Jethro Tull

Jethro Tull - J-Tull Dot Com (1999) [2010, EMI Records]  Music

Posted by jclane at Oct. 26, 2012
Jethro Tull - J-Tull Dot Com (1999) [2010, EMI Records]

Jethro Tull - J-Tull Dot Com (1999) [2010, EMI Records]
EAC Rip | FLAC Image + Cue + Log | 371 MB | Complete Scans | 129 MB
MP3 CBR @320 kbps (LAME 3.99) | Joint Stereo | 143 MB
EMI Records Ltd. | 50999 918095 2 0 | Progressive Rock | RAR 3% Recovery

J-Tull Dot Com is the name of the 20th studio album by the band Jethro Tull. J-Tull Dot Com was released four years after their 1995 album Roots to Branches and continues in the same vein, marrying hard-rock and art-rock with Eastern music influences…

Jethro Tull - Stormwatch (1979) {2004, Remastered, Japan}  Music

Posted by popsakov at Jan. 30, 2025
Jethro Tull - Stormwatch (1979) {2004, Remastered, Japan}

Jethro Tull - Stormwatch (1979) {2004, Remastered, Japan}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 389 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 151 Mb
Covers Included | 00:59:37 | RAR 5% Recovery
Folk Rock, Progressive Rock | Chrysalis / Toshiba-EMI Ltd. #TOCP-67287

Stormwatch is the twelfth studio album by the progressive rock group Jethro Tull, released September 1979. It is considered the last in the trilogy of folk-rock albums by Jethro Tull (although folk music influenced virtually every Tull album to some extent.). Among other subject-matters, the album touches heavily on the problems relating to the environment, oil and money. Stormwatch was notably the last Tull album to feature the "classic" line-up of the 1970s, as drummer Barriemore Barlow and keyboardists John Evan and David Palmer left the band the following year after the end of the Stormwatch tour, while bassist John Glascock died from heart complications during the tour.

Jethro Tull - Stormwatch (1979) Re-Up  Music

Posted by popsakov at May 3, 2023
Jethro Tull - Stormwatch (1979) Re-Up

Jethro Tull - Stormwatch (1979)
EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 269 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 122 Mb
Full Scans | 00:45:35 | RAR 5% Recovery
Folk Rock, Progressive Rock | Chrysalis Records #CDP32 1238-2 | UK

Stormwatch is the twelfth studio album by the progressive rock group Jethro Tull, released September 1979. It is considered the last in the trilogy of folk-rock albums by Jethro Tull (although folk music influenced virtually every Tull album to some extent.). Among other subject-matters, the album touches heavily on the problems relating to the environment, oil and money. Stormwatch was notably the last Tull album to feature the "classic" line-up of the 1970s, as drummer Barriemore Barlow and keyboardists John Evan and David Palmer left the band the following year after the end of the Stormwatch tour, while bassist John Glascock died from heart complications during the tour.

Jethro Tull - RökFlöte (2023) {Blu-Spec CD2, Japan} Updated  Music

Posted by popsakov at June 24, 2023
Jethro Tull - RökFlöte (2023) {Blu-Spec CD2, Japan} Updated

Jethro Tull - RökFlöte (2023) {Blu-Spec CD2, Japan}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 313 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 115 Mb
Full Scans ~ 126 Mb | 00:44:51 | RAR 5% Recovery
Progressive Rock | Sony Records Int'l #SICP-31603

The legendary Jethro Tull return hot on the heels of 2022's UK & German top 10 album The Zealot Gene, with their 23rd studio album RökFlöte. Twelve tracks reminding the world of the iconic sound that the legendary band brought to rock music, recorded with the current Tull line-up of Ian Anderson, David Goodier, John O'Hara, Scott Hammond & Joe Parrish James. RökFlöte - Jethro Tull - The name of the album comes from "Rock Flute" as the original idea was to make an album of mostly instrumental flute music. But eventually Ian Anderson stated that he was drawn to the phrase Ragnarök with "rök" meaning destiny, course, or direction. Ian Anderson would then change "Flute" to "Flöte" to "keep with the spelling".
Jethro Tull - Heavy Horses (1978) {2003, Japanese Reissue, Remastered}

Jethro Tull - Heavy Horses (1978) {2003, Japanese Reissue, Remastered}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 347 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 127 Mb
Scans Included | 00:49:26 | RAR 5% Recovery
Folk Rock, Progressive Rock | Chrysalis / Toshiba-EMI ltd. #TOCP-67186

Jethro Tull's 11th studio album, Heavy Horses, is one of their prettier records, a veritable celebration of English folk music chock-full of gorgeous melodies, briskly played acoustic guitars and mandolins, and Ian Anderson's lilting flute backed by the group in top form. This record is a fairly close cousin to 1977's Songs from the Wood – and was ultimately the hinge-piece and first of an ecologically themed trilogy which concluded with 1979's Stormwatch – except that its songs are decidedly more passionate, delivered with a rough, robust energy that much of Tull's work since Thick as a Brick had been missing. In its lustiness it arguably surpasses even Aqualung.
Jethro Tull - Thick As A Brick (1972/2012/2015) [Official Digital Download 24-bit/96kHz]

Jethro Tull - Thick As A Brick (1972/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time - 43:43 minutes | 944 MB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Front cover
Mixed And Mastered By Steven Wilson for 40th anniversary edition

Jethro Tull's classic 1972 concept album, newly remixed and remastered by Steven Wilson. The album contains a continuous piece of music, split over two sides of an LP record, and is a parody of the concept album genre. The original packaging, designed like a newspaper, claims the album to be a musical adaptation of an epic poem by fictional eight-year-old genius Gerald Bostock, though the lyrics were actually written by the band's frontman, Ian Anderson.
Jethro Tull - Heavy Horses: New Shoes Edition (1978) {2018, 3CD+2DVD Box Set, 40th Anniversary Edition}

Jethro Tull - Heavy Horses: New Shoes Edition (1978) {2018, 3CD+2DVD Box Set, 40th Anniversary Edition}
3CD | EAC Rip | WavPack (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 1,07 Gb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 457 Mb | Full Scans ~ 738 Mb
2DVD-9 | ISO | MPEG-2, NTSC 720x480 (16:9), 5605 kb/s | Audio #1: DD 5.1 (48/16), 448 kb/s
Audio #2: DTS 5.1 Surround (96/24), 1510 kb/s | Audio #3: LPCM 2.0 (96/24), 1024 kb/s | ~ 15,2 Gb | RAR 5% Recovery
Folk Rock, Progressive Rock | Chrysalis Records #0190295757915

Jethro Tull's 11th studio album, Heavy Horses, is one of their prettier records, a veritable celebration of English folk music chock-full of gorgeous melodies, briskly played acoustic guitars and mandolins, and Ian Anderson's lilting flute backed by the group in top form. This record is a fairly close cousin to 1977's Songs from the Wood – and was ultimately the hinge-piece and first of an ecologically themed trilogy which concluded with 1979's Stormwatch – except that its songs are decidedly more passionate, delivered with a rough, robust energy that much of Tull's work since Thick as a Brick had been missing. In its lustiness it arguably surpasses even Aqualung. "No Lullaby" is the signature heavy riff song, a concert version of which opened Bursting Out: Jethro Tull Live recorded that same year. Anderson sings it – and everything else here – with tremendous intensity, as though these might be the last lines he ever gets to voice.
Jethro Tull - Nothing Is Easy: Live At The Isle Of Wight 1970 (2005)

Jethro Tull - Nothing Is Easy: Live At The Isle Of Wight 1970 (2005)
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | MPEG-2 Video, PAL 4:3 (720x576), 25fps, 6995kbps | DD 5.1, 448kbps; DTS 5.1, 768kbps | 80min | 4200Mb
Rock | Eagle EREDV405 | rel: 2005 | covers

Perhaps the most interesting and insightful of the individual films to come out of Murray Lerner's footage shot at the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival, Nothing Is Easy is also the most ambitious. Jumping between the 1970 events and a rather droll-humored Ian Anderson recalling the events from 2004, the film gives a lot more than an excellent account of the band's music and stage presentation of that era. We also get a close-up look at the threats of violence and hooliganism that lay beneath the peace-and-love rhetoric of the later-'60s counterculture, as the band finds itself caught in the midst of a confrontation between festival organizers trying to retake control of one sliver of the venue, and attendees – most of whom crashed the gate – refusing to cooperate and threatening mayhem.
Jethro Tull - Broadsword And The Beast (1982) {1993, Japan 1st Press}

Jethro Tull - Broadsword And The Beast (1982) {1993, Japan 1st Press}
EAC Rip | WavPack (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 232 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 98 Mb
Covers Included | 00:39:01 | RAR 5% Recovery
Progressive Rock, Folk Rock | Chrysalis / Toshiba-EMI #TOCP-7818

The Broadsword and the Beast is the 14th studio album by Jethro Tull, released on 10 April 1982 and according to Ian Anderson in the liner notes of the remastered CD, contains some of Jethro Tull's best music. It mixes electronic sound, provided by Peter-John Vettese (a characteristic that would be explored further on the next album Under Wraps), with acoustic instruments. The album is a cross between the synthesiser sound of the 1980s and the folk-influenced style that Tull had in the previous decade. The Broadsword and the Beast is one of Steve Hackett's favorite albums.

Jethro Tull - Benefit (1970) {Reissue}  Music

Posted by popsakov at Feb. 10, 2024
Jethro Tull - Benefit (1970) {Reissue}

Jethro Tull - Benefit (1970) {Reissue}
EAC Rip | FLAC (Img) + Cue + Log ~ 263 Mb | MP3 CBR320 ~ 113 Mb
Full Scans | 00:42:49 | RAR 5% Recovery
Folk Rock, Progressive Rock | Chrysalis #CDP32 1043-2 | UK

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.