- Joined
- Oct 31, 2012
- Messages
- 176
I'm fully in my "why were the better albums done in 5.1, I'll never hear them in Atmos in my lifetime" period.
So you came to Tull relatively late. I guess you’re younger than I am.Living In The Past-Blu-Ray dance. Was my first Tull album with Thick As A Brick.
At 16, free tickets for some hippie band. My first and favourite Tull concert. June 4, 1972So you came to Tull relatively late. I guess you’re younger than I am.
So you were 16 when I was 21.At 16, free tickets for some hippie band. My first and favourite Tull concert. June 4, 1972
Maple Leaf Gardens Toronto, Canada
Thick As A Brick Pt.1/ Flute Solo (incl. God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen, Bourée (fragment))/ Thick As A Brick Pt.1 contd./ News & Weather/ Thick As A Brick Pt.2/ Drum Solo/ '218 Babies'/ Thick As A Brick Pt.2 contd., Cross-Eyed Mary, A New Day Yesterday, Aqualung, Wind-Up/Guitar Solo/Locomotive Breath/Hard-Headed English General, Wind-Up (reprise)
Set lists of Jethro Tull live concerts in 1972, at the Ministry Of Information
Parents first description. +Looked like hippies stormed the stage for Thick As A Brick. I was almost put off by the Jethro Tull name. Heard some Aqualung tracks on FM radio before the concert sold me.So you were 16 when I was 21.
The irony, which you are clearly aware of, is that Ian hated the hippie drug culture and didn’t count himself as one of them.
Of course, all (or most) of their fans back then thought that they were hippies.Parents first description. +Looked like hippies stormed the stage for Thick As A Brick. I was almost put off by the Jethro Tull name. Heard some Aqualung tracks on FM radio before the concert sold me.
Now & then just weirdos.Of course, all (or most) of their fans back then thought that they were hippies.