Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Jethro Tull -- Aqualung

  Aqualung is, in all fairness, just the ramblings of a vagrant mad man, which gives the band points for originality, but hardly makes this seminal classic, conceptual, prog, heavy metal, folk, celt, mishmash any good.  The strangeness of the album does make it a must hear, at least once, and for me, once was enough!  What made it even more bizarre were the notes on the back cover, tweaked from the book of Genesis for the character of Aqualung.  Side one focuses, and is named after, Aqualung, a sniveling weirdo, while the flipside focuses, and is named after God, now is it about Aqualung's relationship with God, I don't know.  There were a couple pleasant surprises on this record.  The first one, a folk number, Cheap Day Return, clocked at 1:21, this track has a Cat Stevens feel to it, and I'd go as far as saying a Elliot Smith vocal sound inbeded in the beginning -- I loved it.  The second surprise was in the song Mother Goose it stems in the same vein as the previous track, not as good, but gets murdered by intervals of flute solos which makes you think you were in Polanski's Macbeth.  Aqualung is just one of those weird thing in rock history, I didn't like it, but I respect it for what it is!