Tull Recapture the Glory Days
A couple of weeks ago, I saw Jethro Tull at the Royal Festival Hall on the band's 40th Anniversary Tour.
The concert was pretty good - a decent setlist and a lively performance from Ian Anderson and co - but what set this gig apart was the appearance of classic 70s lineup drummer Barrie Barlow who was wheeled out for 'Thick as a Brick' and 'Heavy Horses'.
Prior to this, I'd always tended to think Ian Anderson WAS Tull, and it didn't really matter who else was in the band (this comes from the perspective of someone who got in to the band in the mid-80s, well past the glory years).
But Barlow's drumming was astonishingly good, and lifted those 2 songs from nostalgiac indulgences into something much more vital and exciting. It was a combination of technique and personality - I couldn't keep my eyes off him!
Seeing him gave a little hint of what a great band Tull must have been at its peak.
I wonder if Anderson now regrets the great clearout of 1980 - would Tull be less marginalized if he'd kept faith with Barlow, Palmer and Evan instead of replacing them with a series of competent but comparitively anonymous journeymen?
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Dave Pegg is hardly
Dave Pegg was hardly anonymous!
I agree that Pegg wasn't
I agree that Pegg wasn't 'anonymous', but he joined the band before the 1980 purge.
Barlow was replaced by Mark Craney, and Evan/Palmer was replaced by Eddie Jobson.
Since then, Tull's lineup has included a lot of competent players that have reinforced the idea that, post-1980, Tull has been Anderson + backing band.
Shirley
"Anderson, Barre and backing band"..?
You lucky lad
I posted before that I saw the same tour in St. Albans where Mick Abrahams and Clive Bunker guested, but you're dead right, Barrie Barlow was a key member and I miss him. Mind you, to be fair, I thought he left, Ian didn't chuck him out - he was a close mate of John Glascock who, putting it diplomatically, Ian eased out, mainly because he was suffering from lifestyle exacerbated health problems. So Barrie lost heart and left. Losing John Evan and David Palmer was a great mistake though.
At the Portsmouth gig the singer from a Tull tribute band, who I know slightly, guested for a few numbers - incredible that Ian was up for it. All credit to him!
I saw...
...the Cardiff show and it seems we were just about the only gig that DIDN'T get some sort of celebrity guest or ex-member of Tull. We got some local folk trio whose songs I forgot immediately after hearing them. Tull were great though; thoroughly polished performance which was very entertaining.