For a man of Ian's talents he is very modest.......he always give a credit where credit is due.....his acoustic guitar skills are way underrated......he is a great musician an incredible songwriter and performer etc. Etc.......
Both Ian Anderson and Ray Thomas were the two biggest influences when I learned to play the flute in grade school! I learned all their songs in highschool and could play them all by ear. Their methods of playing and flute artistry are what drew me in; I was hooked! Where would rock and roll be without some of these flute tooting magicians? JT and the Moodies are my favorite bands. ❤
What a humble classy interview. My most memorable concert was Jethro Tull in 1980 at the St. Paul Civic Center (Minnesota). During Bungle in the Jungle my best friend and I ran to the very front of the stage. Ian playing 3-6 feet away. That was awesome.
Ian has come into his own. I've always been a huge fan even from his earliest days, but back then he was just this gangly kid with that crazed insane look in his eyes, but now age has mellowed him and he's like the old godfather of folk rock. Like a fine wine, he just keeps getting better and better.
Freddy the Freeloader: Thank you for your revelations Freddy! Unfortunately he doesn't keep getting better and better. Arthritis means his playing has vastly deteriorated. And his voice has been shot away for the past 2 decades!
To answer some questions here. Personally I think they shot their wad with Thick as a Brick but that doesn't mean that Ian never wrote another good song or they put out another good lp. The two exceptions(for myself)are Songs From the Wood and Crest of a Knave. Ian's voice changed as a result of a bad bacterial infection(strep throat)he got in 1986. It left scare tissue on his vocal chords that caused his voice to sound like that.
Ian is always a great listen! Honest, and sincere without falsely being humble. There is always thought behind his answers in interviews. A most intelligent and interesting legend! Thanks for the post!
My fave as well. He put the flute and 5:4 meter into prog rock and no one has tried to replicate it. "Living in the Past" as far as I'm concerned is Ian Anderson's magnum opus.
Jethro tull and gentle giant..1972...the greatest show on earth.. Seeing over 200 bands throughout the years..still a concert stamped in my memory..awesome
I was at the Fillmore West SF, in 69 Jethro Tull Concert and watching Ian Anderson playing the flute standing and dancing around on one leg, a good Trip it was.
y'know a lot of people go on and on about ian's flute work, but as much as i love that, i've always been more impressed his way of playing acoustic guitar. he has a very good instinct towards strum patterns.
My brother listened to JT in the 70's when were in middle school. That was me first introduction to them. I loved many bands and solo artists. Ian didn't need to worry about not having guitar be the lead instrument in a band and I'm glad he chucked the idea of getting rid of it; had he chosen guitar to be like everyone else we couldn't have all those great songs playing his flute. He was meant to play the flute. Look at all the songs he did that we wouldn't have if he hadn't picked up that magical musical wand creating alot of masterpieces that no one else could do. I love the Moody Blues too for a little over 45 years. Both groups incredibly gifted bands that created some of the best music of my era. Aren't you glad they chose to be musicians and not lawyers or car salesmen? I am!!!
Anderson is very humble. The music he created in the early 70's is as wonderful as anything recorded in that era. Benefit, Thick as a Brick, and Aqualung are among the best albums ever released.
I have to hand it to Ian, during my musically formative years ... teenage to young adult that man was out there putting out consistently great albums with all good songs at a rate of more than 1 per year for over a decade. I loved going to the record store ... yes, vinyl records, and seeing a new Jethro Tull album cover that I had never seen before and snatching it right up. There was no internet, or magazines for me anyway, that is how I found out about a new album, or occasionally I would hear a song on the radio and know it was something off the new Jethro Tull. Something different and interesting all the time.
Been watching and listening to Ian play with Gary Brooker " A whiter Shade of Pale. I've always loved this song, but with Ian's flute, can't stop listening now😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘
The flute was Ray Thomas' signature and was essentially to so many of the Moody Blues' compositions; but when I first heard Jethro Tull's "Living in the Past" I was just floored -- not just the flute as an integral lead instrument in a rock song but a flute in a rock song with a 5:4 time signature. Just sheer genius and I still think it was Jethro Tull's best work -- maybe not their magnum opus but without question their most imaginative and magnificent composition, arrangement and performance.
@@handebarlas6248 True that; I'm always reminded of the old staples, though -- Agualung, Thick as a Brick, Bouree, etc. Even "Bungle in the Jungle," which was really JT's only venture into pop music at the time -- but you're right, just like ELP and Yes et al, theirs is a treasure trove of multi-faceted talent and genius.
@@briane173 I feel more than disappointed when people are not ready to appreciate the complete work of an artist. People will have different favourites of course-that is just normal. However Tull continued to make incredibly great music for decades. How can somebody like you-who clearly likes LITP and the others you mention here- which are very close to my heart as well- not appreciate Songs from the Wood or Budapest or Dark Ages to give just a few examples?? I am afraid that sounds a bit too restricted to me with all due respect.
Great interview.. I've always been very much into both bands. When I saw the Moody Blues many years ago, many young people in the audience were saying: "They did *that?"*
Beyond Wrong !!!!!He took his style from THE ABSOLUTE GREATEST.....RAHSAAN ROLAND KIRK !!!!!! Anderson couldn't play in the same zip code. Check it out !!!
@@brucemassey260Mate, I think you missed the part about best ROCK flute player. Roland Kirk was insanely gifted and unquestionably far more technically skilled than Ian Anderson. I'm sure Anderson himself would agree with that. However, a rock player he was not.
Very gracious comments from Ian . A true gent . But what set the Moodies apart from everyone else , is their acid experiences and guidance therein ! When you were REALLY tripped out and far out there , there were none ! who could take you up there , show you the sights , and then bring you back home , down to earth , as safely and lovingly as the Moodies . Gawd bless you lads , for being there with us , and all the fun loving you showed us . Amen .
Forty-Seven years ago I got into two groups. A to Z. Anderson and Zappa. Get to see Dweezil next week in Dallas and hopefully Ian again sometime this year. The two greatest composers of last century. And Ian's guitar playing is alright to me.
Thank you very much for posting this. As usual Ian gives clear answers to questions. And he is modest too. Actually perhaps a bit too modest. Then again I am sure he knows better.
Ian Anderson is such a wonderful, beautiful, thoughtful, intelligent person, and a real gentleman. I wonder what he thinks of the french horn in Lucifer's Friend?
I remember my bartender was playing a cd back in 92 and every song had me saying, "I remember this song too." I was reconizing every song being played. When I asked my bartender who it was, he said "Sweet." I was like, I remember that band.
My sister was awesome with the flute; I have always loved JT and the Moody Blues. I have also come to really appreciate the Native American Flute as Russ Freeman (the Rippingtons, along with the sound of an Eagle) turned me on to. I totally understand what Ian is saying about the lack of the flute in more music...it really adds a new layer to music
I was glad to hear that he did not claim to 'invent' using the vocalizations with playing flute, & acknowledge that it was already being done in jazz & in particular Roland Kirk, who I had heard in the past was supposedly an influence on Ian.
Surely both are good; great even. Are you ANOTHER of the countless multitudes that soured on Layla because of over-playing on the radio? I don't understand how such a monumentally great song has got so many distractors. It is a great, emotional, and pure work of genius. I will always give credit where it's due-- and Layla deserves any and all accolades it does get.
He mentions, but only in passing, the Dutch band Focus. Thijs van Leer and new Focus line ups are still going in 2018. Brilliant usage of flute in rock. Ian seems to have ignored their greatness.
He mentioned them, therefore he did not ignore them. Focus were around at the same time as Jethro Tull and probably Focus were not a big influence on Ian.
yeah, Focus was not that popular or big, but they had a lot of albums and a lot of the music was pretty good. I think it was a little too European for an American audience ... except for the wildly uncharacteristic Hocus Pocus by Focus with the flute, whistling and yodeling. I had several of their albums and always loved them.
I think Ian plays a 'nice' flute, as well. Just check out his flute in the performance with J. Hayward in 'Nights'. Or Reason for Waiting. So elegant and wistful.
Hi Ian I just want to pay tribute to the best and most significant musician and human being I have followed through time. Unfortunately, my record collection was stolen a few years ago, and will be very expensive to get back. Wish You all Well
To answer Ian - Why no player has used the flute as a lead instrument in rock - They would always be compared to you! BTW, I'm a big Jethro Tull fan (mostly the early stuff).
Just to clarify, Peter Gabriel most certainly did play the flute on record and live (Supper's Ready, I Know What I Like, Battle of Epping Forest, Firth of Fifth).
I'd love to hoist a pint or two with Mr. Anderson. Life in the rearview mirror has a clarity that looking out the side window at the scenery rushing by does not.
I always thought a clarinet in a rock band would be exciting. I was laughed at & I knew some clarinet players who would've given it a shot. But none of the other musicians took it seriously. That is until I heard Italian rock singer Eugenio Finardi inject a clarinet solo into a Chuck Berry subdued type rock song he wrote called "Corinna," back in the mid-'80s. (His all-English LP "Secret Streets"). Wow...it worked, made the song have atmosphere. But only a European artist would think in these musical terms. I did feel somewhat justified. (The song is on TH-cam).
I loved his self-effacing approach to this interview, but I'm surprised he completely overlooked one other of the old boys of flute playing, namely the late great Ian McDonald of King Crimson who made a feature of the flute. Listen to 'I Talk to the WInd' on 'In the Court of the Crimson King'. It's the loveliest and most proficient exemplar of the flute one could hope to hear. Speaking of King Crimson, a slightly later manifestation of the group included Mel Collins on flute.
I hope Ian wouldn’t be disappointed to hear that the flute, per se, was not nearly so important as the groundbreaking music of which it was a part. Jethro Tull was a welcome relief from the cult of personality so prevalent in rock music at the time. They were an ensemble, performing superb arrangements of very compelling music. It was eye-opening then and remains so to this day.
That "rather attractive young lady flute player" Ian refers to at 7:20 was likely an American named Norda Mullen, who I'm fairly certain I saw in the Moodies' lineup at a Stateside concert nearly 20 years ago. What I'm less certain about was a second woman in that same lineup, who sang and effectively hit the notes that neither Justin Hayward nor John Lodge could. (All worked out seamlessly, and the concert was splendid from start through encores.) As for Ian stepping in for Ray, their voices couldn't be more different, but the flute solo would've been impeccable. Now, what Ian does with the flute has long been and remains in a league of its own, though the "difficult to fit in" flute CAN add much to anything. Finally, Ian McDonald of King Crimson, anyone?
Heh--"dinky-donky music" Peter Gabriel did indeed play the damn thing (flute) when he was in Genesis. By the 80s, it was gone (seemingly he hung it up after moving from playing for audiences who did nothing but clap politely to those who cheered as well), but in the early days of Genesis in the 60s and early 70s, he certainly played it...
What I like about flute, or woodwind instruments like a Sax, or a Harmonica is you don't have to lug an amp around with you if you want to play it on the streets. The acoustic guitar is pretty big and bulky and people look at you like you are horrible at it when you are trying to tune it in public.
To have thought, wrote, & sung Like ''The Tull'' well now... ''There are artists who'll wrest us up & place us into themselves; into their works. These are the very One's who'll continue wresting us up... Far and beyond their appointed rests in peace; period!'' -gilpin 42621
One flute player he forgot to mention was none other than Martin Barre, the long-time Tull guitarist. Ian says of himself that he couldn't play "nicely", that's why they had Barre play flute on the tune "Reasons for Waiting" on the Stand Up album--"nice", melodic playing on a ballad. I think Ian also downplays the Roland Kirk influence on his playing. He says that singing along with a solo was "as old as the hills" but Kirk was the one who developed singing into a flute and Ian's early playing sounds a lot like Kirk--there's even a Roland Kirk song ("Serenade to a Cuckoo") on the group's first album, "This Was". Ian developed his own style of doing it as he went along, but I don't see anything wrong with acknowledging Kirk's innovations and influence.
Jude F: Absolutely correct. Anderson's style is ripped lock stock and barrel from Roland Kirk! Except Kirk could play three instruments at once! Kirk also developed the circular breathing technique. Having said that, I've always had a soft spot for Jethro Tull ever since bumping in to them at a Hyde Park Free Concert. I think they were bottom of the bill to The Pretty Things!
It's not a matter of who plays the flute better or who has began first. Nobody plays flute as Anderson does. His approach is extremely expressive. Btw here we are in front of a great music composer, not only a flute player. Btw Clapton ain't so much better than Anderson in playing guitar. Ian'guitar approach is simply unique and amazing.
Yeah, it is really superhuman how much good, thoughtful, clever and unique music Ian Anderson put out. I remember as a teen seeing more than an album of great stuff every year for over 10 years. First album I got was Aqualung, and then I discovered there were earlier albums. By the time I saved up to get Benefit Thick As A Brick was out, and then I got Stand Up and This Was and poof! Living in the Past ... and Passion Play. and on and on. Amazing that anyone could do that.
Nice nod to the Moody Blues, but Ian is a brilliant, insanely hard working songwriter and performer - legend
For a man of Ian's talents he is very modest.......he always give a credit where credit is due.....his acoustic guitar skills are way underrated......he is a great musician an incredible songwriter and performer etc. Etc.......
Great acoustic-guitar player. The last couple of times I’ve seen him, however, he played not guitar at all.
Both Ian Anderson and Ray Thomas were the two biggest influences when I learned to play the flute in grade school! I learned all their songs in highschool and could play them all by ear. Their methods of playing and flute artistry are what drew me in; I was hooked! Where would rock and roll be without some of these flute tooting magicians? JT and the Moodies are my favorite bands. ❤
Jethro Tull and The Moody Blues from 1967 to 1972 were amazing
I enjoy listening to a person of genius. His speech illustrates that.
INDEED.
And yet, his fantastic guitar playing and his beautiful melody's influence me to play guitar in my 60's.
Anderson is the most complete musician ever. My hats off to you Ian
Same here.
Same here.
Musician, businessman, entrepreneur, et all ....
The renaissance sound of Jethro Tull is what always kind of appealed to me.
What a humble classy interview. My most memorable concert was Jethro Tull in 1980 at the St. Paul Civic Center (Minnesota). During Bungle in the Jungle my best friend and I ran to the very front of the stage. Ian playing 3-6 feet away. That was awesome.
Ian has come into his own. I've always been a huge fan even from his earliest days, but back then he was just this gangly kid with that crazed insane look in his eyes, but now age has mellowed him and he's like the old godfather of folk rock. Like a fine wine, he just keeps getting better and better.
Freddy the Freeloader: Thank you for your revelations Freddy! Unfortunately he doesn't keep getting better and better. Arthritis means his playing has vastly deteriorated. And his voice has been shot away for the past 2 decades!
@@andythomas706 Make that 3+ decades, unfortunately. And the last 10 years have seen his singing get even worse. Instrumentally, still great.
To answer some questions here. Personally I think they shot their wad with Thick as a Brick but that doesn't mean that Ian never wrote another good song or they put out another good lp. The two exceptions(for myself)are Songs From the Wood and Crest of a Knave.
Ian's voice changed as a result of a bad bacterial infection(strep throat)he got in 1986. It left scare tissue on his vocal chords that caused his voice to sound like that.
Ehmm no, he’s way beyond his prime unfortunately...
I never get tired of listening to Tull
His respectful attitude is refreshing
Ian is always a great listen! Honest, and sincere without falsely being humble. There is always thought behind his answers in interviews. A most intelligent and interesting legend!
Thanks for the post!
He's been saying almost the same thing on and off stage for 50 years now.
Marshal Tucker Band is another great band that uses the flute in their music.
true ... once in a while
and Heart
Love. Love. Love
Heard it in A Love Song tho. What a tune.
Great interview. Always love hearing him speak.
First time I’ve heard Ian be humble and give praise to other of his piers 👍🏻
Nice 👍🏻
Ian has always been humble, but with a very dry and rebelious sense of humour, he was often misinterpetrad, and still is by many.
He looks really good! I love Anderson!😍 My Fav JT tune? "Living In the Past"... Great interview and very endearing words for Ray & Moody's!
My fave as well. He put the flute and 5:4 meter into prog rock and no one has tried to replicate it. "Living in the Past" as far as I'm concerned is Ian Anderson's magnum opus.
Jethro tull and gentle giant..1972...the greatest show on earth..
Seeing over 200 bands throughout the years..still a concert stamped in my memory..awesome
Bungle in the Jungle is one of the best song I have ever heard.
And Thick as a Brick is in my top 5 albums of all time.
TAAB maybe theee greatest album of the R&R era!!!!!!!!!
I was at the Fillmore West SF, in 69 Jethro Tull Concert and watching Ian Anderson playing the flute standing and dancing around on one leg, a good Trip it was.
y'know a lot of people go on and on about ian's flute work, but as much as i love that, i've always been more impressed his way of playing acoustic guitar. he has a very good instinct towards strum patterns.
I remember reading a book about music in which Anderson was described as one of the best acoustic guitar players of his era.
Say what he wants, Ian is still one of the best acoustic guitar players there ever was.
My brother listened to JT in the 70's when were in middle school. That was me first introduction to them. I loved many bands and solo artists. Ian didn't need to worry about not having guitar be the lead instrument in a band and I'm glad he chucked the idea of getting rid of it; had he chosen guitar to be like everyone else we couldn't have all those great songs playing his flute. He was meant to play the flute. Look at all the songs he did that we wouldn't have if he hadn't picked up that magical musical wand creating alot of masterpieces that no one else could do. I love the Moody Blues too for a little over 45 years. Both groups incredibly gifted bands that created some of the best music of my era. Aren't you glad they chose to be musicians and not lawyers or car salesmen? I am!!!
I agree. But Ian would never have chosen an ordinary job simply because HE IS A GENIUS.
I would listen to “Songs From the Wood” over anything Clapton has ever done-he could never write songs as rich and with the melodic eloquence as Ian.
Ian Anderson is so much bigger than what was expected. Thank You for what you did. You made Windwoods soooo freaking coooool.
Anderson is very humble. The music he created in the early 70's is as wonderful as anything recorded in that era. Benefit, Thick as a Brick, and Aqualung are among the best albums ever released.
Change "Benefit" and "Aqualung" to "A Passion Play" and "Songs From the Wood'. 👌
@@Cr8Tron Besides his flute and acoustic guitar playing, I also like his sax work on 'A Passion Play'.
@@Cr8Tron they're all great. Replace nothing, enjoy it all.
JKP1124 He also did some sax on War Child. 👍
Rick Leblanc Yep. But this post gave me the impression that someone wanted to stick to just three albums.
I have to hand it to Ian, during my musically formative years ... teenage to young adult that man was out there putting out consistently great albums with all good songs at a rate of more than 1 per year for over a decade. I loved going to the record store ... yes, vinyl records, and seeing a new Jethro Tull album cover that I had never seen before and snatching it right up. There was no internet, or magazines for me anyway, that is how I found out about a new album, or occasionally I would hear a song on the radio and know it was something off the new Jethro Tull. Something different and interesting all the time.
Been watching and listening to Ian play with Gary Brooker " A whiter Shade of Pale. I've always loved this song, but with Ian's flute, can't stop listening now😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘😘
I cannot blame you.
The flute was Ray Thomas' signature and was essentially to so many of the Moody Blues' compositions; but when I first heard Jethro Tull's "Living in the Past" I was just floored -- not just the flute as an integral lead instrument in a rock song but a flute in a rock song with a 5:4 time signature. Just sheer genius and I still think it was Jethro Tull's best work -- maybe not their magnum opus but without question their most imaginative and magnificent composition, arrangement and performance.
I agree that Living in the Past is sheer genius but Tull has many more exceptionally imaginative compositions. Countless in fact...
@@handebarlas6248 True that; I'm always reminded of the old staples, though -- Agualung, Thick as a Brick, Bouree, etc. Even "Bungle in the Jungle," which was really JT's only venture into pop music at the time -- but you're right, just like ELP and Yes et al, theirs is a treasure trove of multi-faceted talent and genius.
@@briane173 I feel more than disappointed when people are not ready to appreciate the complete work of an artist. People will have different favourites of course-that is just normal. However Tull continued to make incredibly great music for decades. How can somebody like you-who clearly likes LITP and the others you mention here- which are very close to my heart as well- not appreciate Songs from the Wood or Budapest or Dark Ages to give just a few examples?? I am afraid that sounds a bit too restricted to me with all due respect.
Great interview.. I've always been very much into both bands. When I saw the Moody Blues many years ago, many young people in the audience were saying: "They did *that?"*
The Moody Blues and Jethro Tull were the best of flute music in rock in the 1960's and 1970's
Chris Wood?
Focus?
Ian was by far the best rock flute player ever. No one today could match that or his style from way back in the 60's and 70's.
Beyond Wrong !!!!!He took his style from THE ABSOLUTE GREATEST.....RAHSAAN ROLAND KIRK !!!!!! Anderson couldn't play in the same zip code. Check it out !!!
@@brucemassey260Mate, I think you missed the part about best ROCK flute player. Roland Kirk was insanely gifted and unquestionably far more technically skilled than Ian Anderson. I'm sure Anderson himself would agree with that. However, a rock player he was not.
Ray Thomas was one of a kind, and he definitely had his great moments!
Annie Wilson of Heart is still out there. Enjoyed this interview a lot.
Very gracious comments from Ian . A true gent . But what set the Moodies apart from everyone else , is their acid experiences and guidance therein ! When you were REALLY tripped out and far out there , there were none ! who could take you up there , show you the sights , and then bring you back home , down to earth , as safely and lovingly as the Moodies . Gawd bless you lads , for being there with us , and all the fun loving you showed us . Amen .
Extremely knowledgeable musician and amazing songwriter.....seems very humble for a living legend..
Master writer. His lyrics are so deep and meaningful. The music and rythems touch the soul . #1 in my book.
Anderson is a brilliant acoustic guitar player. Also, wrote almost all of Tull songs on guitar. He is one of the brightest artists of our times.
Peter Gabriel didn't just pose with a flute, he was an accomplished player who played flute on other's albums as well as his own.
Yepper! P.G. played on Cat Stevens' album "Mona Bone Jacon"
who gives a shit..he sucks
@@normanpelley ok Russian troll bot.
You mean with Genesis that band with Phil Collins on drums?
He was a bad flute player
Forty-Seven years ago I got into two groups. A to Z. Anderson and Zappa. Get to see Dweezil next week in Dallas and hopefully Ian again sometime this year. The two greatest composers of last century. And Ian's guitar playing is alright to me.
Thank you very much for posting this. As usual Ian gives clear answers to questions. And he is modest too. Actually perhaps a bit too modest. Then again I am sure he knows better.
Love Ray Thomas,rip, and the Moody Blues.
Ian Anderson is and was the greatest artist of Rock and Roll.. If you ask me.
How happy I am to hear Ian mention Ray Thomas, also a nice nod to The Moody Blues!
Ian Anderson is such a wonderful, beautiful, thoughtful, intelligent person, and a real gentleman. I wonder what he thinks of the french horn in Lucifer's Friend?
This is the man WHO wanted to be in moody blues
I remember my bartender was playing a cd back in 92 and every song had me saying, "I remember this song too." I was reconizing every song being played. When I asked my bartender who it was, he said "Sweet." I was like, I remember that band.
My sister was awesome with the flute; I have always loved JT and the Moody Blues. I have also come to really appreciate the Native American Flute as Russ Freeman (the Rippingtons, along with the sound of an Eagle) turned me on to. I totally understand what Ian is saying about the lack of the flute in more music...it really adds a new layer to music
I was glad to hear that he did not claim to 'invent' using the vocalizations with playing flute, & acknowledge that it was already being done in jazz & in particular Roland Kirk, who I had heard in the past was supposedly an influence on Ian.
That is not new. Ian has always acknowledged other people who played the flute in rock and jazz.
All you need to do is pull out their debut album, he covers Kirk
One and only Ian Anderson.
ABSOLUTELY:
Would love to know how to play a flute. Ian was a great musician, acrobat and stage presence, just awesome!
When you are that great, you can give the proper nods. His talent speaks for itself.
Ian did a guest appearance (flute) on the first Blackmore's Night album in 1997. It was the title track if I remember correctly.
This guy was the King of rock flute and we all know it ! But he got disappointed that Justin didn’t call him after Ray passed away.
Ian I would rather listen to your picking on thick as a brick than Layla any day!
Really don't mind if you sit this one.......out
Well said
Surely both are good; great even.
Are you ANOTHER of the countless multitudes that soured on Layla because of over-playing on the radio? I don't understand how such a monumentally great song has got so many distractors. It is a great, emotional, and pure work of genius. I will always give credit where it's due-- and Layla deserves any and all accolades it does get.
well said,,,,its like anything else CLAPTON for instance had the misfortune of surviving while others have passed and passed on to become legendary
@@THE-HammerMan D'accord! Agreed!
His style of guitar suited me just fine....
I love you Ian
Let's go living in the past...great song. I remember the wild-eyed, crazed looks of the past. He looks calm here.
🤔Why does Ian Anderson always seem to forget to realize that he does a quite respectable job playing the acoustic guitar?!😵💫
How in the world is this band not in the Rock n roll hall of fame?
He mentions, but only in passing, the Dutch band Focus. Thijs van Leer and new Focus line ups are still going in 2018. Brilliant usage of flute in rock. Ian seems to have ignored their greatness.
He mentioned them, therefore he did not ignore them. Focus were around at the same time as Jethro Tull and probably Focus were not a big influence on Ian.
yeah, Focus was not that popular or big, but they had a lot of albums and a lot of the music was pretty good. I think it was a little too European for an American audience ... except for the wildly uncharacteristic Hocus Pocus by Focus with the flute, whistling and yodeling. I had several of their albums and always loved them.
I’m a lot like that, hearing tunes and going “I didn’t know that was so and so”. Thanks to XM radio for song details on my computer!
I think Ian plays a 'nice' flute, as well. Just check out his flute in the performance with J. Hayward in 'Nights'. Or Reason for Waiting. So elegant and wistful.
I would love to be as good a failed guitarist as Ian is.
Ya, REALLY.
The Man Is A Most Perfect, High Vibrational Soul. Would Love To Meet Him And and she pHave A Pull
I think he’s so cool! 😎
"I set about it because Eric Clapton didn't play the flute" LOL
A class act.
I have been Tull fan since long time ago but recognize that really was Roland Kirk who first played the flute that way before anybody.......
The flute in Dear Diary by The Moodies is chef's kiss.
So glad he mentioned Focus.
Hi Ian
I just want to pay tribute to the best and most significant musician and human being I have followed through time.
Unfortunately, my record collection was stolen a few years ago, and will be very expensive to get back.
Wish You all Well
HOW NOBLE OF HIM TO MENTION THE GREAT LATE RAY THOMAS.....😇💝🙏
Great answers. To unknown questions. 2 mics next time Buckeroo
To answer Ian - Why no player has used the flute as a lead instrument in rock - They would always be compared to you!
BTW, I'm a big Jethro Tull fan (mostly the early stuff).
JT is the only folk rock band I will listen to as I have for the last 45 years.
Don't forget the Incredible String Band. Both Mike and Robin were master of many instruments.
Just to clarify, Peter Gabriel most certainly did play the flute on record and live (Supper's Ready, I Know What I Like, Battle of Epping Forest, Firth of Fifth).
I'd love to hoist a pint or two with Mr. Anderson. Life in the rearview mirror has a clarity that looking out the side window at the scenery rushing by does not.
He actually plays very nicely on Elegy off Stormwatch.
And on a lot of other songs too.
His technique definitely improved over the years. I don't think he went to standard fingering until the 1990's!
".....a burst of flute-y flavor....." lol
Nice nod to Focus. There's also a Small Faces record called The Autumn Stone that has a lovely flute solo, but I don't know who played it.
I saw JT at Massey Hall; my ears haven't stopped bleeding since then.
TheEleatic Hi when did JT play Massey Hall down in Toronto? Damn I missed it!
M-Preis für o0oi mit Pi8 Freundin
Going Up The Country, Orange Skies and California Dreamin' have some nice flute on them. Caravan's Love Song With Flute also.
Alejandro González flute thing by blues project
West coast "Cool Jazz" player Bud Shank, a flutist and alto saxophonist, played the flute solo on California Dreamin'.
I always thought a clarinet in a rock band would be exciting. I was laughed at & I knew some clarinet players who would've given it a shot. But none of the other musicians took it seriously.
That is until I heard Italian rock singer Eugenio Finardi inject a clarinet solo into a Chuck Berry subdued type rock song he wrote called "Corinna," back in the mid-'80s. (His all-English LP "Secret Streets"). Wow...it worked, made the song have atmosphere. But only a European artist would think in these musical terms. I did feel somewhat justified. (The song is on TH-cam).
I suggest you listen to Supertramp.
In those golden days any instrument that worked counted!
I loved his self-effacing approach to this interview, but I'm surprised he completely overlooked one other of the old boys of flute playing, namely the late great Ian McDonald of King Crimson who made a feature of the flute. Listen to 'I Talk to the WInd' on 'In the Court of the Crimson King'. It's the loveliest and most proficient exemplar of the flute one could hope to hear. Speaking of King Crimson, a slightly later manifestation of the group included Mel Collins on flute.
I hope Ian wouldn’t be disappointed to hear that the flute, per se, was not nearly so important as the groundbreaking music of which it was a part. Jethro Tull was a welcome relief from the cult of personality so prevalent in rock music at the time. They were an ensemble, performing superb arrangements of very compelling music. It was eye-opening then and remains so to this day.
That "rather attractive young lady flute player" Ian refers to at 7:20 was likely an American named Norda Mullen, who I'm fairly certain I saw in the Moodies' lineup at a Stateside concert nearly 20 years ago. What I'm less certain about was a second woman in that same lineup, who sang and effectively hit the notes that neither Justin Hayward nor John Lodge could. (All worked out seamlessly, and the concert was splendid from start through encores.) As for Ian stepping in for Ray, their voices couldn't be more different, but the flute solo would've been impeccable. Now, what Ian does with the flute has long been and remains in a league of its own, though the "difficult to fit in" flute CAN add much to anything. Finally, Ian McDonald of King Crimson, anyone?
The "second woman" you refer to is Julie Ragins. To this day (2022) she still tours with Justin's solo show.
Heh--"dinky-donky music"
Peter Gabriel did indeed play the damn thing (flute) when he was in Genesis. By the 80s, it was gone (seemingly he hung it up after moving from playing for audiences who did nothing but clap politely to those who cheered as well), but in the early days of Genesis in the 60s and early 70s, he certainly played it...
peter played flute in 197o on a cat stevens album,,,,MONA BONE JAKON
Wo, really? I never knew that. I love Cat Stevens. The things you learn. Thanks!
Marshall Tucker Band. Firefall
What I like about flute, or woodwind instruments like a Sax, or a Harmonica is you don't have to lug an amp around with you if you want to play it on the streets. The acoustic guitar is pretty big and bulky and people look at you like you are horrible at it when you are trying to tune it in public.
To have thought, wrote, & sung Like ''The Tull'' well now...
''There are artists who'll wrest us up & place us into themselves; into their works.
These are the very One's who'll continue wresting us up...
Far and beyond their appointed rests in peace; period!''
-gilpin 42621
One flute player he forgot to mention was none other than Martin Barre, the long-time Tull guitarist. Ian says of himself that he couldn't play "nicely", that's why they had Barre play flute on the tune "Reasons for Waiting" on the Stand Up album--"nice", melodic playing on a ballad. I think Ian also downplays the Roland Kirk influence on his playing. He says that singing along with a solo was "as old as the hills" but Kirk was the one who developed singing into a flute and Ian's early playing sounds a lot like Kirk--there's even a Roland Kirk song ("Serenade to a Cuckoo") on the group's first album, "This Was". Ian developed his own style of doing it as he went along, but I don't see anything wrong with acknowledging Kirk's innovations and influence.
Jude F: Absolutely correct. Anderson's style is ripped lock stock and barrel from Roland Kirk! Except Kirk could play three instruments at once! Kirk also developed the circular breathing technique. Having said that, I've always had a soft spot for Jethro Tull ever since bumping in to them at a Hyde Park Free Concert. I think they were bottom of the bill to The Pretty Things!
Guitar player here ,but I actually played flute for a time,learned his solos.but had to return it.
I always thought he was a very good guitar player, especially using the French Parlor style guitar.
great on acoustic guitar, probably not so good on electric guitar.
I too gave up my amateurish attempts (age 16) to play guitar when I heard Eric Clapton! I thought "who needs me when the world has EC".
Pan Dance was beautifully classically played.
Yes Ian , Peter Gabriel did indeed play flute in Genesis.
Says he couldnt play electric like eric but Is he not a very fine acoustic guitarist?
It's not a matter of who plays the flute better or who has began first. Nobody plays flute as Anderson does. His approach is extremely expressive. Btw here we are in front of a great music composer, not only a flute player. Btw Clapton ain't so much better than Anderson in playing guitar. Ian'guitar approach is simply unique and amazing.
He's a funny bastard ... as well as being intelligent, modest and bloody talented.
Have you heard Tull’s whole body of work? Anderson delivered plenty....but I think Justin worked him into a few gigs....
Yeah, it is really superhuman how much good, thoughtful, clever and unique music Ian Anderson put out. I remember as a teen seeing more than an album of great stuff every year for over 10 years. First album I got was Aqualung, and then I discovered there were earlier albums. By the time I saved up to get Benefit Thick As A Brick was out, and then I got Stand Up and This Was and poof! Living in the Past ... and Passion Play. and on and on. Amazing that anyone could do that.