Irish native who switched from the music industry to the world of sport moving from Universal Music to AS in 2017. A keen runner, soccer player and now discovering the world's fastest growing sport of ...
The Tull lineup on record: Scott Hammond, John O'Hara, Ian Anderson, Florian Ophale, and David Goodier. Credit: Photo by Sylvia Finke/Courtesy of Chipster PR As the band’s co-founder, front ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Jethro Tull Under Wraps: The Unwrapped Edition (Rhino/Warner Music) Jethro Tull is set to release a new box set highlighting their ...
Ian Anderson is understandably pleased Jethro Tull — the pioneering progressive-rock band he founded and has led since 1967 — has sold more than 60 million albums worldwide and is now embarked on the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Ian Anderson Jethro ...
Frontman Ian Anderson recorded Curious Ruminant with Jethro Tull’s current lineup, with additional contributions from two former members of the band. Anderson sang lead and played flute, guitar, and ...
Jethro Tull's follow-up to their breakthrough Aqualung album was Thick as a Brick. The LP was as notable for its packaging as much as the music it contained. In fact, it was just about the most ...
The video was directed by Sam Chegini and begins with the famous illustration of the old man on the Aqualung album cover before expanding into a stark and often devastating meditation on homelessness, ...
From the beginning, Jethro Tull has been, to quote one of their songs, "Skating away on the thin ice of a new day." Even in an era when progressive rock defied many music critics and won audiences ...
Of the nearly 55 years that Jethro Tull has existed as rock ‘n’ roll’s ambassador of flute-driven English folk music, 45 of those years were driven by the muscular guitar battery of Martin Barre. With ...
The music of Jethro Tull is to get an extraterrestrial premiere. On Tuesday (12 April), 250 miles above the Earth, US astronaut Catherine Coleman will raise a flute to her lips, performing via video ...