An incredible performance, made more so by the fact that Ian was still really learning the flute. He might only have been playing a year or two at this point. Incredible!
I have no idea what makes a flute player better or worse, I only know that his playing was sublime to my ear and that Roland Kirk was the best jazz flutist I’ve e er heard.
@@NoRancho-pj2mw Technical prowess is not a bad thing but some of the most technically gifted musicians failed to produce or record any memorable or moving compositions. His soloing is indelible, beautiful and iconic which is always better than mere capability. Perhaps this will illustrate my point better: Buddy Rich is widely considered the most gifted drummer of all time yet his solo albums are remarkably forgettable. By contrast, Ringo Starr is not considered to be an especially gifted drummer, but some of his brilliant fills and other drum parts are key elements in some of the most iconic rock songs ever recorded. Who’s the more accomplished percussionist? I vote Ringo.
People don’t realize that His flute playing is self taught. There’s videos out there of concert flutist’s watching Him play who are just amazed at the way He goes about it. th-cam.com/video/gKSrq_qjB_Y/w-d-xo.html&feature=share This is funny
Saw them many times in my youth...ONE TIME....we had FRONT row seats!!! I even remember I was wearing a beautiful long blue and yellow dress. Ah, great memories!
Only seven people disliked this? I have never seen anything like this... They deserve to be PRAISED for their hard work. They are so great. Thank you Tull
What is truly AMAZING is that he had only been playing the flute for about 3 years when this was filmed. To play at that level with only 3 years of experience is ASTOUNDING.
this music was with me since I can remember, in Nicaragua, the hippie audience loved this and lived it, JT part of my childhood and yours quickly slipping away guys, soon there won't be any of us, time for the next crowd. Rejoice in this spirit as much as you can. Peace n love.
I saw him with friends in MN early 90's. It was a small theater. After the show I was so astonished by him, the flute solo's alone were breathtaking. I walked near to him and stared at him in amazement. He stared at me and then his flute as if to give it to me. I could not take the pipers pipe.A friend of another kept saying it was time to go.I turned to go. I'll never forget the piper and his magic flute. Catherine Herrmann
I saw Jethro Tull in the Old Boston Gahden plenty of times in the 70s and 80s doing Mescaline all the way. It was the only way to Go see them at the time. Just watching Ian Anderson go nuts during Bouree was worth the Price of admission at the time. I believe it was like $10 at the time.I remember the joke was , back in the day , if you got pulled over for drunk driving and the Cop handed you a Flute and said , if You can play Bouree like Ian Anderson does on One Leg for one minute without falling , You can go home. Good Luck. 😂😂
Man this is an awesome song. First time I heard Bouree was on their 2003 Christmas Album cd. I never knew until this hour, that he has done this song for more than forty years. Amazing then and amazing now!
Hypnotised from the start to the end. This is the nearest we have to a time machine. It is like he's possessed playing that flute and his timing is so tight, too. I think the flute possessed him :)
Wasn't a Tull fan. Long B4 my time. Only knew a few "hits." Then recently bought STAND UP on a whim (cute cover). Definitely one of the best albums I've ever heard. Shocking! --especially for early 1969. Every song an individual--perfectly crafted, perfectly produced. Nice to see where Sabbath, Zep (of II, III & IV) drew some of their epic ju-ju.
Why so shocked? This is from a time when musicians had to pull off LIVE performances and actually knew music and their instruments. No drum machine, no patching in the studio. The real thing.
No matter how many times hearing and seeing this song, it's like the first time. Simply amazing . on a personal note; Ian, sorry about accidentally knocking your pipe out of your hand that time in Denver. It truly was accidental.
SoTrue !!! I'm going on 70 yrs old !!! I saw them Live, in the early 70's. We had the Stand Up album, .... But after all these yrs., I could listen to This Every day !!! Nevermind the Whole album, ... I crank This tune up - on my Phone !!! Wherever I am !!! I must drive my neighbors nuts!!! I've got the whole Aqualung album on my phone, too !!! 💚💜💚💜💚🎶🎶🎶🎶💕💕💕
Whoever you are I truly thank you for posting this. I was giving up on the flute and my uncle showed this specific song to me and rekindled my love of the instrument; now I'm still playing in college. so thank you whoever you are.
Agree with the bass solo thing. I'm a flute player and a guitar player myself, but I teach myself guitar riffs I love, including bass riffs, and the whole bass line for this song is gorgeous. I adore playing the bass solo, especially when I can use someone else's bass for it. XD
primera vez que veo el video de este tema desde que lo escuche por primera vez en 1970, en mi radio am, programa Alto Voltaje, radio Chilena. En esos años escuchar este tema era casi una experiencia religiosa.
The audience had no idea there was a bass solo happening. You can see Ian Anderson telling them to look at the bassist but they just keep applauding. Sounds like the bassist said screw it and ended the bass solo early since no one was listening.
You can tell that the audience applause was mixed in post by either the documentary makers or the original source editors for this performance. How can you tell? Listen to the applause fade out as Ian begins to play again. The applause does not actually die down or calm down naturally. It fades out. As an editor I know. That was an audio dissolve. And another clue is that this was a single camera shoot. The only cuts to the camera is the cut to the audience applauding and then the cut back to Ian waving at the band. Definitely an editing hack job there. Also listen to the applause at the end of the song. It's not as loud or distinct as the one after Ian's solo.
@@420GratefulHippie Thanks for the editor's insight haha. Half a decade later now I'm re-watching this and I realize that you're right this whole performance has been heavily edited.
@StanTheDog57 Ich sehe das auch so. Habe sie erst 1989 kennengelernt mit 18 und habe mir dann nach und nach alle Alben besorgt. Für mich bis heute eine der einzigartigsten Bands aller Zeiten.
JT m'a réconcilié avec le "classique". Qd j'ai écouté la première fois ce morceau, j'étais ado, c'était trop bon... et ça le restera tjrs. Vu en "LIVE" à Padoue (Italie) en 72, concert mémorable !
Such amazing footage! I just saw him perform this actually less than a week ago. Even though I was obviously born in the wrong era, I am very thankful for clips like this. And of course to be able to catch Ian still kicking it oh so close to 70 years of age. Never too old to rock & roll right!
C'était justement cette version (ou une encore antérieure) qui m'avait convaincu de faire un choc à la fête de fin d'année de mon école. Salle d'environ quatre cents personnes, peut-être six cents, e n'ai pas compté. Surrttout des parents. Genre petits doigts en l'air. Salle noire, rideau de scène fermé. Je m'emmène par devant, ave ma guitare concert, spot sur moi, je commence cette bourrée de JSB totalement à la classique. Quoi de neuf ? Juste que c'est un peu casse-doigts sur la guitare. Puis le rideau de scène s'ouvre un peu, un autre spot sur un bassiste, bahdadibahdadahbabadoubabadah. Cool, quoi. Quelques mesures. Puis le rideau s'ouvre plus large, batterie discrète. Chouette ! Puis le rideau s'ouvre encore plus. Cinq guitaristes et trois percus sup y vont. Puis deux flutes et trois violons. Là, étant assis sur le bord de la scène m'énerve, en fais état, lève ma gratte, mets pied à terre et furax quitte la scène. Le rideau s'ouvre complètement, spots sur la totale, neuf guitarristes, cinq percus (de tous genres), quinze violonistes, sept flautistes (différents), deux pianos, presque quarante choristes. Tous à fond, "hurler" le bonheur de ce morceau merveilleux. Wow ! Bien sûr, à cette époque nous étions punis pour faire telle musique "de singes", absolument inacceptable. Ensuite place aux musiques de l'époque. Hm... aussi du rock'nroll, que nos parents avaient perdu de vue... Bhen oui, du vrai. Faire tourner mamy, faire du rock dessus le dos avec maman. Bien oui, le gardien municipal de la salle était dépassé. Le pauv' ne savait plus comment faire et a appelé ses supérieurs au secours. Pas de bol : M le Maire, le Landrat (Préfet), le Commandant de la Police et le Capitaine des pompiers étaient dans la salle et s'amusaient à fond. Bon, à un moment il fallait mettre fin à la chose (vers 4 ou 5 heures du matin), alors on rétrograde. On revenait à des musiques un peu plus traditionnelles, plus classiques, des blues (vous voyez un peu, je pense - du "rapproché", puis y mettre fin. Manœuvre à l'inverse : la version jazzy déjantée de la bourrée de JSB par JT à l'envers, ramener à la version classique. ralentir, le rideau de scène se referme petit à petit, un instrument s'éteint dans l'arrière-plan après l'autre, un spot après l'autre. A la fin juste moi assis sur le bord de la scène, d'abord avec la version jazzée, puis venant à la la version académique de la bourrée, puis dernier spot éteint, le temps que les gens sortent. There is no recording of that, and it's not necessary. We know what we lived and are happy of that. Mni tx to JT, they gave us force to live. Never give up. Ok ?
Jethro Tull was for me the iniciation inside of music and the misterys of the metal flute in 80's. I see in live in Gava, Barcelona 2 weeks ago and is the same Ian Anderson like 30 years ago whit less hairs. The best for you Ian.
Just an aside, I went to a concert in 1970 with Jethro Tull and the Johnny Winter Review, incredible show with, maybe, three hundred people in all. The cost of the tickets; five bucks. Even given inflation concert tickets have become outrageously overpriced and fewer folks are having the chance to see a great concert live.
@@stews9 that was McCartney's double. You know he died in 66. That's great that you payed that kinda money for a stand-in. Just messing with you. Have you heard that conspiracy theory that McCartney died in 1966?
Christopher I met some old rockers when I was in ballyshannon Ireland 2016 They had seen Black Sabbath before they were called Black Sabbath I think it was the Birmingham boys Anyway sixpence to get in
his was one of the stand out concerts I went to as a kid !!!! still remember that phone ringing on a pitch black stage him coming out and answering it Yelling to the crowd it's for you !!!! it had quite the effect when on weed and shrooms
It's Glen Cornick on the bass, Carrick Celt. Jeffrey took over from him only by the time of the Aqualang album, about three years later. In 1969 Jeffrey was a close friend to Ian and hung out with the band but didn't even play an instrument. Take care!
Ian Anderson is indeed a musical genius who could sell the classical sound of Bach to the Rock n Roll crowd. Incredible to say the least.
An incredible performance, made more so by the fact that Ian was still really learning the flute. He might only have been playing a year or two at this point. Incredible!
I have no idea what makes a flute player better or worse, I only know that his playing was sublime to my ear and that Roland Kirk was the best jazz flutist I’ve e er heard.
He recorded this music around two years after touching a flute for the first time in life . Magic
М*а
@@MaximusWolfe There are more technically proficient flutists in the world, but no one has ever promoted the flute or made it as famous as Ian.
@@NoRancho-pj2mw
Technical prowess is not a bad thing but some of the most technically gifted musicians failed to produce or record any memorable or moving compositions. His soloing is indelible, beautiful and iconic which is always better than mere capability. Perhaps this will illustrate my point better:
Buddy Rich is widely considered the most gifted drummer of all time yet his solo albums are remarkably forgettable. By contrast, Ringo Starr is not considered to be an especially gifted drummer, but some of his brilliant fills and other drum parts are key elements in some of the most iconic rock songs ever recorded. Who’s the more accomplished percussionist? I vote Ringo.
Ian’s flute performance is so amazing and his flamingo pose is fantastic!
People don’t realize that His flute playing is self taught. There’s videos out there of concert flutist’s watching Him play who are just amazed at the way He goes about it.
th-cam.com/video/gKSrq_qjB_Y/w-d-xo.html&feature=share
This is funny
Love Ian Anderson. So talented & a great showman 💜
"flamingo pose". Thanks, I never thought of it like that before.
Saw them many times in my youth...ONE TIME....we had FRONT row seats!!! I even remember I was wearing a beautiful long blue and yellow dress. Ah, great memories!
I grew up with my Dad playing Tull all the time, and now every time I listen to this it gives me a warm feeling inside :)
The bassline in Bouree is awesome...the whole audience never noticed
Only seven people disliked this? I have never seen anything like this...
They deserve to be PRAISED for their hard work. They are so great.
Thank you Tull
Glenn
Nobody dislikes Jethro Tull.
Nobody.
Absolutely fantastic version. I have never seen this before. Just shows how original they were back in 1969. Classic
Most amazing music man
What a wild musician Ian was & still is.
Brilliant in all ways.
Amazing sounds & so,so good!
What is truly AMAZING is that he had only been playing the flute for about 3 years when this was filmed. To play at that level with only 3 years of experience is ASTOUNDING.
Less than 3 years .He started few months before the band got name Jethro Tull in the begining of 68. This gig is from 69.
@@biserkasertic1208 Indeed.
this music was with me since I can remember, in Nicaragua, the hippie audience loved this and lived it, JT part of my childhood and yours quickly slipping away guys, soon there won't be any of us, time for the next crowd. Rejoice in this spirit as much as you can. Peace n love.
JT, so unique! Brilliant!
I saw him with friends in MN early 90's. It was a small theater. After the show I was so astonished by him, the flute solo's alone were breathtaking. I walked near to him and stared at him in amazement. He stared at me and then his flute as if to give it to me. I could not take the pipers pipe.A friend of another kept saying it was time to go.I turned to go. I'll never forget the piper and his magic flute. Catherine Herrmann
Saw them play at the London Royal Albert Hall in 1970…stunning performance
Ian has always brought it on. Awesome talent.
I saw Jethro Tull in the Old Boston Gahden plenty of times in the 70s and 80s doing Mescaline all the way. It was the only way to Go see them at the time. Just watching Ian Anderson go nuts during Bouree was worth the Price of admission at the time. I believe it was like $10 at the time.I remember the joke was , back in the day , if you got pulled over for drunk driving and the Cop handed you a Flute and said , if You can play Bouree like Ian Anderson does on One Leg for one minute without falling , You can go home. Good Luck. 😂😂
Man this is an awesome song. First time I heard Bouree was on their 2003 Christmas Album cd. I never knew until this hour, that he has done this song for more than forty years. Amazing then and amazing now!
The Tull of my youth. What a band.
The most satisfying moment of anyone's day is when a friend remarks: "Wow, Jethro Tull is a really talented flute player!"
"It drives me crazy when people think Jethro Tull is just a guy in the band..."
On lead seed drill ....
I even heard the version with Jack Rottall !!! 😜😜
By the way, which one is Jethro?
I'm still listening to Jethro tull and loving every song in 2020. So good.
Il pifferaio magico
So am I in 2022. And I was listening to Tull in the 1970's.
Grandissimi!
Stupenda versione, grande performance del mitico Ian Anderson!
Estasi musicale!!!
Hypnotised from the start to the end. This is the nearest we have to a time machine. It is like he's possessed playing that flute and his timing is so tight, too. I think the flute possessed him :)
Som e qualidade do vídeo estão excelentes, fazendo jus à essa obra brilhante! 🤘🇧🇷
Beautiful !! Excellent solos. A truly magical tune; thnx 4 posting !!!
Ho 53 anni e quest'uomo lo sposerei subito
Wasn't a Tull fan. Long B4 my time. Only knew a few "hits." Then recently bought STAND UP on a whim (cute cover). Definitely one of the best albums I've ever heard. Shocking! --especially for early 1969. Every song an individual--perfectly crafted, perfectly produced. Nice to see where Sabbath, Zep (of II, III & IV) drew some of their epic ju-ju.
Why so shocked? This is from a time when musicians had to pull off LIVE performances and actually knew music and their instruments. No drum machine, no patching in the studio. The real thing.
No matter how many times hearing and seeing this song, it's like the first time. Simply amazing . on a personal note; Ian, sorry about accidentally knocking your pipe out of your hand that time in Denver. It truly was accidental.
SoTrue !!! I'm going on 70 yrs old !!! I saw them Live, in the early 70's. We had the Stand Up album, .... But after all these yrs., I could listen to This Every day !!! Nevermind the Whole album, ... I crank This tune up - on my Phone !!! Wherever I am !!! I must drive my neighbors nuts!!! I've got the whole Aqualung album on my phone, too !!! 💚💜💚💜💚🎶🎶🎶🎶💕💕💕
@@elizabethbowie9753 ; Cool. I too am going on 70 and have been to a bunch of their shows. I love their music. Rock on
have you ever noticed,,, the various gasp for breaths in all of Ian Andersons solos serve as bass notes?
Genius!
Whoever you are I truly thank you for posting this. I was giving up on the flute and my uncle showed this specific song to me and rekindled my love of the instrument; now I'm still playing in college. so thank you whoever you are.
El incomparable Ian Anderson con el tema que quizás más se le conoce, en una interpretación maestra de la flauta
What a performance!
God I love Jethro Tull /I was a t a concert in Chicago .I ran into my older brother at that . What a memory
Agree with the bass solo thing. I'm a flute player and a guitar player myself, but I teach myself guitar riffs I love, including bass riffs, and the whole bass line for this song is gorgeous. I adore playing the bass solo, especially when I can use someone else's bass for it. XD
Although we couldn't hear the bass solo on this video, because of the shit sound quality. The crowd going bonkers over Ian the weirdo.
primera vez que veo el video de este tema desde que lo escuche por primera vez en 1970, en mi radio am, programa Alto Voltaje, radio Chilena. En esos años escuchar este tema era casi una experiencia religiosa.
i have seen a concert in hamburg with 2 flutes.....never again.....sounds nice..thx for posting
The audience had no idea there was a bass solo happening. You can see Ian Anderson telling them to look at the bassist but they just keep applauding. Sounds like the bassist said screw it and ended the bass solo early since no one was listening.
@leahcim38 metallica live "day on the green" Cliff Burton( For Whom The Bell Tolls)
This is not really a solo,more of an intro.
If it was John Densmore's novel I would read it!
You can tell that the audience applause was mixed in post by either the documentary makers or the original source editors for this performance. How can you tell? Listen to the applause fade out as Ian begins to play again. The applause does not actually die down or calm down naturally. It fades out.
As an editor I know. That was an audio dissolve.
And another clue is that this was a single camera shoot. The only cuts to the camera is the cut to the audience applauding and then the cut back to Ian waving at the band. Definitely an editing hack job there.
Also listen to the applause at the end of the song. It's not as loud or distinct as the one after Ian's solo.
@@420GratefulHippie Thanks for the editor's insight haha. Half a decade later now I'm re-watching this and I realize that you're right this whole performance has been heavily edited.
Sad honestly, it's an incredible bass solo..
tuve la suerte de verlo en vivo, es único e irrepetible. Gracias
@StanTheDog57 Ich sehe das auch so. Habe sie erst 1989 kennengelernt mit 18 und habe mir dann nach und nach alle Alben besorgt. Für mich bis heute eine der einzigartigsten Bands aller Zeiten.
Great ian, great glen... Fantastic video :) thanx
JT m'a réconcilié avec le "classique". Qd j'ai écouté la première fois ce morceau, j'étais ado, c'était trop bon... et ça le restera tjrs. Vu en "LIVE" à Padoue (Italie) en 72, concert mémorable !
Everyone thinks their generation's music is the best. I'm glad I got to experience this genre. For me, nothing comes close.
I'm 21 and I absolutely hate 99% of the music my generation makes, so I'm thankful for the music your generation has created!
Couldn't agree more
Wout Vertriest 3 years late but I'm also 21 and couldn't agree more
RIP Glenn Cornick master
André : yeah, Glenn Cornick is among my favorites bass player
Great to see him here, though.
So, first death in 1969. Fucking audience!
He was amazing.
Son mas que fantásticos son de otro mundo, los amo gracias por subir estos vídeos, les amo eternamente
What a unique Band. I saw them in 1970. I perform a Ian Anderson type solo even now in my currect show.
Brilliant
never will i doubt the power of the flute ever again......
This is insane,. A concept, rock band in the 60's and 70's doing BACH !!!
What demons disliked this beautiful piece of art... I’m ashamed.
There is an innocence here we will never recover.
Such amazing footage! I just saw him perform this actually less than a week ago. Even though I was obviously born in the wrong era, I am very thankful for clips like this. And of course to be able to catch Ian still kicking it oh so close to 70 years of age. Never too old to rock & roll right!
Saw him two months ago - absolutely amazing concert! Last saw him with JT in 1974! LOVE him ❤
J adore cette version...Que du bonheur !!!
Wonderful to see.
So many excellent memories.🥸❣️
i love the way ian was trying to show to the stupid audience that there was happening a great bass solo.
@bflo1000 was Hammond able to play the bass solo, or did they retire that from their shows?
Right on!
forever love, if only not so far away! please come back to Texas
There is no better Tull live performance than this! #changemymind
Unique flute, unique persona, unique show.
I'd argue it was the mix boosting audience volume.
still thanx for sharing this gem of early Tull!
Esto es verdadera música increible
C'était justement cette version (ou une encore antérieure) qui m'avait convaincu de faire un choc à la fête de fin d'année de mon école. Salle d'environ quatre cents personnes, peut-être six cents, e n'ai pas compté. Surrttout des parents. Genre petits doigts en l'air.
Salle noire, rideau de scène fermé. Je m'emmène par devant, ave ma guitare concert, spot sur moi, je commence cette bourrée de JSB totalement à la classique. Quoi de neuf ? Juste que c'est un peu casse-doigts sur la guitare.
Puis le rideau de scène s'ouvre un peu, un autre spot sur un bassiste, bahdadibahdadahbabadoubabadah. Cool, quoi. Quelques mesures. Puis le rideau s'ouvre plus large, batterie discrète. Chouette !
Puis le rideau s'ouvre encore plus. Cinq guitaristes et trois percus sup y vont. Puis deux flutes et trois violons.
Là, étant assis sur le bord de la scène m'énerve, en fais état, lève ma gratte, mets pied à terre et furax quitte la scène.
Le rideau s'ouvre complètement, spots sur la totale, neuf guitarristes, cinq percus (de tous genres), quinze violonistes, sept flautistes (différents), deux pianos, presque quarante choristes. Tous à fond, "hurler" le bonheur de ce morceau merveilleux. Wow !
Bien sûr, à cette époque nous étions punis pour faire telle musique "de singes", absolument inacceptable.
Ensuite place aux musiques de l'époque. Hm... aussi du rock'nroll, que nos parents avaient perdu de vue... Bhen oui, du vrai. Faire tourner mamy, faire du rock dessus le dos avec maman.
Bien oui, le gardien municipal de la salle était dépassé. Le pauv' ne savait plus comment faire et a appelé ses supérieurs au secours. Pas de bol : M le Maire, le Landrat (Préfet), le Commandant de la Police et le Capitaine des pompiers étaient dans la salle et s'amusaient à fond.
Bon,
à un moment il fallait mettre fin à la chose (vers 4 ou 5 heures du matin), alors on rétrograde. On revenait à des musiques un peu plus traditionnelles, plus classiques, des blues (vous voyez un peu, je pense - du "rapproché", puis y mettre fin.
Manœuvre à l'inverse : la version jazzy déjantée de la bourrée de JSB par JT à l'envers, ramener à la version classique. ralentir, le rideau de scène se referme petit à petit, un instrument s'éteint dans l'arrière-plan après l'autre, un spot après l'autre.
A la fin juste moi assis sur le bord de la scène, d'abord avec la version jazzée, puis venant à la la version académique de la bourrée, puis dernier spot éteint, le temps que les gens sortent.
There is no recording of that, and it's not necessary.
We know what we lived and are happy of that.
Mni tx to JT, they gave us force to live.
Never give up. Ok ?
What a rare gem! Thanks for the upload - priceless!
Loving it, many good memories!
Wow, what a video. I never even knew that it existed..I had not heard of Tull before 1972 or so.
Despues de tantos años,escucharlo te da un subidon y paz
Makes me weep, it's so beautiful.
they are in my heart 'n' roll hall of fame, and thats what matters
Fafuloso, espectacular! Que música! Cuanta creatividad
Jethro Tull was for me the iniciation inside of music and the misterys of the metal flute in 80's. I see in live in Gava, Barcelona 2 weeks ago and is the same Ian Anderson like 30 years ago whit less hairs. The best for you Ian.
How many of us started playing flute because of Ian?
Thank you Jim Skura (band director) for introducing me to Jethro Tull.
Love Jethro Tull
They kick ass. Such a robust blend.
No one will ever be this badass 🤘🏼 thank you
Beautiful ...Just too Gigantec !! if i may say so, nobody can do this nowadays ..Brilliant
Always will be a classic! I grew up listening to Stand Up, Aqualung & Passion Play - amazing music!
Rest in Peace Glenn Cornick Always will remember you.
Simplesmente fantástico!
Despite the editing /filming faults, this is very nice!
Just an aside, I went to a concert in 1970 with Jethro Tull and the Johnny Winter Review, incredible show with, maybe, three hundred people in all.
The cost of the tickets; five bucks. Even given inflation concert tickets have become outrageously overpriced and fewer folks are having the chance to see a great concert live.
Yep, concerts are out of many peoples price range now.
Paid $600 to see McCartney. Best concert ever, too. 44 songs.
I saw that concert(tour) as well....INCREDIBLE memories
@@stews9 that was McCartney's double. You know he died in 66. That's great that you payed that kinda money for a stand-in.
Just messing with you. Have you heard that conspiracy theory that McCartney died in 1966?
Christopher
I met some old rockers when I was in ballyshannon Ireland 2016
They had seen Black Sabbath before they were called Black Sabbath
I think it was the Birmingham boys
Anyway sixpence to get in
impecc.....! un groupe génial que mon père adorais
Bravo...IAN ANDERSON ... !! awesome band Jethro Tull...my favorite band from that era...love it, feels like back to my young hood...hahahaha.....
Oh God I'm Gittn old ,this never sounded so good, thanks for this my God....
I have this whole documentary, its a great one!
Thanks for uploading!
UW2
I'd never seen this clip before. Thanks for posting it!
WOW so rare video Briliant, thank for share it.
his was one of the stand out concerts I went to as a kid !!!! still remember that phone ringing on a pitch black stage him coming out and answering it Yelling to the crowd it's for you !!!! it had quite the effect when on weed and shrooms
I like this Video, and Tull! Thank you!!!!
what a live.. what a song... what a groove bass slap!! one of my favourite songs ever!!
Beautiful ❤️
classic live footage where have all the good times gone
Seit ewig Jethro Tull........ ❤
Incredible musician
dude, its AMAZING
Jethro Tull is really Wonderfull
so awesome loves a bit of j.t :)
Thanks. Saw him last night.
Everyone starts to applaud right when it reaches the bass solo. Funny bad sad at the same time.
a very rare version thnx
Geez... he was 22 ..... great discovery (this video)
Jethro is my favorite guy in the band.
Simplemente... Brillante!!!!!
great video! This is history!
It's Glen Cornick on the bass, Carrick Celt. Jeffrey took over from him only by the time of the Aqualang album, about three years later. In 1969 Jeffrey was a close friend to Ian and hung out with the band but didn't even play an instrument. Take care!