Jethro Tull - I Wonder Who FLAC

Tracklist
| 1 | Farm On The Freeway |
| 2 | Bouree |
| 3 | Instrumental |
| 4 | Songs From The Wood/Too Old To Rock'N'Roll/Heavy Horses |
| 5 | Budapest |
| 6 | I Wonder WhoFeaturing – Clive Bunker, Gerry Conway, Mick Abrahams |
| 7 | A New Day Yesterday |
| 8 | Cross-Eyed Mary/Dharma For One |
| 9 | Locomotive Breath |
| 10 | For A Thousand Mothers |
| 11 | Reasons For Waiting |
| 12 | Living In The Past |
| 13 | So Much TroubleFeaturing – Clive Bunker, Gerry Conway, Mick Abrahams |
| 14 | Intro |
| 15 | Aqualung |
| 16 | My Sunday Feeling |
| 17 | Passion Jig/Seal Driver |
| 18 | Andy Gidding's Parrot |
| 19 | Thick As A Brick |
| 20 | With You There To Help Me |
Credits
- Bass Guitar – Dave Pegg
- Drums – Doane Perry
- Guitar – Martin Barre
- Keyboards – Andrew Giddings
- Vocals, Flute, Acoustic Guitar – Ian Anderson
Notes
Live 1993-10-15 London
Companies
- Recorded At – Hammersmith Apollo
Album
A is the 13th studio album by Jethro Tull. It was released on 29 August 1980 in the UK and 1 September of the same year in the United States. The album was recorded in the summer of 1980 using Maison Rouge Mobile and Maison Rouge Studios in Fulham, London. Eddie Jobson guested on the album, playing keyboards and electric violin. The album was produced by Ian Anderson and Robin Black. This is the track 'I Wonder Who' from the album All Said and Done by Blodwyn Pig. Blodwyn Pig is the band featuring ex Jethro Tull guitarist Mick is the discography of the British progressive rock band Jethro Tull who formed in Blackpool, Lancashire in 1967. Initially playing blues rock, the band's sound soon incorporated elements of British folk music and hard rock to forge a progressive rock signature. The band were led by vocalistflautistguitarist Ian Anderson, and have included other significant members such as guitarist Martin Barre, drummer Doane Perry, and bassist Dave Pegg. Jethro Tull. Christmas Album. 50 for 50. Original Masters. 50th Anniversary Collection. Repeat - The Best Of Jethro Tull Volume 2. Living In The Past. Tales of Wonder. Aqualung is the fourth studio album by the rock band Jethro Tull, released in 1971. It is widely regarded as a concept album featuring a central theme of the distinction between religion and God, though the band have said there was no intention to make a concept album, and that only a few songs have a unifying theme. According to one reviewer, the album has dour musings on faith and religion which for him have marked it as one of the most cerebral albums ever to reach millions of rock listeners. View concert statistics of I Wonder Who by Jethro Tull played live. Check out who covered the song and in which years it was played and how often. Show all 419 Jethro Tull songs. A' Medley 25. How Much Is That Doggie in the Window 19. 10:08 to Paddington 32. 1000 Mothers 1. 99 Lives 21. Jethro Tull's Christmas album is an absolute delight and I have found that it doesn't have to be Christmas to play it helps The album is packed with some familiar songs as well as some original material and holds together beautifully from start to finish. It really is a lovely listening experience. Christmas at st bride's. For those of you that have bought the double package with the St Bride's recording, then you really have got value for money This is not so much a complete Tull album as a Christmas service featuring Jethro Tull. recommended -Cup of Wonder comprehensive and entertainingenergetic worka must -Green Man Review. The Jethro Tull albums from 1977-1979 are hugely responsible for my subsequent study and work in British particularly Scottish history and culture including several books, my Robin Hood being dedicated to Dave Pegg, and Jethro Tull being a collaboration with Dave, Ian Anderson, Glenn Cornick and Doane Perry, so the influence of this album on me cannot be. The 80s werent as kind to Jethro Tulls commercial fortunes. Then the band inadvertently enjoyed one of their biggest career highlights in 1987 when Tull's 16th studio album, Crest of a Knave , was awarded the Grammy for Best Hard RockHeavy Metal Performance to the puzzlement of many including Anderson himself. New albums bearing original Jethro Tull material petered out in the '90s their last, J-Tull Dot Com , arrived in 99, and Ian Anderson has recorded mostly under his own name in the new millennium, but he has kept the legacy of Tull alive on stage, regardless. Its 50 years since Ian Anderson released the first Jethro Tull album. Over that time, the bands sound has evolved and diversified, but they remain an enduring touchstone of the prog rock world. To celebrate that half century, we sit down with Ian Anderson to look back on over of Tull's studio albums This Was 1968. Its all in the title, isnt it This was Jethro Tull























