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Minstrel in the Gallery is the eighth studio album by British rock band Jethro Tull, released in September 1975.The album sees the band going in a different direction from their previous work War Child (1974), returning to a blend of electric and acoustic songs, in a manner closer to their early 1970s albums such as Benefit (1970), Aqualung (1971) and Thick as a Brick (1972).
Jethro Tull Box: Released: 26 October 2007; Label: Eagle; Jack in the Green: Live in Germany 1970–1993: Released: 20 May 2008; Label: Eagle Rock Entertainment; Classic Artists: Jethro Tull – Their Fully Authorised Story: Released: 6 March 2009; Label: Blackhill; Live at AVO Session Basel: Released: 2009; Label: Edel; Live at Madison Square ...
Bursting Out is a 1978 live double album by the rock band Jethro Tull. ... A deluxe remixed edition was released June 21, ... "Minstrel in the Gallery" ...
Like their previous album, Minstrel in the Gallery, the band recorded the album in the Maison Rouge Mobile Studio.They recorded "Too Old to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die" and "The Chequered Flag (Dead or Alive)" along with the outtakes "Salamander's Rag Time", "Commercial Traveller" and "Advertising Man (Unfinished backing track)" on 19 and 20 November 1975, "Big Dipper" on 3 January 1976 ...
25th Anniversary Box Set is a 1993 limited edition box set by Jethro Tull. It includes some of the band's best-known compositions from 1969 to 1992, many of them previously unavailable in the versions presented here. It was the second Jethro Tull box-set in five years, the first being the 3 CD/ 5 LP/ 3 Cassette 20 Years of Jethro Tull.
The Best of Jethro Tull – The Anniversary Collection is a greatest hits album by Jethro Tull, released in 1993. [3] It includes some of the band's biggest hits from 1968 to 1991. Track listing
Stormwatch is the twelfth studio album by progressive rock band Jethro Tull, released in September 1979. The album is often considered the last in a trio of folk rock albums released by the band at the end of the 1970s, alongside Songs from the Wood (1977) and Heavy Horses (1978).
[9] George Starostin wrote that it "completely overshadows every other tune on here", calling the song "a rightful Tull classic, starting with a pathetic, but fascinating guitar pattern and featuring truly clever lyrics about the fates of old rockers." [10] Eric Senich of WRKI ranked the song the ninth best Jethro Tull song. [3]