Jethro Tull – 20 Years Of Jethro Tull

Jethro Tull - The Originals (1998) [3CD Box Set]  Music

Posted by v3122 at Sept. 4, 2021
Jethro Tull - The Originals (1998) [3CD Box Set]

Jethro Tull - The Originals (1998)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
3CD | EMI, CDOMB 021 | ~ 684 or 284 Mb | Scans(600dpi, jpg) -> 62 Mb
Progressive Rock

While audiophile editions of Thick as a Brick, Aqualung, Living in the Past, and A Passion Play are easily obtainable, Tull's very earliest albums have languished in substandard editions on CD for ten years. This triple-CD box from England, part of EMI's 100th Anniversary reissue series, rectifies the problem, featuring newly remastered versions of This Was, Stand Up, and Benefit, each packaged in a miniature re-creation of the original LP sleeve…
Jethro Tull: Albums Collection. Part 3 (1978-2007) [Live Albums] Re-up

Jethro Tull: Albums Collection. Part 3 (1978-2007)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
7CD | Label: Various | ~ 2616 or 1137 Mb | Artwork(jpg) -> 252 Mb
Rock / Progressive Rock / Progressive Folk Rock

Jethro Tull was a unique phenomenon in popular music history. Their mix of hard rock; folk melodies; blues licks; surreal, impossibly dense lyrics; and overall profundity defied easy analysis, but that didn't dissuade fans from giving them 11 gold and five platinum albums…

Jethro Tull - This Was (1968) {1993, Japan 1st Press}  Music

Posted by popsakov at Feb. 24, 2024
Jethro Tull - This Was (1968) {1993, Japan 1st Press}

Jethro Tull - This Was (1968) {1993, Japan 1st Press}
EAC Rip | WavPack (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 194 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 96 Mb
Covers Included | 00:38:02 | RAR 5% Recovery
Art Rock, Progressive Rock, Blues Rock, Folk Rock | Chrysalis / Toshiba-EMI Ltd. #TOCP-7813

Jethro Tull was very much a blues band on their debut album, vaguely reminiscent of the Graham Bond Organization only more cohesive, and with greater commercial sense. The revelations about the group's roots on This Was – which was recorded during the summer of 1968 – can be astonishing, even 30 years after the fact. Original lead guitarist Mick Abrahams contributed to the songwriting and the singing, and his presence as a serious bluesman is felt throughout, often for the better: "Some Day the Sun Won't Shine for You," an Ian Anderson original that could just as easily be credited to Big Bill Broonzy or Robert Johnson; "Cat's Squirrel," Abrahams' big showcase, where he ventures into Eric Clapton territory; and "It's Breaking Me Up," which also features some pretty hot guitar from Abrahams.

Jethro Tull's Ian Anderson - TAAB2 (2012)  Music

Posted by popsakov at June 11, 2023
Jethro Tull's Ian Anderson - TAAB2 (2012)

Jethro Tull's Ian Anderson - TAAB2 (2012)
EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 304 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 130 Mb
Full Scans ~ 76 Mb | 00:53:45 | RAR 5% Recovery
Progressive Rock, Folk Rock | Chrysalis / EMI #5099963872620

Released in 2012, Thick as a Brick 2, abbreviated TAAB 2 and subtitled Whatever Happened to Gerald Bostock? is the fifth studio album by Ian Anderson, and is a follow-up of Thick as a Brick, Jethro Tull’s highly acclaimed 1972 album. Thick As A Brick 2 focuses on Gerald Bostock, the fictional boy genius author of the original album, forty years later. “I wonder what the eight-year-old Gerald Bostock would be doing today. Would the fabled newspaper still exist?” – Ian Anderson. The follow-up album presents five divergent, hypothetical life stories for Gerald Bostock, including a greedy investment banker, a homosexual homeless man, a soldier in the Afghan War, a sanctimonious evangelist preacher, and a most ordinary man who (married and childless) runs a corner store; by the end of the album, however, all five possibilities seem to converge in a similar concluding moment of gloomy or pitiful solitude. In March 2012, to follow the style of the mock-newspaper cover (The St Cleve Chronicle and Linwell Advertiser) of the original Thick as a Brick album, an online newspaper was set up, simply titled St Cleve.

Jethro Tull - Live: Bursting Out (1978) {2004, Remastered}  Music

Posted by popsakov at Feb. 22, 2023
Jethro Tull - Live: Bursting Out (1978) {2004, Remastered}

Jethro Tull - Live: Bursting Out (1978) {2004, Remastered}
2CD | EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 651 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 257 Mb
Full Scans | 00:47:27 + 00:46:13 | RAR 5% Recovery
Progressive Rock, Art Rock, Folk Rock, Classic Rock | Chrysalis #7243 593396 2 7

Released just as punk was taking hold on the public's imagination in America and making groups like Jethro Tull seem like dinosaurs on their way to extinction, Bursting Out became a seemingly perpetual denizen of the cutout bins for years afterward. However, it happened to be a good album, a more-than-decent capturing of a live Tull concert from Europe. The sound is remarkably good, given the group's arena rock status at the time, and the repertoire is a solid representation of the group's history, going all the way back to "A New Day Yesterday" from their second album and up through 1978's Heavy Horses, with stops along the way for "Bouree," "Aqualung," "Locomotive Breath," "Cross-Eyed Mary," and a compact reprise of Thick as a Brick. Some of these tracks work better than others – the tendency here is to play loud and hard, and sometimes that just doesn't translate well on record; seeing "Locomotive Breath" probably worked better than hearing it.
Jethro Tull - Benefit (1970) {2001, Remastered With Bonus Tracks}

Jethro Tull - Benefit (1970) {2001, Remastered With Bonus Tracks}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 389 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 157 Mb
Full Scans | 00:54:54 | RAR 5% Recovery
Folk Rock, Progressive Rock | Chrysalis #7243 5 35457 2 7 | EU

Benefit was the album on which the Jethro Tull sound solidified around folk music, abandoning blues entirely. Beginning with the opening number, "With You There to Help Me," Anderson adopts his now-familiar, slightly mournful folksinger/sage persona, with a rather sardonic outlook on life and the world; his acoustic guitar carries the melody, joined by Martin Barre's electric instrument for the crescendos. This would be the model for much of the material on Aqualung and especially Thick as a Brick, although the acoustic/electric pairing would be executed more effectively on those albums. Here the acoustic and electric instruments are merged somewhat better than they were on Stand Up (on which it sometimes seemed like Barre's solos were being played in a wholly different venue), and as needed, the electric guitars carry the melodies better than on previous albums.
Jethro Tull - This Was: The 50th Anniversary Edition (1968/2018) *PROPER*

Jethro Tull - This Was: The 50th Anniversary Edition (1968/2018)
3CD | EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 1,01 Gb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 490 Mb
Full Scans ~ 651 Mb | 03:14:27 | RAR 5% Recovery
Art Rock, Progressive Rock, Blues Rock, Folk Rock | Chrysalis #0190295611484

Jethro Tull was very much a blues band on their debut album, vaguely reminiscent of the Graham Bond Organization only more cohesive, and with greater commercial sense. The revelations about the group's roots on This Was – which was recorded during the summer of 1968 – can be astonishing, even 30 years after the fact. Original lead guitarist Mick Abrahams contributed to the songwriting and the singing, and his presence as a serious bluesman is felt throughout, often for the better: "Some Day the Sun Won't Shine for You," an Ian Anderson original that could just as easily be credited to Big Bill Broonzy or Robert Johnson; "Cat's Squirrel," Abrahams' big showcase, where he ventures into Eric Clapton territory; and "It's Breaking Me Up," which also features some pretty hot guitar from Abrahams.
Jethro Tull - 25th Anniversary Box Set [4CD Box Set] (1993) (Repost)

Jethro Tull - 25th Anniversary Box Set [4CD Box Set] (1993)
EAC Rip | FLAC (image+.cue+log) - 1,75 GB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps (LAME 3.93) - 673 MB | Covers - 180 MB
Genre: Progressive Rock | RAR 3% Rec. | Label: Chrysalis Records (0946 3 26005 2 3)

Where the first Jethro Tull box five years earlier, 20 Years of Jethro Tull, mostly traded on radio broadcast performances and rarities, a few outtakes, and a remastered collection of key songs, 25th Anniversary Boxed Set benefits from a more thorough raid on the vaults that has yielded up one essential addition to any Jethro Tull collection. Disc two is the centerpiece of the set, containing an additional hour of the group's November 4, 1970 concert at Carnegie Hall in New York (two pieces were previously issued on Living in the Past). Preserved on a 16-track master tape, this benefit show for the drug rehabilitation program Phoenix House was the group's most prominent American gig up to that time. It's a good representation of what the band sounded like in its second incarnation, when they were still establishing themselves outside of England…
Jethro Tull - Benefit: The 50th Anniversary Enhanced Edition (1970) {2021, Box Set, Remastered}

Jethro Tull - Benefit: The 50th Anniversary Enhanced Edition (1970) {2021, Box Set, Remastered}
4CD | EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 1,65 Gb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 801 Mb
Covers Included | 04:58:26 | RAR 5% Recovery
Folk Rock, Progressive Rock, Art Rock | Chrysalis #0190295201616

Jethro Tull’s 1970 classic Benefit will be celebrated in a brand-new 4CD/2DVD set, featuring remixes by Steven Wilson, an abundance of previously unreleased material, packaged within a deluxe hardback book, containing 100 pages of commentary from numerous contributors alongside hordes of images of the band creating and performing their first million-selling album. Benefit (The 50th Anniversary Enhanced Edition) will be out on 5th November. Following the successes This Was (1968) and Stand Up (1969), Jethro Tull returned in 1970 with their third studio album in as many years. Benefit (The 50th Anniversary Enhanced Edition) contains a copious amount of expanded material, building upon the 2013 Steven Wilson remixes. CD3 contains a previously unreleased Steven Wilson remix of Jethro Tull performing at Tanglewood in 1970. Further to that, CD4 contains a newly remastered version of a concert at The Aragon Ballroom in 1970 in mono.
Jethro Tull - 25th Anniversary Boxed Set (1993) [4CD Box Set]

Jethro Tull - 25th Anniversary Boxed Set (1993)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
Chrysalis, 0946 3 26005 2 3 | ~ 1756 or 763 Mb | Scans(jpg) -> 160 Mb
Progressive Rock

Where the first Jethro Tull box five years earlier, 20 Years of Jethro Tull, mostly traded on radio broadcast performances and rarities, a few outtakes, and a remastered collection of key songs, 25th Anniversary Boxed Set benefits from a more thorough raid on the vaults that has yielded up one essential addition to any Jethro Tull collection. Disc two is the centerpiece of the set, containing an additional hour of the group's November 4, 1970 concert at Carnegie Hall in New York (two pieces were previously issued on Living in the Past). Preserved on a 16-track master tape, this benefit show for the drug rehabilitation program Phoenix House was the group's most prominent American gig up to that time…