Music Blog

March, the Mad Scientist

This week at Glyn Wiltonโ€™s Mixed Music Bag,
heโ€™s asking us to write about a song in which
the title or a line mentions the current month. 
Hereโ€™s my featured March artists and their song.

Continue reading “March, the Mad Scientist”
Music Blog

Do You Hear What I Hear?

Written for Glynโ€™s Mixed Music Bag #20, where we are asked to write about a song by a group or solo singer beginning with the letter I or J.

The date was January 24, 1969. Jethro Tull stepped on stage at the Fillmore East to play their inaugural performance in the United States. Tull hadnโ€™t yet reached the point of popularity in The States to warrant a headlining gig; they were the opening act for Blood, Sweat and Tears. That’s who we were there to see. When the opening act started playing, I remember turning to Bill and saying โ€œI could be wrong but I think that guyโ€™s playing a flute!โ€ and that was the beginning of my love affair with Jethro Tull.

Even if their long career stalled at the start of the โ€˜70s, Jethro Tull would still go down in rock history for that one crucial thing: they proved that the flute could be a killer R&R instrument. Front man Ian Anderson has wielded the instrument โ€“ a favorite among middle-school-band girls and wandering minstrels for almost a thousand years โ€“ like a madman onstage, aggressively blowing solos usually reserved for guitars or saxophones. But paired with the bandโ€™s era-spanning brand of progressive folk music โ€“ expertly displayed on 1971โ€™s breakthrough Aqualung album โ€“ the flute has become a weapon of mass destruction in Andersonโ€™s hands. Despite the many lineup changes the band has gone through over the years, Jethro Tullโ€™s records have rarely diverted from their ambitious paths. The group infamously won the first-ever Hard Rock/Metal Grammy in 1989. So there!

The track โ€œAqualungโ€ is a story of homelessness and how society deals with it. Ian Anderson said his wife took photos of the homeless and showed them to him.  Many of the lyrics describe actual homeless men.  His wife also wrote some lyrics from the photos. Anderson went on to say โ€œAqualungโ€ is a โ€œguilt-ridden song of confusion about how you deal with beggars, the homeless and our reaction of guilt, distaste, awkwardness, all these things that we feel when weโ€™re confronted with the reality of the situation. You see someone whoโ€™s clearly in desperate need of some help, whether itโ€™s a few coins or the contents of your wallet, and you blank them out. The more you live in that business-driven, commercially-driven lifestyle, you can just cease to see them.โ€

Here’s a bit of history regarding the name of the album/song. An Aqualung is a portable breathing setup for divers (think scuba gear). Andersonโ€™s photos showed a homeless man with breathing problems and the name โ€œAqualungโ€ came to him. It turns out that Aqualung was a brand name for the deep sea breathing system in a TV show Anderson liked to watch โ€“ Sea Hunt.  In a 2019 interview, Ian Anderson said, โ€œThey tried to sue the hell out of us, the Aqualung Corporation of North America. We apologized profusely and said, โ€˜Sorry, we didnโ€™t know. We thought ALL underwater breathing apparatus were called Aqualungs because itโ€™s so famous the world over.โ€™ It was an honest mistake. I think they were flattered by the fact that we thought they were the one and only kind of company doing that stuff. They decided not to sue us after all.โ€ Great story!

Aqualung” was never released as a single simply because itโ€™s too long. Radio at the time was sharply divided between AM, which played the 3-minute pop hits, and FM, where they played what was called deep cuts. The album Aqualung is Jethro Tull’s best-selling with more than seven million units worldwide. It was generally well-received critically and has been included on several music magazines’ best-of lists. 

From 1971, this is โ€œAqualungโ€ by Jethro Tull, from the album of the same name..

And this is Ian Anderson’s Flute Solo from 1976 in Tampa, Florida

Big thanks to Glyn for hosting Mixed Music Bag every week.

Thanks for stopping by and hanging with me today.

See you on the flip side. ๐Ÿ˜Ž

NARยฉ2024

All text, graphics and videos are copyright for The Sicilian Storyteller, The Elephantโ€™s Trunk and The Rhythm Section and are not for use by anyone without permission. NARยฉ2017-present.