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Jethro Tull were certainly early to the party when it came to developing the idea of prog rock, but how early did Ian ...
Then again, this is the same Ian Anderson who emphatically declared in a 1988 Union-Tribune interview: “I don’t think anyone will remember Jethro Tull, except as an obscure reference in some book.
Jethro Tull may have been too esoteric for many people, but Ian Anderson thought one song was responsible for shaping his ...
Latest Jethro Tull album Curious Ruminant has Ian Anderson reflecting on his hammy stage performances of the past, working with William Shatner and Mikael Åkerfeldt, and how the band could have a ...
Mick Jagger might be one of the biggest rock stars of all time, but Jethro Tull’s lead singer Ian Anderson doesn’t consider his vocal skills to be the most impressive. “It depends what you do,” ...
Fans of Jethro Tull are looking forward to Ian Anderson bringing them up to date on the fate of Gerald Bostock, fictional star of the band's seminal 1972 album 'Thick as a Brick.' Tull frontman ...
In 2013, three decades after Jethro Tull mastermind Ian Anderson released his first solo album, Walk Into Light, he was assembling what would become his sixth outing, Homo Erraticus. That year he ...
Ian Anderson has explained why he decided to release the upcoming album The Zealot Gene as a Jethro Tull album, nearly a decade after winding the band down. Since 2012 he’d been releasing new ...
When it comes to carrying on the music of early British prog-rock band Jethro Tull, lead singer Ian Anderson is arguably the most qualified. Yet when Anderson takes the stage at Musikfest’s ...
Billed as “Ian Anderson presents Jethro Tull 50th Anniversary Tour,” the 2018 concert trek kicks off May 30 in Phoenix and concludes Sept. 11 in New York. All tour dates appear below for the tour.
It’s hard to figure what to make of progressive rock these days – at least the progressive rock of Jethro Tull lead singer Ian Anderson, who performed Sunday at Sands Bethlehem Event Center ...
In April of 1972, Jethro Tull took everything that people either loved or hated about prog-rock and put it in a 44-minute album that was also, incidentally, a 44-minute song: Thick as a Brick.