![]() |
|
| ||
The story of the man with the dirty trousersInterview by John "Bo Bo" Bollenberg
It has been a long time since a band as big as Jethro Tull would take the trouble to confront the press in its entirety, even if they enjoined us one by one. After minstrel Anderson had answered us "solo," guitarist Martin Barre and keyboard player Andrew Giddings entered the little room, whilst playing their instruments - Barre on acoustic guitar and Giddings on accordion. Once Anderson saw what was happening, he quickly took the flute that lay in front of him in order to treat us to a short acoustic version of "Bourée." "We hadn’t talked about this," smiled Anderson. "Really this is the very first time something spontaneous like this has happened!" That spontaneous attitude would also be present during the band’s concert where the group would show a very relaxed attitude and loads of typical British humor. But what I would like to know is whether at all Jethro Tull today is a band or a project? "In the 31 years we’ve been busy, a mere 22 people have been a member of Jethro Tull," calculates Anderson in a hurry. "Whenever we should call it a day, then my little mathematical knowledge teaches me we have sufficient people to play a game of football, on a large pitch! When I look at the boys around this table, then I can’t say it concerns a project. Jonathan Noyce, our bass player [born when Aqualung was released], has been the last member to join the band and that’s been five years ago. Doane [Perry] has been with us for 16 years, Andrew 10 years and Martin more than thirty years." Some people use ‘music’ to extra underline a statement. Has Anderson ever done this? "I have always found that I’m a musician and not a preacher. I can’t allow myself to go on stage and tell people what is good and what is wrong. My songs tell stories about everyday life and here and there I will twist the reality a little bit so that the listener might not exactly know how it all fits together. Certain songs are about my wife yet I have to write about it in a mysterious way because when I write too explicit then I’ll have my wife against me. Let’s say that I mainly write about the husband-wife relationship anyway. Also the man-man relationship might be possible, although I have no experience with it, but who knows, it might still happen!" The thought alone makes Anderson laugh like a bad schoolboy who has just succeeded in another prank. But there’s the new CD, and the title Dot Com has, of course, been chosen because of the link with the band’s brand new website www.j-tull.com which, of course, delivers to you all you ever wanted to know about the band and more. "Andrew Giddings is our webmaster and the nice thing is that we started this site around the same time when we began writing the material for our latest album. It’s as if both things were connected in one way or another. The record company thought it was a splendid idea to call the album after the website but not so long ago I found out that some old friends of ours, Marillion, have just released Marillion.com as their new album. This is not the first time that such a ‘coincidence’ occurred. The same thing sort of happened when John Lennon released his Some Time In New York City album. At the moment Jethro Tull is number five in the Billboard 100 where CD-sales through Internet is concerned. The number five band in the world next to big selling artists like Garth Brooks and Shania Twain! Out of personal interest I wanted to know how many sales this meant and we have to thank this fifth place thanks to the sale of … 2000 CDs! Someone like David Bowie swears by Internet and I’m convinced that things will get better within a couple of years, but the way Bowie moves into this new world probably will mean selling … 3000 CDs! Look, record stores will always be there because people simply like to get their hands dirty looking through piles and piles of albums and CDs. If you take a look at the sleeve for the new album up close, you will see the genitals from the figure on the sleeve. Anderson was very surprised that he got a phone call from the States about this. Had he thought about removing these genitals or placing a sticker over them? It makes me think about the first copies of Bowie’s Diamond Dogs on which you could see the penis of the dog. That ‘piece of meat’ was later removed by means of airbrush technique. Anderson nods his head: "Europe has so much more culture than America! Thousands of years ago artists would paint and sculpture their subjects in all of their nude beauty. I was sixteen when, at art school, I had to draw nudes. Sixteen years old and I had to draw vaginas! Today, half of the Internet is filled with porn and probably half of that or even more is coming from the States and now they ask me to remove a ‘dick’ from a cartoon!" When you are so overwhelmed by the sound of the flute like Anderson is, you probably will look for native flutes all over the world in order to include these sounds onto forthcoming albums and compositions. "That’s what I have always done. I bought my very first flute in 1970 when I was about 20 years old. I bought a flute, a mouth organ and an Irish ‘tin whistle,’ all on the very same day. I have always loved acoustic instruments. On the first Jethro Tull album I played mandolin and on the second I used a balalaika. I am 'Mister Unplugged’ in Jethro Tull. It is nice to include more ethnic sounds within the concept of a rock band. It’s OK as long as the rest of the band doesn’t play too loud. A while ago we thought of putting a big fence around Doane Perry’s drumkit in order to save our ears from damage. If you think about what we went through over all these years then it’s a miracle that we’re still alive, let alone can still hear. Sadly, the latter can’t be said of Pete Townshend and Jack Bruce."
"A few weeks ago we played in front of around 10,000 people, but I can’t remember where it was," continues Anderson. "Yet I can remember very well a gig we did in Missoula, a tiny village in Montana, where only about 2.000 people showed up. It’s rather those tiny things which make it all worthwhile and fun to do, like the wallpaper in the dressing room, a beautiful girl in the audience, or the girl who gave Martin her bra." "Unfortunately that was my wife,' says Martin in typical British style!
When we look at contemporary bands such as Yes, Genesis, Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin, we see that all of these bands did at one time in their career release a double studio album during the vinyl age. If CD would have existed then, could it be that albums like Aqualung or Thick As A Brick might have included more music or has the band edited certain tracks or deleted songs altogether in order to fit all the material onto one vinyl disc? "It was more an economical reason more than anything why we never released a double studio album," says Ian, bemused. "We had enough material but the record company just looked at the extra cost like a more expensive sleeve, booklet, etc… so it never happened."
Just before the concert was about to start, someone asked the audience to not smoke in the concert hall because Ian Anderson had some trouble with his throat. The guy next to me kept on smoking his joint and at times I could hardly see the stage. Talk of "Locomotive Breath"! Luckily, the band gave us a well-balanced selection of new and old material including favourites such as "A New Day Yesterday," "Locomotive Breath," "Aqualung" and some vintage stuff from This Was. It was a wonderful concert, not too loud and in perfect balance. Jethro Tull: from beaujolais primeur’* to grand cru classé’* in thirty years. Cheers! ![]() Jethro Tull live, circa the 60's * see your wine encyclopedia for explanation. Discography
| ||
© Copyright 1999, 2000 Progressive World |