Professional Flutist PANICS/reacts to | Jethro Tull, Locomotive Breath 🚂
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- Опубліковано 31 бер 2024
- The screams I scrumed. The gasps I gusped. WHO ADJUSTS HIS FLUTES?
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That amount of sheer panic that went through my body see that flute being flung! BUT I LOVE THIS! I immediately pulled out my crappy flute and learned the ways of the fling. Maybe I'll do it on camera someday!
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🔹Here's the link to the original video: • Jethro Tull - Locomoti...
🔸Intro and outro music produced by DahJP, SoundCloud: / dahjp
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#jethrotull #reaction #nittpicc
What is one item you can’t live without?
Cake
Chewbacca impressions
LOVEBITES! When are you doing them again?? 🙂🤘
Love!
An acoustic guitar.
!2-string if I have a choice, but six string will do
I see Jethro Tull, i press "like" before the reaction starts.
Same
I don’t always listen to jethro tull BUT when I do it’s always sitting on a park bench.
'S ok. As long as you're not eyeing little girls with bad intent.😉
bring some tissues, you have snot running down your nose
I ride heavy horses while wielding my broadsword
Hahaha!
@@DonP_is_lostagain If a "little girl" is old enough to menstruate, I'm looking, and in this case, it was Cross-eyed Mary, "and she'll do it for a song."
Flutists: this is a precious and delicate instrument of my art, I will protect it like my child.
Ian: I'm a music wizard and this is my magic wand.
I was so lucky to see Jethro Tull 10 times in the front row, he never drops his flute, he's perfect!!! They are unbelievable!!!❤❤❤❤
I bought "Aqualung" 53 years ago back in junior high school. Great album!
Me too!
Me three!
Still got my vinyl album
Those were the Days. 74 years on.
I was a freshman in college when I bought the album. Never dreamed ancient, decrepit me would listen to it. I was mistaken.
On drums for that period, Gerry Conway who passed 2 days ago on March 29th 2024… Another great drummer who has played with JT.
RIP MR CONWAY GODS SPEED.
Damn on my birthday may he rock on
It’s not Gerry Conway on drums in this video . This is Barrie Barlow in 1978 , before Ian fired everyone but Martin .
@@arthurtaneI557 It’s clearly Gerry Conway on drum. They are so different in their playing… It’s a 1982 show and he was on drum for that era of JT. Barry has been sacked somewhere in 1980.
One item I can’t live without? A NittPicc mini stroke watching Ian Anderson flailing his flute like a baton.
She doesn't realize that this is Ian Anderson... or what that really means in the context of his instruments.
If he calls ANY flute manufacturer and asks for ANY kind of flutes... they will literally send him a crate full of them. No money needed. He could decide to never play the same flute twice and simply toss them into the audience after each solo. He could go through a dozen flutes per show, and the flute manufacturer would just keep sending more.
Kinda like John Popper with harmonicas... that guy literally goes through several harps per song (switches to a different one with each key change) and just keeps on tossing them into the crowd as he finishes with them. Pretty sure he used to play Hohners, but switched to Fender and his own signature series harps at some point. And it's probably been 30 years since he had to pay for a harmonica.
@@Mr.Ekshin Maybe, but for years, he only used a bunch of learner-model flutes, because they so often would get dropped, thrown, whacked, etc. and he had to replace them.
@@thomasmacdiarmid8251Or may be he just glued all parts into one piece.
@@fidenemini111 Someone here or on Thales's reaction channel said that he soldered them. I would have thought glue or rosin inside the connections. Still none of those would protect against the flute getting dropped or whacked against stuff when it is being twirled and tossed like a baton.
That's an early 70's Combat Flute, Mark1A.
Ian is self-taught. It wasn't until his daughter was learning flute that he discovered he was fingering wrong ... then self-taught himself to play correctly
Yes!
What is it that literally *ALL* classically-trained flautists notice, and mention? Something about his pinky-finger?
I don't play flute so I don't know, but I've seen several reaction vids, and his right hand and little finger is pointed out so often!
Something about it could be easier, and he's making it harder on himself? Something like that?🤔
@@JamesJoy-yc8vs Ian Anderson was born with a birth defect of his right pinky finger.
@@JamesJoy-yc8vs Yes, it's the right pinky. It's supposed to be pressing the first key on the foot-joint of the flute most of the time to hold it open. By default, it's closed. It makes a very slight difference in the tone. The only time that key really needs to be held open is to play a D#. However, there is not only a slight (almost undetectable) difference in tone, but an improvement in the balance of the way the instrument is held, which obviously doesn't concern him. I never bothered, either, and my music teacher never complained.
Speaking of Nittpicks... the band is Jethro Tull. The flautist/singer is Ian Anderson...and if you are stressed out by the way he waves his flute around, you'll never get through what The Who used to do to their guitars.
Or Jimi Hendrix
Yes 😄 I would recommend 'Won't Get Fooled Again' live at Shepperton Studios 1978 for both Keith Moon and Pete Townsend in full on Keith and Pete mode, not to forget Roger Daltrey swinging the mic around 😄
Sadly to be the last performance with Keith Moon.
Or their microphones…
Speaking of nittpicks... She said she met Ian in the beggining of the video, so i am pretty sure she knows that, her saying "yeah Jethro Tull(obviously the band, not the singer), sick!" doesn't mean what you seem to think it means.
And when on a live show the drummer put explosives in one of the drums, but he put too much in, blew the whole set to pieces, it was crazy
Ian Anderson is a true multi-instrumentalist. He taught himself to play the flute which was probably a good thing when the intention was to play rock/folk rock music with it. Classic training might have given him too many good habits. He does play guitar on stage when needed, an acoustic one but mostly leaves it to a dedicated guitarist in the band. He plays other instruments in the studio and has been known to play every instrument on some tracks. Live he focuses on vocals and flute and of course theatrics. The flute and how Anderson played it was central to the band's sound and image.
As far as Jethro Tull songs go, you can't go wrong with "Skating Away (On the Thin Ice of the New Day" or "Thick as a Brick".
Yes, he's dropped it. He typically brings 6 or more flutes with him on tour. If something breaks, he cannibalizes parts or just grabs a backup. This has been going on with him for over 50 years. I've done much the same.
Some have commented on the tape on the flute -- swinging it around like that, it has actually come apart and he uses the tape to keep the sections securely together.
@@stpnwlf9 yeah, those spins can totally launch a foot joint. I've done that too :)
Strange that in the plethora of Tull footage I could never witness any harm done to a flute. Perhaps you are somewhat underestimating his body control, also when handling the flute.
@@NuntiusLegis Or they just don't release video of the misadventures...
I saw him twirling his flute (during the "Stormwatch" tour) but then it flew into the audience. Woooops!
I was bought up on Jethro Tull by my two older brothers. My middle brother even modelled his look on Ian Anderson. I inherited his Tull collection when he sadly passed away. I saw them at their 25th anniversary concert in London, Ian broke 3 flutes that evening ! Can never get enough Tull.
I saw them on the 25th anniversary tour in Atlanta, GA. Procol Haram opened for them.
I have seen tons of Tull footage, but it seems no harm to a flute has ever been filmed.
I too saw the 25 th anniversary tour with Procol Harem in , an outdoor show in Ontario , Canada’s Wonderland .
I saw Tull three times in the seventies. As far as a concert of entertainment it was the best I'd ever been to. It wasn't just good music, it was energy and sound coming together. The whole show was great and memorable.
Did you know that Ian Anderson taught himself flute, but taught himself incorrect technique? Years later, his daughter pointed out his errors, and he re-taught himself with proper technique. Old dogs applies, unless you're Ian Anderson. I'm always surprised at how serious of a man he is. I've never seen him laugh in an interview, and rarely smile. Love the album "Songs From the Wood". Clever album.
yeah, if you watch his fingering in the earlier videos versus the way he keys in the latter ones, you will see that he used some of his right-hand fingers at or below the first knuckle - like a bagpipe or Pennywhistle, but switched to using the fingertips like a classical flautist does.
I remember an interview back when the iPod was all the rage, and he said his "ippid" was mostly Jethro Tull songs so he could keep in mind what he was going to sing and play.
I think he has a dry sense of humor from one of his box sets he made the statement along the lines that he went into music out of being lazy,also his lyrics can be quite funny Rainbow blues for example.
Of course Ian learned most of what he knew on flute from Rahssan Roland Kirk - certainly not the first jazz flutist but the first to take the vocalisation effects into somewhat-hysterical territory, which Ian worsened in his My God-type solos.
@@trashandcheese3636 Really? Never heard him mention him. Not that I doubt you. I'll have to pull up some work of Kirk. Ian is most definitely a showman. That whole stage persona fits him so well.
I saw Jethro Tull in the late 80s. I saw hundreds of groups as part of my job and I have to say they're one of the best for live performance. The show I watched, Ian brought out the giant balloons balanced on his nose during the SeaLion song. Lots of audience interaction. Lots of fun.
He did the balloons on the A tour.
Ian Anderson LITERALLY Made the Flute a ROCK instrument!
Don't worry about his flute it is a rock&roll flute built for abuse and beautiful music 😅
Greetings from Denmark ❤
🤣
And it looks like he has some tape around the joint(s?).
Ian's also a fantastic acoustic guitarist... One of my all-time faves on that instrument.
I saw Jethro Tull in concert in 1969. I didn’t know who they were because they were a new act at the time. I walked out of the concert in a daze.
Locomotive Breath is from the Aqualung album. The outro is actually Black Sunday from the A album. They did an excellent job transitioning from one to the other.
For the record, I was a huge Metallica fan in the 80s but was genuinely happy when Jethro Tull beat them for the 1989 Grammy award for Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance Vocal or Instrumental.
Well, that makes one of us.
For the record, I'm a Tull and Metallica fan. But that was the hard rock/metal category and Jethro Tull is neither. The album that won has a couple songs that are a bit more rocking than usual, but it's still folk/prog rock band, not hard rock or metal.
They only won because the old dudes on the academy had probably never heard of Metallica, and there was probably vote trading going on too. It's just proof that and even back in '89, these awards meant nothing. Now that's even more the case. And that goes for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame too. The only award that really matters is what the fans give you, not the industry clowns.
@mightydegu That makes two of us.
Metallica sucks
Ian and Martin Barre (the usual Tull Guitarist) have both expressed regret at winning that award, Rock Island is one of their lesser albums (although probably their heaviest recording-wise)
Although frankly Barre 's a better metal guitarist than Ulrich is.
When Metallica did win the Best Heavy Metal award the first thing they (Lars, their mouthpiece at the time) said was "We'd like to thank Jethro Tull for not releasing an album this year."
Martin Barre is a master guitarist. When Ian Anderson was looking for a guitarist they had Tony Iomi (who became Black Sabbath's guitarist) for a week and then added Martin. He brought in both rock and classical pieces to the band and was an integral part for many years.
Barre's one of the most criminally underrated guitarists of the last 60 years.
@@adam_mawz_maas I agree (and so does he I think).
@@adam_mawz_maas if you get an opportunity to see Marin’s band , don’t miss it ! Phenomenal shows in small venues, blew away the last time I saw Tull in 2007 , Ian’s vocals were horrible, I knew it was the last time I would ever see Tull . When he fired Martin , I never listened to another thing Ian did .
A fun Tull song is Song for Jeffrey, live with Tommy Iommi (of Black Sabbath fame) on guitar. Yes, Iommi was briefly a member of Tull
I've seen other flute players also cringe at Ian's flute spinning, but he probably toured with multiple flutes, a flute tech person, and may have made modifications to "reinforce" it.
There is clearly tape around the head joint. I assume the foot joint is taped, but that is usually where he grips it, so I haven't spotted it in this video. I've also seen mention of multiple flute casualties, in a single performance.
In an interview once, Ian stated that his flute is glued or soldered into one piece, so there’s very little danger of it separating.
I've seen flute players cringe at Ian,but just before he starts to play.
I'm a 50 something year old man with a teenaged boys sense of humor and blushed a bit, and giggled a lot, when you described what happens to a flute over time. 😊🤣
Thank you for a great reaction to a great piece of music.
I was 18yo as I sat ten feet from the stage in Barton Hall at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, April 15. 1972. First song? The full 45-minute version of Thick as a Brick. You could literally feel the bass hit you in the chest. I remember my ears rang for days. The thing about Jethro Tull was that they weren't afraid to do the unexpected, i.e., a 45-minute song with props like a phone booth, a ringing telephone, that incredible singing-humming flute played by a "one-legged" Ian Anderson in a kilt (or was it tights?). Cross-eyed Mary. Aqualung. Windup. Still a fan at 70.
I met and hung out with Ian for a few hours on the back deck of a beach bar several years ago... I didn't realize it was THAT Ian until I went to the Tull concert later that evening! Nice guy.
Envy...
I met the band in 1988 , Ian was cordial at best , he did pose for a pic . I met Marin again in 2022 when he had Tulls first drummer Clive Bunker with him doing a 50th anniversary tour for Aqualung. , I’ve seen Tull many times in 40 years, never saw Martin look so relaxed and having so much fun as I did in July 2022
This is the reaction I expected from a flutist. While I don't play, I repair musical instruments. I am fairly certain it is soldered together. The head joint would probably still be free, but the foot would fly off unless more permanently attached. My repair specialty is brass instruments, and I feel this way watching the Mnozil Brass perform live.
It looks like the head joint is fixed with yellow tape. Not the most secure of arrangements, but if it's good enough for him, he's the performer, do what you like. (Besides, compared the abuse to instruments from other performers (ie Ashley MacIsaac), Anderson is treating his flute like precious crystal.)
@@bittergeek 💯
I wonder if he thought of using clear shrink wrap. Would that work?
Pure conjecture here: would it be possible to make a flute whose sections join together with bayonet mounts instead of (as it seems) simple friction? Would that work musically, and would it be secure enough to withstand Anderson's gymnastics?
@@davorzmaj753 Possible, but it would be much easier and stable to solder the foot joint on. The foot really only needs to come off for transport, but it would be easy to make a case for a flute in one piece. The headjoint needs to be somewhat free to tune the flute, and to clean the moister after playing.
Good ole Jethro Tull. Hard rock with some of the guitar solos replaced with Flute solos because "Come on, it'll be fun for everyone."
The spinning of the flute gave you heart palpitations. The fact that he's running and dancing around the stage with that _JACKET_ on, was making me sweat just watching him. He _HAD_ to be burning up in that thing.
Wait'll you see Focus doing Hocus Pocus live if you want flute stress. 😬
Absolutely, that is absolute dope - Ian Anderson eat your heart out!
@@DarrellW_UK Yes, Hocus Pocus is amazing, but check out Tull, flute solo, Tampa Bay Auditorium 1976.
Then help me try to convince her to do a reaction. 😂😁😉🍻
Hello
Ian Anderson, singer & flutist has been involved in music since 1962. I believe that Ian's flute is custom made for Rock. Besides doing the flute, he is also multi-instrumentalist too.
Great reaction. He twirls that flute like it’s a baton 😂
He has several flutes..lol..also he his self taught! Amazing!
My wife bought tickets for us to see Jethro Tull at the Univ. of Illinois It was a coming home gift for me retuning from Air Force basic training in 1971. She knew that I REALLY liked the LP.
Speaking as a former flutist I was introduced to Tull when I was younger than 12.... Give a listen to "Songs from the Wood" or "Thick as Brick" if you really want to hear how wonderful Ian can play.
"Songs from the Wood" is a marvelous album, even if you're not pagan!
Every Tull record to 1978 is incredible to my ears . After Ian fired everyone but Martin , the only album I really love is Crest of a Knave from ‘87.
Some Tull classics you must listen: My God, Aqualung, Cross Eyed Mary, Thick as a Brick, Songs From the Wood, We Used to Know
Ian used to throw his flute up in the air all the way to the level of the lighting right and catch it behind his back- I'm sure he missed a few times.
Ian Anderson is a master showman. He is proof flutes belong in rock and roll.
You have to do the live version of My God at the Isle of Wight Festival. Amazing flute improvisation and an amazing song.
you met ian ? green with envy ! saw tull 3 times between '71 and '75 at their peak. yeah i'm getting old. in my top 3 for live concerts ever. not only is he a wizard on the flute but his acoustic guitar prowess is just striking. musician extraordinaire.
Me too! Thrice in the early '70s! I'm guessing IanA went thru a lot of flutes during that period, but it was merely part of the show...
And he twirled that (those?) flute every single time. My last time was the PassionPlay tour, wherein they played the whole ThickAsABrick lp first!
I saw them three times back then too. Fantastic concerts
i saw the 'benefit' tour and 'thick as a brick' also - so long ago now i can't even remember what the 3rd one was. but it may have been 'stand up'. what an album !@@fredkrissman6527
I’ve seen them at least a dozen times after 1980 , met the 1988 lineup in Saratoga Springs on the 20th Anniversary tour ( drove down from Ottawa Ontario Canada) . Saw Martins band in 2022, Clive Bunker on drums , phenomenal performance, way better than what Ian is calling Tull these days .
StandUp intro JT to me as a 15 yr old,@@thedocofrock1890, when I heard it while tripping about in a SunsetStrip headshop. ANewDayYesterday blew my mind, and I left the shop with the lp under my arm. ☮
I saw Jethro Tull in 75, my first year in college. He sure likes to spin his flute. He did slam his flute into the mic stand a didn’t flinch. What a showman Ian is. Martin Barr is a fantastic guitarist.
In 1993 he spent three months of careful study to correct his self taught technique. This video is about a decade before that. On tour he travels with about a dozen flutes, and while he was careless handling them in the early days, he now says that he lovingly cleans and fixes anything after every performance. These days he mostly uses Powell flutes live.
I've seen Jethro Tull live a few times and at least one of those times I noticed Ian had two flutes...one that he spun around like a baton and another that he actually played...whichever one was not in use was in a little holder on the side of his mic stand and he'd switch back-and-forth depending on whether he was playing it or spinning it. I don't know if that was SOP, but definitely at one of the shows I saw.
Yeahhhhhhhh!!!!! That was great! I can image the stress you felt from the flute/baton twirls, but dang - he is a great showman no doubt.
A few of my favorites that I recommend are Minstrel in the Gallery, Witch's Promise, and Songs from the Wood😊
Saw Tull live in 1980 and it was amazing. Ian played Pop Goes The Weasel on one leg with the other crossed over as an intro to Bungle In The Jungle.
There was so much energy on that stage I was worn out by the time it was over.
Man of principle is my favourite Tull track. Love to see young people appreciating your music❤
Jethro Tull is the EARLY 18th century agriculturalist that the band is named after. In 1701 he invented a horse-drawn seed drill that economically sowed (planted) seeds in neat rows, preventing a great deal of seed wastage by preventing birds and other animals from seeing the seeds lying on the surface. He is known for at least one other significant invention where farm-scale agriculture is concerned.
The singer and flautist (and only CONSTANT member of Jethro Tull) is Ian Anderson.
1701....the #s of the Naval Construction Class of the Starship Enterprise 👍😉
Thank you. Now I can not listen to whatever else she was going to say. Immediate see ya!
@@brianbean8812 wtf why?
@@mjt1517 what if I started by saying that I know all about the Ford camry. Would you seriously think that I know what I'm talking about? Would you seriously waste your time with what I had to say? Come on simple.
Some folks may have already mentioned this, but in this performance Locomotive Breath segues into the finale from their song Black Sunday. It's effective for continuing a driving rhythm. Absolutely the next piece you should listen to is the live recording of THICK AS A BRICK live in London 1977. Such an excellent articulate and sweetly anxious reaction. Brava!
And flute-tossing!
Went to several Tull concerts in the 70s and 80s. To say he put on a great show is an understatement !!
I have loved Tull since 70s, thank you for your clear musical explanation 🙏❤️
I knew you knew Jethro Tull because you played a bit of Bouree in your reaction to Daydreaming by Band-Maid, but I didn't know you were a big fan! One of my favourite bands growing up. I wish more flutists would introduce his unorthodox technique, or their own twist on it, to their playing occasionally. It adds so much expression and energy. Obviously they need to learn to play with "proper" technique as well, which he worked on a lot himself in the 90s (apparently his daughter was taking flute lessons and pointed out things like incorrect fingering). How difficult do you think it is to master both?
Edit: By the way, maybe he couldn't play guitar at first, but he definitely learnt. One of my favourite Tull songs is Life is a Long Song, and the highlight of it is Ian Anderson's acoustic guitar playing.
Life is A Long Song is an amazing song, I love the lyrics and his guitar playing on it , Skating Away is another favourite acoustic tune . He was a good guitarist before he started to play the flute, he tones that down when he talks about it , he just knew he wasn’t going to be the next Jeff Beck, Clapton , or Hendrix.
You got to watch "My God" from Isle of Wight 1971...think that's the year. You get Ian on guitar, much more flute, and some of the flute is classical. My favorite Tull song and performance.
Love his showmanship. The wide open eyes for emphasis along with his unkept hippy "homeless aqualung" look.
Wow Lady
You are FUN ! My heart was racing and nearly fainted because i forgot to breathe watching your appreciation of this music.
Jethro Tull was one of the Greatest influences in my youth.
🌹
I always figured he had his flutes welded into one-piece or something with at least one backup
Back in the day the story that was told was this. Ian was all excited about playing the guitar in a rock band and went to a shop to get one. After a while he decided that with the likes of Eric Clapton and Stevie Ray Vaughan out there guitar wasn’t going to work. He went back to the shop but was told he could trade but not get a refund. Ian agreed to the trade and when the dealer asked him what he wanted he replied, “Make it something small because the way things are going I’m going to be living in an alley somewhere.” The flute was obtained, Ian took a few months to learn the basics and the rest is history. Ian does things on the flute while performing that will make you scratch your head but when he started doing them he didn’t know that you weren’t supposed to. By the way Ian does play guitar in some of the songs they do. I am like you I am left wondering how many times Ian has launched flute parts into the audience.
Lest we forget, Ian Anderson is a phenomenal acoustic guitar player and has a very unique style. Whenever you hear acoustic guitar in Tull recordings, it's Ian playing. For the best example of his capabilities, listen to Sossity...You're a Woman, from Benefit. Very few UA-cam guitarists have succeeded.
Stevie Ray Vaughan was completely unknown when Ian picked up the flute in 67 or early 68 . He realized he was never going to stand out as an electric guitarist and chose a flute as something different to experiment with . He is actually an amazing guitarist, one of the best acoustic guitarists I have ever seen live .
@@user-pf7jm9go6o Ian is an amazing guitarist, his acoustic playing is as important on the Tull recordings as is Martins also amazing playing.
NitPicc, you are a real joy to witness. Your smile and enthusiasm is contagious - I found myself smiling and laughing right along with you till my cheeks hurt a little - LOL. Wishing you MUCH success in your musical and UA-cam career!
Was fortunate enough to be surprised by a band they added the last day before the show.They did stuff like that in'71. It was Tull, who no one ever heard of at that time . They tore the Aragon Ballroom to pieces!
So what happens if Ian drops his flute? Some guy off stage brings him the next flute. Maybe you don't have more than one, but you think he doesn't? His flute(s) may have to survive cab drivers and airport baggage handlers. Of course he has more than one. He probably also has local music shops on speed dial.
Considering the band has a (later) song about a stolen mandolin, you're right.
Don't worry NittPicc, I've watched reaction videos to this song where concern was shown for the flute. I'd guess he had backups on the stage if the worst happened. I grew up in the 70's listening to Deep Purple, Judas Priest, Jethro Tull and Black Sabbath. I heard Ian Anderson asked Tony Iommi to join Jethro Tull around the time Black Sabbath started. I don't know if that's true, but you can imagine Tony's heavy riffs may have changed Jethro Tull's sound.
Tony WAS a member of Jethro Tull briefly
Jethro Tull played in the Rolling Stones "Rock & Roll Circus". Their first guitarist, Mick Abrahams, had left the band and they needed someone for that appearance. Tony Iommi was available so he played in that one instance.
Then he & Geezer Butler went on to form Sabbath, and Jethro Tull found Martin Barre
Great choice , thanks for you fresh , nice and funny reaction. Love it, so congratulations. Jethro Tull were super successful in the seventies and eighties, a band that forged their own label, unique and inimitable with a charismatic great artist Ian Anderson and with a clear Scottish flavor.
Self-taught in learning the flute, he makes his performances a great party with an explosion of energy, music, soul, theatrical expression, freshness, color and very good vibes.
Anderson is like a superman, if not, tell me, you as a flutist, ¿how can you perform for more than 2 hours singing, playing the flute and others, dancing, running up and down, jumping and doing it again and again and playing standing in one leg and one arm raised above his head!!! and not fall faint?.
React to Jethro Tull live versions , they gonna blow your mind.
My God
Cross eye Mary
Living in the Past
Thick as a Brick
Song from the wood
Aqualung
Wind up
ect...
Keep on rocking ❤ beautiful.
Greetings from Barcelona
Jethro Tull put on some of the best concerts that I have seen, and I've seen everybody
Thanks NittPicc for reacting to Tull. I will look forward to more. Love Tull especially Live. Martin Barre (guitar) one of my favorites. I'm sure he has a trunk full of flutes at the concert. I've never seen Ian drop the flute during my 4 concerts and he was all over the stage. An EXCELLENT front man. Then he had a cigarette after the last song. haha, just kidding. 🔥🤘🏻🎸🎵Peace. 11.7
Barre is quite underrated
@@doomfable3378 Yes, he's come up with some awesome and memorable riffs that stay with you forever.
I always felt A Witches Promise and Life Is a Long Song never got enough attention too.
Funny! As a guitar player we tend to be pretty aggressive with our instruments, especially the heavier stuff. It makes sense though that a flute is more delicate.
See: Stevie Ray -Texas Flood.(Live at the El Mocambo)😉
Saw them live in Dallas, October 1976. It was the album "Too old to Rock and Roll: Too Young to Die" Fantastic show!!!!
Ian Anderson is self taught and mixes Celtic, folk, jazz, rock and blues.
My mother met my father at a Jethro Tull concert in 1971. I was born in August of 1972. Fatherless unfortunately but I grew up with a deep love for Jethro Tull and the music of the 60s and 70s thanks Tony wonderful mother R.I.P.
Hello to the awesome Princess NittPicc! I hope you are having a wonderful day. I really enjoyed watching your anxiety over his treatment of his flute, it was really cute to watch your stress levels increase with every move he made. It reminds me of when someone knocked my sax off a chair, it fell and bent one of the main connecting rods and knocked all of my keypads way out of alignment. It was my first sax and it cost less than $500, and it cost about $200 to fix, but they never got it right, so I still had to get a new one. I wonder if he used JB Weld or some other sticky substance to attach the foot to the main body and to the headstock connection, but that could make tuning a little difficult.
Did not know you were a fellow sax player ... I left the fray back in high school ;) .
@@PANIC_aka_PinD I kept at it for a while after high school and into college, but I pretty much gave up on it when I couldn't find a band. I really had to give up when my ex-wife stole my sax on the day she left. I still have a piano, probably because she couldn't lift it.
@@markhayes9004 lol .... "hey! come back with that piano :p !"
Never heard Locomotive Breath? Besides Aqualung it is probably the most iconic Tull song I can think of. Meeting Ian Anderson would be life changing for most of us. Jealous :) . Personally I like the studio version of this song, because I grew up with it, then take in the LIVE to gain a fuller appreciation. Ian is a self-taught single-footed flutist ;) . Some of the techniques he uses, specifically singing into the flute, are simply mind bending. Flying flutes not your thing :p ??? Lol @ NittPicc Chewbacca.
All from the internet: The locomotive in this song is running out of control, and is a metaphor for societal problems. Old Charlie stole the handle. The handle presumably is the brake on a train that would slow it down but Old Charlie stole it. I guess that makes Old Charlie God or the Devil or nature or Death or whatever forces will eventually overcome us and cause our mortal existence to cease.
... now go somewhere quiet and relax ;) .
I've been a Tull fan since 1972. Ian's flute twirling was a favorite moment of the many concerts I went to. Until he stopped after it became electrically attached.
Seeing you stress out/simultaneously admire what's happening is very entertaining. Come on though, who hasn't ever looked at a flute and thought, 'if I get a hold of that, I'm going to twirl it.' Tell us true: you've done it
Also Marshall Tucker Band on Can't you See.............
I DEMAND MORE FLUTE PLAYING
Check out " Attic of love" Start out with "Bridge of lost desire.". You can find it on UA-cam. The singer also does covers of about thirty great Tull songs. If you like Tull it's gonna blow your mind
That was an instructive, cool, and most of all , FUN, reaction to this classic rocker, thanks!
I was lucky enough to see them live in 1977, Songs From the Woods had been released. They did a 2 hour show in Sydney. still is one of the best concerts I have been to.
Being Hispanic you should consider trying to contact The Warning and see if they'd like to add a flute to something of theirs. Just a thought.
Hard rock flute ;) ...
Like for best Chewie impression ever 🤣
+1 :)
I'm screaming at your reaction! 🤣 I played clarinet in marching band, so was grouped with the flutes/piccolos (I?). It would get so cold on the field sometimes, the glue holding the pads in place would freeze and they'd fall out. We all carried stickies for emergencies 😂
Anderson is a madman.. I so love him and his singing and flute music.
Been to several Tull concerts, got hit by spit when Ian emptied the valve into the crowd. World Famous.
Thank you for explaining Ian Andersen's flute work. I've never heard a flutist explain it so it was always a mystery to me. I've loved JT for years. I bought the album Aqualung when it first came out in the early '70s so Locomotive Breath and me have a long relationship together. Thick as a Brick is a brilliant assemblage of styles
Ann Wilson of Heart also plays flute. You can hear it in a few of their songs, especially "Sing Child".
Jethro Tull is like Baroque Rock.
Baroque Rock, cool
My friends and I always called it Heavy Medieval.
Then they won for best heavy metal album, and we all went "No way!"
So fun to see your reaction. I remember when this album was first out. One of the older kids had a copy. They would listen to it in the school lounge on a portable record player. Very cool
You might find this interesting -- an extract from a page on the Jethro Tull website about Ian's flutes: «The lowly Gold Seal was my only instrument until it was lost or stolen in the USA in 1969 and I found a hastily-acquired local alternative in the shape of the Artley flute. This was a marching band instrument made in Elkhart, Indiana and, although robust and chunky, I managed to break all the 21 that I was to own over the next 15 years! In fact, I used to travel with a case of about 12 of them to get through a long US tour and they had bits missing, dents, ingrained dirt and were a biological hazard to anyone who touched them.» -- doesn't seem to say if/how he did anything special to keep them together... 🤷🏻♀
That was a great performance by the band and I loved your reaction to it. They released a new album late last year and I love it, the lad is in his '70s now, not bad going !!
Nitt Picc, I’followed JT since the 70’s. Seen them in concert likely 5 (or more) times. Ian Anderson was also a ballet trained dancer and in his earlier years he was constantly dancing and ballet leaping all around the stage, tossing his flute into the air and catching it many times throughout his performances. As he aged he of course slowed down and didn’t really jump much if at all. I’ve never seen him miss catching hid flute, ever! He came close once but managed just above the stage to catch it. The last time I saw him he and his lead guitarist Martin Barr constantly switched between flute and guitar throughout the whole concert, you never knew which would play which song to song. Love them both to death for the amazing pleasure they’ve provided me my whole life almost.
Thanks for the flute lessons ! Always wondered how he managed that amazing / unique sound .
'Can I be next . . . ?' well, yes you can if you go off the 'deep - end' like Jethro ! ! ! !
( he had to tie or glue that flute together in order for it to stay in one piece ! )
take care, rh
That was one of the most entertaining reactions I've ever seen for this performance! My very first concert was Jethro Tull in 1985 at Worcester Centrum in Worcester Mass, USA. I was 14. My dad, his little brother and my mom's little brother took me. I was into Twisted Sister, Ratt, Quiet Riot, early Hair Metal and that show just blew me away. The only song I knew by Jethro Tull at the time was "Aqualung" (great song, btw, you should check that one out...no flute, though, but a kick ass guitar solo and excellent lyrics) and I was completely blown away. I've been a fan ever since and have seen JT 8 times over the course of my life. That show made young teen me realize that music encompassed more than just Hair Metal. Anyway, thanks for the reaction ✌
You should watch No Lullaby Live next. It's all very improper and amazing at the same time! Been a Tull fan since 1974. Saw them live about 8 times. Amazing show! I think this is from Madison Square Garden. Live at the Capitol Centre from I think 1978 is floating around the internet. I was at that show. Happy watching!
I saw Tull live when they were doing Broadsword and the Beast album at the Cornwall Coloseum. Ian Anderson was amazing, especially when he sung and played the flute..... no idea how he did that.
Someone shouted out "how's your Isle of Skye- ship" as he owned a large piece of the Isle at the time 😊
Live, energized, musical sound is what Tull is.
You can see that the head is taped to the body to keep it form flying apart as he spins it; I imagine he's taken some similar precautions fro the other parts since he's crazy with his flute in concert. His singing and fluttering really adds a lot of texture to his playing, as well as bringing some older-sounding music to the band, which is named after an 18th century man and wear clothes to match.
Incredible talent and showmanship
One of my favs from Jethro Tull.
That was really fun. Thank you.
Absolute ""perfection"" ,,,,,, words haven't been invented that can adequately express the sheer beauty an awe at watching and listening to a genuis, a master at work ....
My first experience with Jethro Tull was this song, and it blew my mind. With Ian Anderson's stage presence and showmanship on top of his flute playing, WOW!. It kind of makes me regret not doing more with my sister's flute when stealing and just goofing off. (Don't worry, she hardly played it). When listening to the albums, you can't help but play air-flute, much like playing air-violin for Kansas' "Dust in the Wind". I'm sure he treated his flutes he played in the studio with much more care.
thank for your great reaction. happy easter. "bouree" (the 1969 french TV version from 1969) would be great as next one.