 40th anniversary...
- www.recordcollectormag.com
Well to be honest, out of the "Big Prog Six" (Yes, Genesis, Tull, ELP, Crimson, Floyd), Jethro Tull is a band that took a while for me. Only now after all these years am I exploring more fully and finally purchasing the back catalog from the band owning only Aqualung and Thick As a Brick for years. Don't know what took me so long as JT has so many great albums in their long career. I am having a great time with my new discoveries, however...
- www.prognaut.com
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