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Heavy Horses (2003 Digital Remaster)

Jethro Tull

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Album Review

Jethro Tull's 11th studio album, Heavy Horses, is one of their prettier records, a veritable celebration of English folk music chock-full of gorgeous melodies, briskly played acoustic guitars and mandolins, and Ian Anderson's flute lilting in the background, backed by the group in top form. This record is a fairly close cousin to 1977's Songs From the Wood, except that its songs are decidedly more passionate, sung with a rough, robust energy that much of Tull's work since Thick as a Brick had been missing, and surpassing even Aqualung in its lustiness. "No Lullaby" is the signature heavy riff song, a concert version of which opened Bursting Out: Jethro Tull Live. Anderson sings it — and everything else here — as though they might be the last lines he ever gets to voice, with tremendous intensity. The band plays hard behind him throughout, with lead guitarist Martin Barre (most notably on "Weathercock") and bassist John Glascock showing up very well throughout. Anderson's production and Robin Black's engineering catch their every nuance without sacrificing the delicacy of his acoustic guitar and mandolin playing. "Acres Wild," "Rover," "One Brown Mouse," "Weathercock," and "Moths," the latter featuring some of David Palmer's most tasteful orchestral arrangements, are among the loveliest songs in the group's entire repertory. Curved Air's Darryl Way plays violin solo on the title track — a tribute to England's vanishing shire horses, which doesn't really take off until Way's instrument comes in on the break, with a marked tempo change — and on "Acres Wild."

Customer Reviews

Heavy Horses

The 2nd of 3 in a series of records (the other 2 being Songs From The Wood and Stormwatch) where folkier sounds and country or fairy-tale-like themes are more prominent. This record is very upbeat with a springy feel to it and there is far less cynicism than usual in the always entertaining, descriptive lyrics typical of Tull albums--quite a rewarding recording play after play. If you can get past the fact that every song is about an animal (e.g., dog, cat, horses, mouse, etc.) on Ian's country farm estate (where I beleive he was living at the time), or a person in his family (e.g., infant son), something not common and somewhat mundane in the world of rock music, you should find this record will usually put you in a good mood. The acoustics are wonderful, the flute parts are strong, the sound is very "earthy", and there is still a fair amount of heavy guitar (e.g., No Lullabye and Weathercock) to satisfy those longing for some earlier Tull blues and metal sounds. But it's NOT Aqualung, or Stand Up, or Thick As A Brick for that matter, nor was it ever meant to be. Ian Anderson continues to delve into new variations of sounds and orchestrations with a plethora of instruments and musical talent at his disposal. The simplistic Moths is one of the best acoustic pieces ever written by a rock musician and the album holds up quite well for the 50+ population of listeners who don't need rock songs to be about drugs and women any longer. In 1979 this album seemed anacronistic, buried by the onslaught of new wave and punk music that dominated the air waves. But 30+ years later, this recording feels timeless.

Amazing!

A great album... but only one other review!

PROstags is right... it's refreshing to have lyrics from a rock band that don't concern drugs/women. Heavy Horses is the best song here, with lyrics about how the heavy horses are becoming obsolete. Who but Ian Anderson would write a song about this?

Other favorites: Journey Man, Acres Wild, Living In These Hard Times, And The Mouse Police Never Sleeps

There will never be another band like Jethro Tull

A Gem...

Leave it to Ian Anderson to write an album where the best song is a number about feral cats (this is not an insult, by the way). Not quite as good as Thick as a Brick, but then again what is?

Biography

Formed: 1967 in Luton, Bedfordshire, England

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Jethro Tull was a unique phenomenon in popular music history. Their mix of hard rock; folk melodies; blues licks; surreal, impossibly dense lyrics; and overall profundity defied easy analysis, but that didn't dissuade fans from giving them 11 gold and five platinum albums. At the same time, critics rarely took them seriously, and they were off the cutting edge of popular music since the end of the 1970s. But no record store in the country would want to be without multiple copies of each of their...
Full Bio

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