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JETHRO TULL

Prog Folk • United Kingdom


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Jethro Tull biography
Founded in Blackpool, UK in 1967 - Hiatus from 2012-2016


"I didn`t have to play it all the time, I just had to wave it around and look good" - Ian Anderson 2003.

Eccentric on stage yet rather thoughtful, reserved and even sombre at times when not in the limelight, the Jethro Tull image was the brainchild of flute wielding frontman Ian ANDERSON. Clad in scruffy vagabond apparel, and looking more like an anachronism out of a Charles Dickens tale, Anderson conveyed an old English aura during the band`s formative years in the late 60`s and early 70`s which would persist throughout the band's 40 year career both visually and musically.

Born on August 10, 1947 in Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland, Anderson was augmented by a revolving door of colourful musicians over the years which added to the flamboyance of the Jethro Tull phenomenon. Conceived as a psychedelic blues band in late 1967 the music of Jethro Tull has always been dauntingly intricate embracing many styles including blues, jazz, folk, medieval, classical, hard rock along with forays into electronic music, sometimes referred to as "space age prog". The lyrics were equally as sophisticated and sometimes reached new heights of grandiloquence commenting on depressing world events such as drug abuse, the oil crisis, modernisation, third world troubles and a deteriorating economy.. Other topics included fads, spy novels, environmental and social issues as well as metaphysical musings. With lyrics and music which ran deep Jethro Tull have often been over-analysed by both fans and critics alike and many of their albums have been erroneously interpreted as autobiographical due to the fact that many of their record covers featured artwork which seemed to depict Ian Anderson's likeness, something which he has vehemently denied in numerous interviews.

Jethro Tull can trace their origins back to 1963 when as a young art student in Blackpool, England Anderson formed a band called THE BLADES (after a club in a James Bond novel). By 1965 as a 7-piece they had changed their name to THE JOHN EVAN BAND and subsequently to THE JOHN EVAN SMASH (his mother supplied their tour van) Evan, whose real name was Evans, would eventually become the band's keyboard player for most of the seventies. The band relocated to London in`67, the centre of the British blues movement of the sixties in search of more lucrative gigs. However the band was gradually d...
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JETHRO TULL discography


Ordered by release date | Showing ratings (top albums) | Help Progarchives.com to complete the discography and add albums

JETHRO TULL top albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

3.31 | 1002 ratings
This Was
1968
4.05 | 1490 ratings
Stand Up
1969
3.92 | 1256 ratings
Benefit
1970
4.37 | 3023 ratings
Aqualung
1971
4.64 | 3825 ratings
Thick as a Brick
1972
4.04 | 1718 ratings
A Passion Play
1973
3.34 | 994 ratings
War Child
1974
4.04 | 1452 ratings
Minstrel in the Gallery
1975
3.12 | 931 ratings
Too Old To Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young To Die!
1976
4.21 | 1684 ratings
Songs from the Wood
1977
4.04 | 1388 ratings
Heavy Horses
1978
3.50 | 918 ratings
Stormwatch
1979
3.23 | 770 ratings
A
1980
3.30 | 786 ratings
The Broadsword And The Beast
1982
2.23 | 623 ratings
Under Wraps
1984
3.01 | 190 ratings
A Classic Case
1985
3.23 | 700 ratings
Crest of a Knave
1987
2.69 | 551 ratings
Rock Island
1989
2.63 | 523 ratings
Catfish Rising
1991
3.61 | 621 ratings
Roots To Branches
1995
3.01 | 511 ratings
J-Tull Dot Com
1999
3.47 | 485 ratings
The Jethro Tull Christmas Album
2003
3.35 | 222 ratings
The Zealot Gene
2022
3.14 | 152 ratings
RökFlöte
2023
3.41 | 96 ratings
Curious Ruminant
2025

JETHRO TULL Live Albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

4.20 | 478 ratings
Live - Bursting Out
1978
2.94 | 61 ratings
Live At Hammersmith '84
1990
3.65 | 200 ratings
A Little Light Music
1992
3.07 | 56 ratings
In Concert
1995
3.68 | 140 ratings
Living With The Past
2002
4.23 | 184 ratings
Nothing Is Easy: Live At The Isle Of Wight 1970
2004
3.51 | 109 ratings
Aqualung Live
2005
3.50 | 96 ratings
Live At Montreux 2003
2007
4.30 | 32 ratings
Live at Madison Square Garden 1978
2009
4.22 | 39 ratings
Live At Carnegie Hall 1970
2015

JETHRO TULL Videos (DVD, Blu-ray, VHS etc)

3.87 | 59 ratings
Slipstream (DVD)
1981
3.82 | 47 ratings
20 Years of Jethro Tull (VHS)
1988
3.48 | 91 ratings
Living With the Past
2002
3.04 | 56 ratings
A New Day Yesterday - The 25th Anniversary Collection
2003
3.87 | 101 ratings
Nothing Is Easy: Live At The Isle Of Wight 1970
2005
2.99 | 72 ratings
Live At Montreux 2003
2007
4.04 | 25 ratings
Slipstream (9 song version)
2007
4.32 | 28 ratings
Classic Artists Series: Jethro Tull
2008
3.38 | 36 ratings
Jack In The Green - Live In Germany
2008
3.61 | 25 ratings
Songs From Bethlehem
2008
4.38 | 109 ratings
Live At Madison Square Garden 1978 (DVD + CD)
2009
3.78 | 36 ratings
Live at AVO Session Basel 2008
2009
4.58 | 40 ratings
Around the World Live (4DVD)
2013

JETHRO TULL Boxset & Compilations (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

3.09 | 4 ratings
Jethro Tull
1970
3.09 | 4 ratings
Sunday Best
1971
4.12 | 367 ratings
Living In The Past
1972
3.04 | 89 ratings
M.U. - The Best of Jethro Tull
1976
2.97 | 59 ratings
Repeat - The Best Of Jethro Tull - Vol. II
1977
2.04 | 5 ratings
The Best Of Jethro Tull Vol. III
1981
3.18 | 88 ratings
Original Masters
1985
2.09 | 3 ratings
Masters of Rock
1986
3.67 | 94 ratings
20 Years Of Jethro Tull Box
1988
4.45 | 95 ratings
20 Years Of Jethro Tull (The Definitive Collection)
1988
3.78 | 63 ratings
20 Years Of Jethro Tull (USA release)
1989
3.68 | 181 ratings
Nightcap
1993
3.81 | 57 ratings
The Best Of Jethro Tull: The Anniversary Collection
1993
4.40 | 86 ratings
25th Anniversary Box Set
1993
2.60 | 27 ratings
A Jethro Tull Collection
1997
1.56 | 33 ratings
Through The Years
1997
3.00 | 79 ratings
The Very Best Of Jethro Tull
2001
2.27 | 18 ratings
Essential Jethro Tull
2007
3.45 | 56 ratings
The Best Of Acoustic Jethro Tull
2007
3.81 | 55 ratings
The Jethro Tull Christmas Album / Live - Christmas At St Bride's 2008
2009
4.68 | 59 ratings
Aqualung - 40th Anniversary Collector's Edition
2011
2.09 | 3 ratings
Essential
2011
4.87 | 102 ratings
Thick as a Brick - 40th Anniversary Special Edition
2012
4.79 | 90 ratings
A Passion Play: An Extended Perfomance
2014
4.54 | 62 ratings
War Child - The 40th Anniversary Theatre Edition
2014
4.66 | 71 ratings
Minstrel In The Gallery - 40th Anniversary: La Grande Edition
2015
4.65 | 42 ratings
Too Old To Rock'n'Roll: Too Young To Die - The TV Special Edition
2015
4.50 | 37 ratings
Stand Up - The Elevated Edition
2016
4.93 | 33 ratings
Aqualung - 40th Anniversary Adapted Edition
2016
2.00 | 3 ratings
An Introduction to Jethro Tull
2017
4.88 | 57 ratings
Songs From The Wood - 40th Anniversary Edition - The Country Set
2017
4.60 | 45 ratings
Heavy Horses (New Shoes Edition)
2018
4.48 | 31 ratings
This Was (50 Anniversary Edition)
2018
3.07 | 9 ratings
50 for 50
2018
2.00 | 5 ratings
50th Anniversary Collection
2018
4.56 | 42 ratings
Stormwatch (The 40th Anniversary Force 10 Edition)
2019
4.37 | 43 ratings
A (La Mode) - The 40th Anniversary Edition
2021
4.48 | 37 ratings
Benefit - 50th Anniversary Enhanced Edition
2021
4.47 | 23 ratings
The Broadsword And The Beast (The 40th Anniversary Monster Edition)
2023
4.07 | 11 ratings
Warchild II
2023
4.45 | 11 ratings
Live - Bursting Out - The Inflated Edition
2024
4.00 | 5 ratings
The Jethro Tull Christmas Album - Fresh Snow At Christmas
2024
4.26 | 15 ratings
The Chateau D'Herouville Sessions 1972
2024
0.00 | 0 ratings
Songs from the Vault 1975-1978
2025

JETHRO TULL Official Singles, EPs, Fan Club & Promo (CD, EP/LP, MC, Digital Media Download)

3.81 | 21 ratings
Love Story
1968
4.04 | 28 ratings
A Song For Jeffrey
1968
2.72 | 23 ratings
Sunshine Day
1968
4.05 | 34 ratings
Sweet Dream / 17
1969
4.00 | 25 ratings
The Witch's Promise
1969
4.49 | 35 ratings
Living In The Past
1969
3.81 | 21 ratings
Inside
1970
4.38 | 48 ratings
Life Is a Long Song
1971
4.13 | 23 ratings
Hymn 43
1971
4.43 | 35 ratings
Aqualung
1971
4.33 | 12 ratings
Locomotive Breath
1971
4.14 | 35 ratings
Living In The Past
1972
3.52 | 29 ratings
Bungle In The Jungle
1974
4.45 | 11 ratings
Skating Away on the Thin Ice of the New Day
1974
4.20 | 10 ratings
Minstrel in the Gallery / Summerday Sands
1975
3.26 | 35 ratings
Ring Out, Solstice Bells
1976
3.38 | 13 ratings
Too Old To Rock 'N' Roll; Too Young To Die
1976
3.69 | 33 ratings
The Whistler
1977
3.75 | 12 ratings
A Stitch In Time
1978
4.06 | 32 ratings
Moths
1978
3.95 | 13 ratings
Warm Sporran
1979
2.95 | 25 ratings
North Sea Oil
1979
4.35 | 23 ratings
Home E.P.
1979
3.20 | 26 ratings
Working John, Working Joe
1980
3.33 | 29 ratings
Fallen On Hard Times
1982
3.48 | 29 ratings
Broadsword
1982
2.88 | 26 ratings
Lap Of Luxury
1984
3.29 | 7 ratings
Bourrée
1985
3.89 | 19 ratings
Coronach
1986
3.65 | 17 ratings
Said She Was A Dancer 12''
1987
3.65 | 23 ratings
Steel Monkey 12''
1987
3.90 | 10 ratings
Part Of The Machine
1988
3.71 | 22 ratings
Another Christmas Song
1989
3.50 | 21 ratings
This Is Not Love
1991
3.81 | 22 ratings
Rocks On The Road
1991
3.00 | 16 ratings
Living in the (Slightly More Recent) Past / Living in the Past
1993
2.88 | 24 ratings
Rare And Precious Chain
1995
3.41 | 22 ratings
Bends Like A Willow
1999
3.14 | 14 ratings
The Christmas EP
2004
3.50 | 6 ratings
Living in the Past
2013
3.83 | 6 ratings
The Navigators
2023
4.00 | 3 ratings
The Tipu House
2025
4.00 | 4 ratings
Curious Ruminant
2025

JETHRO TULL Reviews


Showing last 10 reviews only
 Curious Ruminant by JETHRO TULL album cover Studio Album, 2025
3.41 | 96 ratings

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Curious Ruminant
Jethro Tull Prog Folk

Review by yarstruly

4 stars I'm sure today's artist needs absolutely no introduction. Jethro Tull, led by Ian Anderson has been a hallmark of prog from the 60s onward. After nearly two decades of no releases under the Tull moniker, Anderson resurrected the name in 2022 with the album "The Zealot Game", albeit without longtime guitarist Martin Barre, who had been onboard since Tull's second album, "Stand Up" in 1969. In 2023, Tull released "RökFlöte" and today's review is the third since the band resumed, called "Curious Ruminant". By all accounts, this album is very much in the style of their 70's classics. Here is the line-up for this outing, which is the 25th studio album under the Jethro Tull name:

- Ian Anderson / flutes, vocals, acoustic guitar & tenor guitars, mandolin, odds & sods, bits & bobs - David Goodier / bass - John O'Hara / piano, keyboards, accordion - Scott Hammond / drums - Jack Clark / electric guitar

With: - James Duncan / drums, cajón, percussion - Andrew Giddings / piano, keyboards, accordion

Let's check out this Curious Ruminant, shall we?

Track 1 - Puppet and the Puppet Master

The track begins with a minor key piano melody, but soon after, a jaunty beat takes over with Anderson's famous flute work out front. Anderson then begins singing and telling a tale. Just before one minute an almost funky rhythm takes over. After a second verse in 6-8 the flute is featured again. The third verse follows and is in turn followed by a guitar solo. As we proceed, we have another flute section, then the organ is featured. All the while the rhythm section is tight. The verses are short, punctuated by flute leads after the main instrumental break. The song concludes on a minor chord after having been in a major key following the piano intro. A lively and entertaining track.

Track 2 - Curious Ruminant

Once again, melancholy piano starts us off. A few acoustic chords join in, before unaccompanied flute takes over. The groove sets in around 30 seconds in, with a chugging rhythm. Ian Anderson has always taken the storyteller role in his music, but it somehow even seems more so here, as his voice is definitely singing a melody, but it's almost spoken. There is a wonderful guitar solo as we cross the three-minute mark. The next verse is quieter than the ones before the solo. Jack Clark's guitar tone is remarkably similar to Martin Barre's, but his playing is more fluid than his legendary predecessor. There is another wonderful guitar solo as we cross the 4-minute point, then a call and response with flute. I like the moving guitar parts behind the vocals. There is a staccato unison rhythm pattern from the band as the song reaches its conclusion. Good track.

Track 3 - Dunsinane Hill

This one begins with a flute, backed by accordion. It has a 3-4 feel like Brahms' Lullaby. The flute parts become layered prior to the verse. At a bit after 1:30 the rhythm changes as the agile flute takes over. He then returns to 3- 4, although the beat picks up. The drums are playing a subtle tom-tom pattern. By 3 minutes he is fully speaking the lyrics, before returning to singing. A well-arranged song, and Anderson's voice is engaging.

Track 4 - The Tipu House

This one begins with a bit more excitement. This one is upbeat with more energy in the flute. I am feeling a bit more of the Tull that I expect to hear. There is a lot going on lyrically here, that I will need more time to digest. Lots of things are happening in the Tipu House, for sure. The song ends somewhat abruptly. Kind of a fun track though.

Track 5 - Savannah of Paddington Green

Birds chirping and other nature sounds are quickly joined by a staccato acoustic guitar part. This one harkens back to the 70s folky acoustic strumming Tull songs. We are in 6-8 here. After a verse and chorus, the staccato acoustic riff leads us back to another verse and chorus. Anderson's voice range may be a bit more limited these days, but he makes it work well by writing within his range. Good track.

Track 6 - Stygian Hand

Stygian seems to be the word of the year among classic proggers, as Alex Lifeson's new band Envy of None's second album which I recently reviewed is called Stygian Wavz. This one has a very fun riff. I like the mandolin on this. Excellent swirling parts between vocal phrases. I love the guitar run just prior to the 2-minute mark. This one reminds me the most of classic Tull, so far. I like the pause in the instruments at around 3:20. Great track, my favorite one to this point.

Track 7 - Over Jerusalem

Flute, Acoustic guitar and some sort of bell-like keyboard or percussion, then vocals soon join in. Other instruments begin making appearances as the verse proceeds. This one is very folky and melodic. In the bridge there are some nice clean electric guitar fills. At around 2:35, the acoustic guitar establishes an odd-metered rhythm. As the band joins back in, the flute takes a solo, then there is a new verse in that rhythm. We are in 5-8, I believe. We then get a brief guitar solo before the flute takes the spotlight back. I like the rhythm section bed in this part. After a short unaccompanied flute bit, the guitar solo resumes, and he continues playing lead lines when Anderson begins singing again. At 4:23, the music mellows out again. There is a stronger section before Anderson closes out the song by saying "Jerusalem" twice in a very distinct way. Strong track.

Track 8 - Drink from the Same Well

This is by far the longest song on the album at 16.42, with the second longest being the title track at an even 6 minutes. After a quick check it seems that the last time there was a song of this length (and it's exactly the same length at that!) on a Tull album was "Baker Street Muse", going back 50 years to 1975's "The Minstrel in the Gallery"! In fact, as far as I can tell the only song over 10 minutes between that one and this one is "Budapest" which was just above that threshold at 10:05 on 1987's Grammy winner (for best metal album, lol) "Crest of a Knave". So, let's see what Ian and company have in store for us.

High-pitched melodic flute and piano start this one off, and then the bass joins in. After around 1:15, some synth strings subtly join in. At the 2:00 mark, an acoustic guitar strum announces a new, more rhythmic section, with the flute still firmly in the lead role. The band provides some rhythmic twists along the way, but the percussion is still subtle. At 5 minutes, the beat pauses, then the flute gives us a new tune. Jazzy drums join in at around 5:35. The piano takes over after the six-minute point, but only briefly as the flute takes back over quickly. Piano gets another brief spotlight around 7 minutes in. After another short pause in the action at around 7:45, piano and acoustic guitar give us a new melodic foundation. After a bit more flute, the first vocals begin at around the 8-minute point on a low note. Ian the storyteller is in fine spirits on this one. There is an effective vocal effect at around 9 minutes in. At 9:45 there is another flute feature. Vocals return at 11:52. At 13:30 there is another distinct pause after an accented note, then we get some rhythms from the intro that return and the flute solo resumes. Ian is, of course, one of the finest flautists in rock history, which is a small but distinguished lot, and he really felt like stretching out on the instrument here. This feels less like a prog epic, however, and more like an extended Ian Anderson flute solo with a short, but intriguing song in the middle of it. That isn't necessarily a bad thing, but the only thing it shares with "Baker Street Muse" is its length. It's not a bad track, but I am a bit disappointed, as I was hoping for something a bit more exciting when I saw the run time of this one.

Track 9 - Interim Sleep

The album closes out with the shortest track, at just over 2 and a half minutes. It begins with a nice slowly strummed acoustic guitar chord. This time he actually is talking instead of singing. The acoustic guitar and flute flourishes accompany a droning note as he waxes poetically. I interpret this as a metaphor for dying and being reborn. This is just a little punctuation on the album, to me.

OVERALL IMPRESSIONS:

It's not bad, not great. It's an enjoyable listen overall. The playing on it is quite good, if lacking a little in energy. But when you consider that the Jethro Tull 'brand" has been around for 57 years this year, it's impressive that there still are Jethro Tull releases to be had. Tracks 6 and 7 are my favorites. Ian Anderson still has stories to tell, and this is how he does it. Maybe it's not quite as good as the 70s glory days, but it's still worth listening to. I'll give it a 4 out of 5 stars.

 Curious Ruminant by JETHRO TULL album cover Studio Album, 2025
3.41 | 96 ratings

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Curious Ruminant
Jethro Tull Prog Folk

Review by BBKron

3 stars Ian Anderson and his current assemblage as Jethro Tull are back with their 3rd album in the last 4 years, and this is the best of those three, as it has more elements reminiscent of the old Tull (more folk and rock elements, return of the acoustic guitar, etc.). It's a good listen, quite enjoyable. The instrumental sections, in particular, are quite good, with stellar flute work and a stronger guitar presence than other recent albums. However, it is still a far cry from classic Tull. Anderson's vocals have greatly deteriorated and are somewhat distracting (should do more instrumentals) and overall, the songs are just not as memorable. Thus, it's good, but not great, and not really something you will probably want to go back to again and again. Rating: 3.0
 Curious Ruminant by JETHRO TULL album cover Studio Album, 2025
3.41 | 96 ratings

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Curious Ruminant
Jethro Tull Prog Folk

Review by TheEliteExtremophile

3 stars Oh boy! Jethro Tull is back with a new album. I gave their last two releases middling-to-lukewarm coverage, so I didn't exactly have very high hopes for Curious Ruminant. Overall, though, I was pleasantly surprised. They leaned hard into folk music, and the album is mostly a success. It's not going to be a contender for my album of the year, but if you're looking for some decent, proggy folk rock, this is a good choice.

Curious Ruminant starts with "Puppet and the Puppet Master". Its opening passage is peppy and folky, with ample acoustic guitar and accordion. This is better than most of the band's recent output, and it strongly calls to mind Tull's output in the mid-to-late 1990s. Anderson's sing-talking isn't great, but with the state of his voice, this is really the best he can do.

The title track comes next, and it slows things down. There's a steady, crunching guitar line, and Anderson's flute playing is great. The band does a good job at keeping things tense, and this is more reminiscent of something off Broadsword and the Beast. I also like that the band's new guitarist has more character to his playing than the last one. He's still no Martin Barre, but it's an improvement. Despite everything positive I have to say about this song, it doesn't need to be six minutes long. Four-and-a-half would have been fine.

"Dunsinane Hill" returns to a folkier sound palette, with flute and accordion taking the lead in its opening. It is, however, also a step down from the prior two songs. Its glacial pace and unsubtle sing-talking makes me think of certain Roger Waters-penned songs. In its second half, the instrumental backing gets a bit more interesting, but this still isn't my favorite cut on the album.

The band returns to their '90s sound on "The Tipu House". It's a fun, high-energy cut, and I especially like the dark and swirling chorus. In contrast, "Savannah of Paddington Green" is a slow, sweet acoustic song. It's not bad, but it doesn't do much to stand out. Ian Anderson has written a lot of songs that sound like this one.

"Stygian Hand" sticks with the overall sound of the preceding cut, but it's got a lot more pep in its step. Mandolin, accordion, and flute give this cut a strangely pirate-y vibe, but it's not goofy. It's just got that "vaguely old-timey British nautical" feel to it, if that makes sense. However, it probably could have been trimmed down by about a minute.

The mood on "Over Jerusalem" is mellower and more whimsical. It's also a bit sappy, and the melody is somewhat awkward and unnatural. This isn't exactly Tull's strongest work.

"Drink from the Same Well" is the band's longest song since A Passion Play. (It clocks in two full seconds longer than "Baker St. Muse"!) The opening passage is a classical-influenced bit of piano, flute, and bass, and it's a pleasant instrumental moment. That introduction is followed by some bouncy folk flavors with the occasional bit of new age-y ambiance. It's pleasant enough, but some of this drags on for longer than it needs to; parts of this huge song can feel repetitious.

The instrumental first half of this song shifts abruptly to a verse. It's a bit wispy for my taste, but there are some good melodic ideas here. A bit more instrumental punch would have been nice, but Anderson's voice doesn't have the strength necessary for that. He needs the backing to be relatively light, or at least deliberately-paced. 

The second half of this song is unnecessarily dragged-out. Its length could have easily been trimmed to about 10-12 minutes without losing much. It kills the momentum of the album up to this point, and much of it just left me bored.

The final song on the album is also its shortest, "Interim Sleep", a brief spoken-word piece.

Curious Ruminant is both the folkiest and the best of Tull's post-reunion output. They sound a bit more like a band, rather than an Ian Anderson solo project. Anderson's voice is still a major hurdle for the band to overcome. He's learned to work within his limitations, but it's still a limitation. Aside from the overlong "Drink from the Same Well", the songs here are mostly focused and generally enjoyable.

Review originally published here: theeliteextremophile.com/2025/03/10/album-review-jethro-tull-curious-ruminant/

 Curious Ruminant by JETHRO TULL album cover Studio Album, 2025
3.41 | 96 ratings

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Curious Ruminant
Jethro Tull Prog Folk

Review by A Crimson Mellotron
Prog Reviewer

3 stars The latest release of Ian Anderson's Jethro Tull is the twenty-fourth studio album from the collective, titled 'Curious Ruminant', released in March of 2025 through Inside Out Music, compiled of nine new compositions recorded throughout the last fifteen years or so, and finally recorded as complete pieces making up the band's arguably the band's most introspective and philosophically-acute album, featuring the regular that currently goes under the Tull name, together with contributions from past members James Duncan (drums) and Andrew Giddings (keyboards, piano, accordion), having previously joined the band in the early 1990s. 'Curious Ruminant' zealously continues the band's contemporary style of forging a successful homage to their classic sound, this time with a much greater prevalence of folksy arrangements, aided by the heavy use of the flute and the accordion, which almost makes this album similar to the famed "prog-folk trilogy" of the late 70s.

From all three recent additions to the discography of Jethro Tull, this 2025 offering might as well be the most consistent and successful one, speaking of the overall impression left off by the album, the flow and the architecture of the work as well as the quality of the music and the engagement of the listener with the compositions. Beautifully complex and quirky, at times really folklore-ish and playful, this album has some truly solid numbers, which shall be a fine treat for dedicated fans, like the title track, 'Stygian Hand', 'Over Jerusalem', and the 17-minute-long epic 'Drink from the Same Well' (a piece necessarily evoking the grandiose 'Baker St. Muse' from 1975), containing some delightful instrumental sections in its first half. Yet going back to the age-old dispute of what is progressive nowadays, 'Curious Ruminant' probably hardly qualifies as such, since this album barely diverges from the musical musings already established on the two preceding releases. Nevertheless, this album will make Tull fans happy and while it is nothing groundbreaking, it is a good, well-curated and well-performed recording by a legendary classic band.

 RökFlöte by JETHRO TULL album cover Studio Album, 2023
3.14 | 152 ratings

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RökFlöte
Jethro Tull Prog Folk

Review by A Crimson Mellotron
Prog Reviewer

3 stars 'RökFlöte' is the twenty-third studio album by legendary classic rock band Jethro Tull as well as the second installment in the "New Testament" of the resurrected version of the group led by Ian Anderson, who is accompanied either by musicians who have been part of Tull prior to the 2012 disbandment, or completely new members. This very album is informed on Norse mythology, drawing inspiration from pagan rites perhaps, and while not necessarily a concept record, the thematic thread is rather interesting. Originally intended as an instrumental album centered around flute pieces by Anderson, the frontman had found himself writing lyrics and full songs soon after, resulting in another complete work of new recordings, essentially an homage to the 70s and quite similar to (yet overall better than) 'The Zealot Gene' from 2022.

Structured as a classic album, with its twelve track-tracklist, 'RökFlöte' presents an interesting resurgence of those traditional J-Tull antics and sounds, much beloved by fans of the band's late 60s/early 70s period, with leading flutes, swiveling all over the place, around which the other members virtually play the music of Ian Anderson, supporting him in the crafting of the various pieces. Stylistically, this album certainly qualifies as folk-rock with progressive tendencies, and quite frankly, there are plenty of joyous, marvelous and exquisitely well-written instrumental passages, eventually supporting the idea that this might have been a gorgeous instrumental Tull release. Songs like 'Ginnungagap', 'Hammer on Hammer', 'Wolf Unchained', 'Trickster', 'The Navigators' and 'Ithavoll' all offer a daring amalgamation of the heavy and acoustic guitar riffs, the lovely mandolin, and Anderson's spiky, warm flutes, generally reminiscent of albums like 'Heavy Horses', 'Aqualung', and even 1969's 'Stand Up'. But while the music is excellent all throughout, the vocals hardly impress as it had been noticed on 'The Zealot Gene', somehow collapsing the overall experience of this album, which is good, coherent and enjoyable at large.

 J-Tull Dot Com by JETHRO TULL album cover Studio Album, 1999
3.01 | 511 ratings

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J-Tull Dot Com
Jethro Tull Prog Folk

Review by A Crimson Mellotron
Prog Reviewer

3 stars Still good but less varied, Jethro Tull's twentieth studio album 'J-Tull Dot Com' is by far a continuation of the musical world of 'Roots to Branches', once again introducing an array of exotic influences to the folksy rock palette of Ian Anderson's band of maestros. With the frontman himself reflecting upon contemporary matters and shifting trends in communication, this album is a nice and well-curated collection of fourteen tracks (in all honesty, a bit too much for what it's worth), and to an extent, one half of this album serves the more traditional side of Tull ('Spiral', 'Awol', 'Wicked Windows', 'Hunt by Numbers', 'El Niño'), while the other half delves even further into the exploration of Eastern influence intertwined with massive riffs and quirky flute playing ('Dot Com', 'Hot Mango Flush', 'Black Mamba', 'Far Alaska'). Without any of the material being overly exciting or explicitly groundbreaking, 'J-Tull Dot Com' is consistent and enjoyable, and even if this record is more accessible than 'Roots to Branches', it exhibits a less intriguing songwriting than its predecessor. A decent listen overall but far from the quality of the band's finest output. This record also happens to be recorded by the longest-serving unchanged lineup of Tull, which probably says something about it, too.
 Roots To Branches by JETHRO TULL album cover Studio Album, 1995
3.61 | 621 ratings

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Roots To Branches
Jethro Tull Prog Folk

Review by A Crimson Mellotron
Prog Reviewer

4 stars 1995's 'Roots to Branches' brings yet another interesting twist to the Jethro Tull sound, with the ostensibly gorgeous influence of world music, swiveling across mighty passages of upfront flute sounds, heavy guitars and a prominent bass, all aspects rounding up for quite an excellent studio album evocative of the band's best material from the mid-to-late 70s, as this nineteenth studio album oversees a fabulous resurgence of creativity and passion following frontman Ian Anderson's travels to India, bringing along a fine Eastern-flavored flute mannerism contributing to the folksy swagger of his band, and in fact making much sense in the context of the British musician's second solo album 'Divinities', seeing the light of day a few months prior to the release of 'Roots to Branches', this influencing its stylistic direction profoundly. While one might catch glimpses of the band's previous experiments with hard rock and blues, this mid-90s release is much more pertinent to Tull's signature prog-folk style of play and is justifiably seen as the band's strongest work since 'Heavy Horses'.

Heaps of fascinating sonic experiments and unusual soundscapes influenced by Indian and Arab music, a trope otherwise referred to as worldbeat or world music. This is a surprising but welcome refreshment of the stagnated sound that dominates recent preceding albums. Martin Barre sounds sharp and inspired, Steve Bailey is prominent and technical on here, while the contributions of Andrew Giddings are remarkable as well, providing a mystically-orchestrated atmosphere of suspense and charm, all while the menacing flutes offer a delightful treat for any fan of classic Tull. Even Anderson's vocals seem to be well-suited to the music, which is often in the minor keys and thus quite moody and gloomy. We have an album replete with fine and often memorable melodies, excellent rhythms and introspective lyrics, with some of the better songs on the album including the powerful title track, the hard-hitting numbers 'Rare and Precious Chain' and 'Dangerous Veils', both of which capture a more invigorated Tull performance, the lavish and complex tracks 'This Free Will' and 'Wounded, Old and Treacherous' and the folk-rock-inspired 'Another Harry's Bar' - in a word, all of the material on 'Roots to Branches' is really good to excellent, which means that this is a strong and underrated album of the later Tull canon.

 Catfish Rising by JETHRO TULL album cover Studio Album, 1991
2.63 | 523 ratings

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Catfish Rising
Jethro Tull Prog Folk

Review by A Crimson Mellotron
Prog Reviewer

2 stars Jethro Tull's eighteenth studio album titled 'Catfish Rising' is a collection of blues-based rock songs that pretty much continue the style developed on previous albums, although in reality also harking back to the band's earliest musical wandering as captured on 'This Was' and 'Stand Up'. Definitely better-sounding and better-arranged than its predecessor 'Rock Island', this seems to be the third "hard rock Tull" album, this time with a greater use of acoustic guitars and flute, both of which are quite upfront, while the keyboards are right at the back, occasionally embellishing certain compositions. Even if all of these aspects seem to be a recipe for success, 'Catfish Rising' is yet another dull album from J-Tull, with tons of uninspired, mediocre writing, mostly embarrassing vocals and forgettable, boring melodies. Evenly spreading out their talents to hard rock, folk-rock and several bluesy pieces, the prevalent feel on 'Catfish Rising' is dread, with the hour-long album working as a patience test for the most dedicated of fans. What this album indicates is that Jethro Tull were outwardly directionless at that time, at least creatively - the album is overlong, and it could have been a much better offering had it been presented as a 35/40-minute-long LP. Turns out the CD format does not do much favor here, and despite the presence of a few remarkable moments (some songs are indeed fine), the majority of the music on here is devoid of grit and liveliness. Some of the better numbers would be 'Occasional Demons', 'Doctor to My Disease', 'White Innocence' and 'Sleeping with the Dog'.
 Rock Island by JETHRO TULL album cover Studio Album, 1989
2.69 | 551 ratings

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Rock Island
Jethro Tull Prog Folk

Review by A Crimson Mellotron
Prog Reviewer

2 stars 'Rock Island' is a strong contender... for the worst Jethro Tull album ever - this 1989 release follows-up 'Crest of a Knave' and echoes strongly the musical pursuits of its predecessor, with the sole difference of being an unfathomably boring and uninspired collection of generic FM rock tunes, bereft of any interesting ideas, loaded with silly and often embarrassing lyrics, and offering some of the least intriguing riffs and sequences of the band's entire discography. From one side, some fans might see this album as the complete negation of Tull's synth-driven new wave experiments from a couple of years prior to 'Rock Island's release, but the entire album is a dreadful excursion into dull songwriting and flat playing, quite surprising for a band having released so many classic albums. Even weaker entries like 'A' and 'Under Wraps' had exhibited some sort of personality and ingenuity - 'Rock Island' is simply devoid of that, there are a few remotely exciting episodes of classic J-Tull mimicry, with the majority of the album falling flat. Some of the songs found on side two can be deemed listenable and remotely acceptable ('The Whaler's Dues', 'Heavy Water', 'Strange Avenues'), but the entire first side is exquisitely bad, rendering 'Rock Island' one of the most disappointing albums authored by the otherwise great Ian Anderson, whose vocals here are once again rather troublesome as on 'Crest'.
 Crest of a Knave by JETHRO TULL album cover Studio Album, 1987
3.23 | 700 ratings

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Crest of a Knave
Jethro Tull Prog Folk

Review by A Crimson Mellotron
Prog Reviewer

3 stars If one considers Jethro Tull's 80s output collectively, some fascinating gems and great music overall can be discovered, but when one singles out different albums, it understand just how fluctuating the band had been, and just how many challenges and changes Ian Anderson and Co. had gone through. Following the commercial and critical failure of 'Under Wraps', Tull had taken a short break and returned some three years later with 1987's 'Crest of a Knave', an album that showcased a welcome return to the more traditional Tull sound, prominently featuring heavy guitars, flickering flutes and a classic rhythm section, with significantly less keyboards and programming, but it also signaled a distressful change - Anderson's voice had changed following a throat surgery. The demanding vocals performed at the band's then-last tour had severely affected the hairy frontman's vocal chords, which by itself had necessitated a change in the vocal delivery style, one of the striking and ostensible aspects found on 'Crest of a Knave'.

But even with this in mind, the familiar folksy hard rock playing reminisces many of the band's glorious classic albums, and with Peter-John Vettese now absent, it is Martin Barre's major contributions to the sound of this album that eventually renders it a decent return to form, even if the guitar player had recalled how Anderson "knew what he wanted" with the writing and the direction on 'Crest'. Slightly more consistent and cohesive stylistically (compared to preceding releases), this album features a couple of songs that can be attributed to that delightful classic Tull writing, that delirious and triumphant prog-folk style made compelling by the Blackpool-founded band - 'Farm on the Freeway' might as well be the best example of that, while the 10-minute suite 'Budapest' could in some contexts be seen as an attempted resurgence of the band's progressive rock links. Opener 'Steel Monkey' is fiery and hard-hitting and 'Mountain Men' is another one of the better songs on here, but the rest of the album has the inevitable aftertaste of a Dire Straits influence and turns out to be uninspired and forgettable. With all of this cleared out, one can imagine this album as a much better offering had it featured a different set of songs (eventually) and while compensated by some strong compositions, 'Crest of a Knave' is far from the grace and novelty of works like 'Songs from the Wood' or 'Aqualung'.

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