
14 Songs, 1 Hour 5 Minutes

Aqualung (Bonus Track Version) Jethro Tull
EDITORS’ NOTES
While Jethro Tull’s 1971 album is peppered with acoustic turns—bowing to jazz-folk heroes like Roy Harper—it’s the sweltering power chords and frontman Ian Anderson’s tough vocals that make it a rock ’n’ roll Goliath. The chugging “Locomotive Breath” and the dirty thump of “Hymn 43” provide metallic KOs, and the rifftastic title tune is a full-on mini-rock opera with gentle breakdowns and tempo shifts. Central themes challenge organized religions, yet there’s a Dickensian quality to many of the lyrics, especially on the grimy “Cross-Eyed Mary,” which details London street urchins.
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Aqualung
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Cross-Eyed Mary
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Cheap Day Return
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Mother Goose
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Wond'ring Aloud
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Up to Me
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My God
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Hymn 43
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Slipstream
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Locomotive Breath
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Wind-Up
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Lick Your Fingers Clean
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Wind-Up (Quad Version)
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Ian Anderson Interview
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