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01 |
Birthday Card at Christmas |
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03:35 |
02 |
Holly Herald |
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04:15 |
03 |
A Christmas Song |
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02:47 |
04 |
Another Christmas Song |
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03:30 |
05 |
God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen |
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04:33 |
06 |
Jack Frost and the Hooded Crow |
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03:35 |
07 |
Last Man at the Party |
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04:47 |
08 |
Weathercock |
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04:17 |
09 |
Pavane |
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04:18 |
10 |
First Snow on Brooklyn |
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04:55 |
11 |
Greensleeved |
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02:39 |
12 |
Fire at Midnight |
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02:24 |
13 |
We Five Kings |
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03:14 |
14 |
Ring Out Solstice Bells |
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04:03 |
15 |
Bouree |
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04:23 |
16 |
A Winter Snowscape |
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04:54 |
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Country |
United Kingdom |
Packaging |
Jewel Case |
Spars |
DDD |
Sound |
Stereo |
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~ The Jethro Tull Christmas Album ~
An introduction to "The Jethro Tull Christmas Album"
Ian's Introduction
Two days before Christmas 2002, I received an e-mail from Fuel 2000 record company boss Len Fico suggesting the improbable scenario of a dedicated Tull Christmas album for the following year.
Although taken aback for a moment, I remembered half-formed plans from some years ago for a Christmas-related set of songs and tunes and so quickly offered, "Give me 24 hours and I'll come back to you with a track list and running order."
And I did. Well, the track list anyway. The running order always depends on varying tempos, song keys and subject matter.
If you liked Bouree and the Songs From The Wood record, you will love this Jethro Tull Christmas Album. The aim was to find some uplifting traditional Christmas Carols, some new songs and to re-record some old Tull pieces on the Christmas topic.
As I was working at the same time on a solo album, I had to off-load some of the studio production and sessions to other participants. Doane Perry did his drum stuff in LA while the UK sessions featured guest drummer James Duncan and, of course, Jonathan Noyce on bass. Ex bassist, Dave Pegg, dropped by to play on a couple of songs and Andrew Giddings used his studio to record his parts and Martin Barre's overdubs. I then pulled it all together and mixed down the various line-ups and sessions in my studio at the last moment.
My views on Christmas? Well, I'm not exactly a practising paid-up Christian but I have grown up and lived with a so-called Christian society for 55 years and still feel great warmth for the nostalgia, festive occasion and family togetherness, so much a part of that time of year. Maybe without Christmas we would have that much less to celebrate and enjoy in this troubled old world. But it's really all the Winter Solstice and the re-birth of nature overlaid with the common sense and righteous teachings of Mr. C.
A Christmas in this modern world should, in my view, accommodate the leisure needs and affections of Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, atheists and agnostics, as well as Fido the family dog and Felix the cat. Throw in a few lost cousins and that dreadful man from next door and you have it! Sip the sloe gin, pull a cracker (so long as she's not the daughter of that dreadful man from next door), kiss and cuddle under the mistletoe, toss Vegan disciplines aside, gobble the turkey (steady on, now) and have a therapeutic respite from the rigours of daily life.
Christmas - an aspirin for the soul or cold-turkey celebration of the birth and life of Christ? It has to be a measured bit of both, doesn't it?
And, if you can cope with it, a Happy New Year.
* Ian Anderson
Annotations
Birthday Card At Christmas
Ian Anderson Vocals, flute, acoustic guitars
Martin Barre Electric guitar
Andrew Giddings Keyboards and bass
Doane Perry Drums
My daughter Gael, like millions of other unfortunates, celebrates her birthday within a gnat's whisker of Christmas. Overshadowed by the Great Occasion, such birthdays can be flat, perfunctory and fleetingly token in their uneventful passing.
The daunting party and festive celebration of the Christian calendar overshadows too, some might argue, the humble birthday of one Mr. J. Christ.
Funny old 25ths, Decembers: : :
Holly Herald
The Holly And The Ivy (Trad.) / Hark! The Herald Angels Sing (F. Mendelssohn)
Instrumental medley arranged and developed by Ian Anderson)
Ian Anderson: flute
Martin Barre: guitars
Andrew Giddings: keyboards and accordion
Jonathan Noyce: bass guitar
James Duncan: drums
A Christmas Song
Ian Anderson: vocals, flute, mandolin
Martin Barre: acoustic guitar
Andrew Giddings: organ
David Pegg: mandolin
James Duncan: percussion
Originally released on the Living In The Past album (1972).
A Christmas song is Ian's first original work after the departure of Mick Abrahams. It is an acoustic, whimsical piece with an emphasis on mandolins and guitars (...). Lyrically he accomplishes a kind of social commentary:
When you're stuffing yourselves at the Christmas parties
You'll just laugh when I tell you to take a running jump
You're missing the point I'm sure does not need making:
The Christmas spirit is not what you drink.
This piece is important for a number of reasons. First, it clearly establishes his view on alcohol. Anderson remains a strong spokesman against drugs and alcohol for the duration of his career. He explains that he avoids intoxication because he feels it interferes with his creative process: he feels that he needs to remain clear-headed to accomplish the kind of self-analysis that he feels is a cornerstone of his writing (Lewis, 27). This attitude toward drugs and alcohol acted to distance him from his audiences and from his contemporaries. He felt as is he grew up in a generation that he didn't belong to. Unable to express the sentiments overtly without ostracizing much of his audience, his opinions toward drugs were "bottled up" and arose as bitterness and anger in his music toward the general culture of the times (Anderson 4). Anderson speaks disdainfully and condescendingly of the pace and greed of America in interviews at this time (Lewis 24).
I don't really agree. It's mentioned, certainly, but I think the song is 90% about the hypocrisy and contradictions of modern, commercial Christmases and the spiritual 'real' meaning of the festival. Alcohol is only mentioned in one line of the song, and the spoken humourous comment at the end is an admission that Ian isn't a Puritan watching from the outside - he wants a drink, too! I've never thought of Ian as anti-alcohol. Definitely anti-drug, particularly anti-cannabis, but he doesn't seem adverse to a quiet drink. I understand him being hostile to drunkenness, but that's a common attitude. It's important to distinguish the sources of intoxication! If he was anti-alcohol, his comments in the 20th Anniversary video, about visiting his local pub and hoping he'd still be able to have a quiet drink with his fans, wouldn't make sense. Peggy famously drinks rather a lot, so why did Ian employ him for so long if he was anti-alcohol? Ian publicly joked about Peggy's drinking habits in numerous concerts and interviews, and I think the only memorable quote from Peggy from his time with Tull was 'Success is being locked in the pub at closing time'. The album title 'Nightcap' and its graphics have a little to do with alcohol....
One point about this song is that the tune and lyrics of the first few lines are from a traditional Christmas carol. I learned the carol when I was about 5 years old; presumably Ian did too! The first verse is:
"Once in royal David's city
stood a lonely cattle shed,
where a mother held her baby,
in a manger for a bed."
See An Online Christmas Songbook if you want the full lyrics and sheet music.
* Neil R. Thomason
"A Christmas Song" is also a work that exists in a strong historical framework because it is presented as a kind of Christmas carol. Caroling is perhaps the oldest surviving English mid-winter tradition (Lloyd 98). It originated as a \par pagan ceremony of ring-dancing (118). Clearly Ian has changed the tone of the traditional Christmas carol, and that has a psychological impact that is difficult to measure. As a pagan tradition, caroling worked a kind of magic of rejuvenation: the winter was a dead time, and to insure the resurrection of the world in spring, the carolers would come to offer their songs and to take their reward (102). The carolers offered blessings of bountiful harvests, and in exchange, those receiving the carol would offer up some of their wealth - in either food or money - as a sort of mid-winter sacrifice (102). The rite is a product of an agricultural society in which the forces of nature need to be interacted with at a magical level in order to insure the survival of all. Ian's use of the carol form invokes strong connotations to anyone familiar with the holiday or with caroling. His song implies the loss of ties to ther meaning of the festivities. He says:
"How can you laugh when your own mother is hungry
and how can you smile when your reasons for smiling are wrong?".
It's clear that those with plenty are not giving to those who have none, and those who get to celebrate do not share the celebration. In a pagan sense, this abandoning of ritual not only fails to provide for the needy, it also endangers the rebirth of spring and all future harvests. These connotations carry over in modern sensibilities as well: there is a sense of distancing from the true nature of things and a sense of imminent repercussions. The song also begins to imply his attitude toward religion. This becomes clearer on his fourth album, Aqualung.
* Judson C. Caswell (SCC vol. 4 issue 92, Dec. 1993); adaptation Jan Voorbij ; Anderson, Ian: Trouser Press Magazine, Autodiscography, 1982, p. 1-13; Lewis, Grover: Rolling Stone: Hopping, Grimacing, Twitching, Gasping, Lurching, Rolling, Paradiddling, Flinging, Gnawing And Gibbering With Jethro Tull, 7/22/1971, p. 24-27; Lloyd, A.L.: Folk Songs In England, New York 1967.
I believe that the whole song is to be examined on a whole, not each line picked apart and analyzed as carrying its own individual significance. The song is almost like beign a third party watching a character Ian plays interacting with a room full of Christmas partiers.
The intensity of the self-righteousness of the narrator's words and their severity rise with the music, starting out sweet and low as are the Biblical lyrics. "Once in royal David's city", and ending angry, loud and full of threat, as the last statement is made.
Certain Christians have taken the meaning of their religion as something to bash over the heads of the "Sinners". The narrator wastes no time in getting there! The party, the food, the "Christmas spirit" that is "not what you drink"; in the eyes of the narrator, all are not what one should partake in if you were really a Christian. Why? (as the music escalates) The narrator takes it to a new gloomy, accusational level that has nothing to do with Christianity or Christmas; Because you're having fun while "your own mother's hungry" (and) "your reasons for smiling are wrong"! At the appex of the angry, depressing rant, the zealot says, "Remember, if you wish, this is just a Christmas Song"!
Some people want power in the name of Christ or whomever, and they just want to use that power as a bludgeon to ruin it for everyone. This attitude is not uncommonly found in puritanical Christian societies that created witch hunts and punishments for ridiculous "sins" that the residents were accused.
I picture Ian's character singing this to a room full of partiers, and as he makes his way down the hall, the gloom he spreads causes everyone to flee, upset and unhappy. After the music has risen and his message made clear, the narrator, alone in the party hall, asks Santa for that which he has damned everone else. "Hey, Santa, pass us that bottle willya?"
I mean, hey, even if he is speaking the words of Devout Importance and making everyone else miserable, he's only human, right?
* Fred Swan
Another Christmas Song
Ian Anderson: vocals, flute
Martin Barre: electric guitar
Doane Perry: drums
Andrew Giddings: keyboards
David Pegg: bass guitar
Originally released on the Rock Island album (1989).
This rustic song starts with three wishes, Christmas wishes perhaps:
"Hope everybody's ringing on their own bell, this fine morning.
Hope everybody's connected to that long distance phone. (...)
Hope everybody's dancing to their own drum this fine morning:
the beat of distant Africa or a Polish factory town".
It praises the importance of home, family and harmony. In Western society Christmas over time has become the particular holiday for celebrating family alliance and community. People do everything to spend Christmas at home (Try to book a flight around December 20 and you will know what I mean). Hence the title. The narrator describes an old man who wants to gather his children around him:
"I'm going to call, call all my children home" (....)
Calling for his sons and daughters, yeah -
calling all his children round."
Is it because Christmas is approaching again? Does he want to re-experience this feeling of alliance with his children who left home many years ago? Or does he realize that his life is coming to an end?
"Old man he's asleep now. Got appointments to keep now. Dreaming of his sons and daughters, and proving -
proving that the blood is strong".
In the third stanza the perspective changes from the one who is calling (the old man) to the ones who are called home. It becomes clear now that the sons and daughters he's calling for are we, the listeners! And what's more important: we can't ignore this call and recognise it immediately, no matter how far away from home we are, no matter how far removed we are from our roots, our traditions:
"Sharp ears are tuned in to the drones and chanters warming.
Mist blowing round some headland, somewhere in your memory.
Everyone is from somewhere -
even if you've never been there."
Which raises the inevitable question who this old man is. A personification of "tradition" perhaps? Are we incited to pay respect to the deeper values, cariied through the ages in the guise of old traditons? At least that is what the next puzzling lines seem to suggest:
"So take a minute to remember the part of you
that might be the old man calling me".
This desire for peace and harmony expressed in the first two stanzas echoes through in the lines:
"How many wars you're fighting out there, this winter's morning?
Maybe it's always time for another Christmas song."
" ....... drones and chanters": the bass-pipes (or its continuous note) and the melody-pipes of the bagpipe.
* Jan Voorbij
On "Another Christmas Song", you wonder who the "Old Man" is. Ian has for years used that phrase to denote God (e.g. "Hope the Old Man's got his face on, He better be some quick change artist" from "Roots to Branches", and others). I think reading the lyric this way gives the entire song deeper meaning, ex: the Old Man calling all his children round, calling all his children home, etc.
* Liam Moriarty
God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
Ian Anderson: flute
Martin Barre: guitars
Andrew Giddings: keyboards
Jonathan Noyce: bass guitar
James Duncan: Drums
Originally released on the Bursting Out Live album (1978).
Jack Frost And The Hooded Crow
Ian Anderson: vocals, flute, mandolin
Martin Barre: electric guitar
Doane Perry: drums and percussion
Andrew Giddings: keyboards, bass
'Jack Frost' is not really an important part of folk myth as such, just an excuse for any child to dress up and play the part of 'Winter'. But it's a nice part of children's stories, very easy to draw a picture of this 'Mr. Frost' character!
I guess the song uses Jack Frost and the Crow to symbolise rather cruel figures, causing bad luck or just plain old discomfort. In the first two verses, they are speaking - telling us to count our blessings since there are people more unfortunate than ourselves at that time of year:
"Why not spare a thought this day for those who have no flame
to warm their bones at Christmas time?" (and)
" .... there's some who have no coin to save for turkey, wine of gifts".
Even though we 'curse' them, they are giving out some very humanitarian advice! Maybe they're not so bad after all, these two? Maybe they're just misunderstood? But in the final verse, they warn that we, too (the lucky ones) could end up spending Christmas in their 'dark' company one of these days:
"The Lord may find you wanting, let your good fortune disappear.
All homely conforts blown away and all that's left to show
is to share your joy at Christmas time
with Jack Frost and the Hooded Crow".
Good fortune may indeed disappear. And you get the feeling that Jack and the Crow wouldn't be too heart-broken about it!
When I was travelling in Skye in April 1988, I noticed a dead crow had been strung up on a tree -- clearly to deter other crows from attacking the new-born lambs. One of the many Beltane incantations used in Scotland runs:
"This I give to thee, preserve thou my horses. This to thee, preserve thou my sheep. This I give to thee, O fox! Spare thou my lambs. This to thee, O hooded crow! This to thee, O eagle!"
In other words, an offering was made to the good and bad creatures or spirits, in order to secure a fruitful and prosperous year ahead.
* Andy Jackson
In most of Britain, the Carrion Crow is a large, solitary, totally black bird. In Scotland, the same species has a grey back, and is called a "Hooded Crow", because of its appearence. I don't know the story behind the song, but crows are considered quite intelligent and I expect there are a few folk stories about them. Hooded Crows are fairly common on Skye, and fit the context. They are carrion birds which have been alleged to attack young lambs - they might be thought of as the Northern European equivalent of vultures. Thus, people tend not to think of their hardship at Christmas, as the song suggests. In parts of Scotland, a nickname for the bird is a 'Hoodie'. The bird on the cover of 'Crest Of A Knave' is a Hooded Crow.
* Neil R. Thomason
Recorded in June 1981 during "The Broadsword And The Beast" sessions, it was released as the B-side of the "Coronach" UK single in 1986.
In the introduction to "Broadsword And the Beast" I stated that the album reflects the atmosphere of crisis of the early eighties. Most of the songs include elements of uncertainty about the future, threat, fear or even dispair. That goes also for this 'Broadsword' song, as well as for 'Too Many Too', 'I'm Your Gun' and 'Down At The End Of Your Road'.
* Jan Voorbij
Last Man At The Party
Ian Anderson: vocals, flute, piccolo, mandolin, percussion
Martin Barre: electric guitar
Andrew Giddings: keyboards, accordion, bass
Weathercock
Ian Anderson: vocals, flute, mandolin
Martin Barre: electric guitar
Doane Perry: drums
Andrew Giddings: keyboards, bass
The final song of the Heavy Horses album appears here is again. It uses the concept of the weather as an analogy for the state of humanity in general:
"Did the cold wind bite you, did you face up to the fright (...)
Do you simply reflect the changes in the patterns of the sky (...),
Do you fight the rush of winter (...)".
This idea of 'the rush of winter' would be seized upon later in 1978 as Anderson wrote songs for Tull's next album. The hope for a better future is comes to the fore in :
"make this day bright. Put us in touch with your fair winds.(...)
Point the way to better days we can share with you."
Pavane
Composed by Gustave Faure, arranged and developed by Ian Anderson.
Ian Anderson: flute, percussion
Martin Barre: guitars
Andrew Giddings: keyboards
Jonathan Noyce: bass guitar
James Duncan: drums
First Snow On Brooklyn
Ian Anderson: vocals, flute, acoustic guitar
Martin Barre: electric guitar
Doane Perry: drums
Andrew Giddings: keyboards, bass
The Sturcz String Quartet, arranged Laszlo Bencker
- Gabor Csonka - 1st violin
- Peter Szilagyi - 2nd violin
- Gyula Benko - viola
- Andras Sturcz - cello
Greensleeved
Trad. instrumental based on "Greensleeves", arranged and developed by Ian Anderson.
Ian Anderson: flute
Martin Barre: guitars
Andrew Giddings: keyboards
Jonathan Noyce: bass guitar
James Duncan: drums
Fire At Midnight
Ian Anderson: vocals, flute, acoustic guitar
Martin Barre: electric guitar
Doane Perry: drums
Andrew Giddings: keyboards, bass
Originally released on the Songs From The Wood album (1976).
Once again a beautiful love song that describes the joy of coming home from a hard working day and spending time with one's wife. Ian said he wrote the song after a long day in the studio. The song breaths an atmosphere of relaxation, ease, harmony and - perhaps - gratitude.
* Jan Voorbij
The genius of Ian is to have placed this song at the end of the album, \line because it is the more hopeful of all, and because it acts as a closing \line scen e taking place at midnight, after "another working day" that might be \line the writing of the album, or the journey of the Whistler to teach people how \line to be happy. It inscribes itself in the continuity of the whole album and at \line the same time acts as a conclusion to it. I really think this is one of the \line most powerful songs Ian ever wrote, but it is a pity that it is so short!
* Fred Sowa
We Five Kings
Instrumental "We Three Kings" (Rev. J. Hopkins) arranged and developed by Ian Anderson.
Ian Anderson: flute
Martin Barre: guitars
Andrew Giddings: keyboards, accordion
Jonathan Noyce: bass guitar
James Duncan: drums
Ring Out Solstice Bells
Ian Anderson: vocals, flute
Martin Barre: electric guitar
Doane Perry: drums
Andrew Giddings: keyboards, bass
Originally released on the Songs From The Wood album (1976).
This song is a dance to celebrate winter Solstice (mostly on the 22nd and sometimes on the 21st of December) and appeals to rejoice the lengthening of the days, c.q. the return of the light. In it druids dance while the narrator calls for people to gather underneath mistletoe and give praise to the sun. For many European nations like the Celts, and the Germanic peoples this festival in ancient times was one of the major ones of the year, full of rites and ceremonies of which some survived the ages like the bonfire/fireworks. During its spread over Europe, Christianity claimed this festival by 'implanting' Christmas as a festival of light on the 25th of December. The back of the sleeve of the "Solstice Bells"-EP (released in 1976) has a brief anecdote describing how the Church coopted the pagan winter solstice celebrating, Yule, and replaced it with Christmas.
* Jan Voorbij
I have a piece of news for you: I think that Ian made a blunder here! He talks about Druids, but evidence has been shown that the Celtic peoples, of whom the Druids were the priests, did not celebrate Solstices. The Celts had only four days of celebration in the year, namely Samain on the eve of November (our actual Halloween), which was their New Year's Day, Imbolc on the Eve of February (which has become French "chandeleur"), Beltane on the eve of May, and finally Lughnasad on the eve of August. Other Pagan peoples, mainly gothic tribes, celebrated the Winter's solstice as Yule, but the Celts never did. Perhaps Ian meant to use "druid" in the sense of "priest", but the Druids were only Celtic, and derive their name from the same root as the Latin verb for "see": etymologically, Dru-vides means "the far-seeing," that is those that could see that which normal human beings cannot (i.e. the gods or any supernatural manifestation.)
Where Ian is right though is in qualifying the Sun of "sister" and not "father" (more rarely "brother") as we are accustomed to. In Celtic languages the Sun was feminine and the Moon masculine, because Celtic people considered the power of life to be feminine in nature, and that the sun's heat and light was the expression of the Mother Goddess's power to give life. The distinction between Mother Goddess and "sister Sun" does not contradict this, because for Celtic peoples the Goddess embodied all types of women, hence she was mother, sister and lover at the s ame time.
(For more detailed information about Celtic civilisation, mythology and beliefs, I recommend the books written by Jean Markale. He is a French writer who has written many books on the Celts as well as on the Arthurian Legend, and you can find many of his works translated into English. Look for titles such as The Celts : Uncovering the Mythic and Historic Origins of Western Culture, Woman of the Celts, The Druids : Celtic Priests of Nature, or The Great Goddess : Reverence of the Divine Feminine from the Paleolithic to the Present.
* Fred Sowa
Bouree
J. S. Bach, arranged and developed by Ian Anderson.
Ian Anderson: flute
Martin Barre: guitars
Andrew Giddings: keyboards, accordion
Jonathan Noyce: bass guitar
James Duncan: drum
Originally released on the Stand Up album (1969).
Ask people "Do you know Jethro Tull?" and they will very likely answer: "Yes, they had a hit with Bouree." This piece of music was inspired by a lute piece composed by Johann Sebastian Bach. 'Bouree' does not only show Ian's improvisational talents on flute, but also brings Glenn Cornick's firm bass playing to the fore. It consists of three parts: the classic Bach theme, an improvisational part featuring flute and bass, and a reprise of the theme now played by two flutes.
What is the origin of the well-known and very successful Tull-hit 'Bouree'? After some research I came up with the following. Ian Anderson's Bouree is indeed an adaptation of a Johann Sebastian Bach Bourree. The original version by Bach can be found as the fifth movement of the Suite in E minor for Lute (BWV 996). A suite is a popular 17th and 18th century musical form consisting of a series of dances. Most of the time a suite consists of four dance-forms: the Allemande (originated in Germany), the Courante (originated in France), the Sarabande (originated in Spain) and the Gigue (jig) (originated in England). Other dance forms were the Minuet, the Gavotte, the Polonaise, the Bourree, and many others.
The Suite in E minor, where Jethro Tull's Bouree can be found, is the earliest work that Bach composed for the lute. It is nick-named "Aufs Lautenwercke" (From works for the Lute). It dates from the middle of Bach's Weimar period (1708-1717). Bach did not compose many works for the lute and occasionally, in Bach's own time, those works were performed on the lute/harpsichord, a hybrid instrument in whose construction Bach had assisted. Now something more about the bourree. The correct spelling is 'Bourree' with an 'accent aigu' on the first e.
Here is an exceprt from 'The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians' (London, MacMillan, 1980, ISBN 0-333-23111-2.'; Vol. 3; pages 116-117). Article by Meredith Ellis Little. "Bourree (Fr.; It. borea; Eng. boree, borry).
A French folkdance, court dance and instrumental form, which flourished form the mid-17th century until the mid-18th. As a folkdance it had many varieties, and dances called bourree are still known in various parts of France; in Berry, Languedoc, Bourbonnais and Cantal the bourree is a duple-metre dance, while in Limousin and the Auvergne it is commonly in triple metre. Many historians, including Rousseau (1768), believed that the bourree originated in the Auvergne as the characteristic BRANLE of that region, but others have suggested that Italian and Spanish influences played a part in its development. It is not certain if there is a specific relationship between the duple French folkdance and the court bourree.
Specific information on the bourree as a court dance is available only for the 18th century, whence at least 24 choreographies entitled bourree are extant, both for social dancing and for theatrical use. The bourree was a fast duple-metre courtship dance, with a mood described variously as 'gay' (Rousseau 1768) and 'content and self-composed' (Matheson, 1739). The step pattern common to all bourrees, which also occurred in other French court dances, was the 'pas de bourree' (Bourree step). It consists of a 'demi-coupe' (half-cut), a 'plie' (bend) followed by an 'eleve' (rise on to the foot making the next step), a plain step, and a small gentle leap. These three steps occurred with the first three crotchets of a bar, whether in the duple metre of a bourree or the triple metre of a sarabande, where the 'pas de bourree' was also used.
If the small leap were replaced by a plain step, the pattern resulting was called a 'fleuret'. The 'pas de bourree' preceded the 'fleuret' historically, and is somewhat more difficult to execute; by the early 18th century, however the two steps seem to have been used interchangeably, according to the dancer's ability. The bourree as a social dance was a mixture of 'fleurets', 'pas de bourrees', leaps, hops, and the 'tems de courante' (gesture consisting of a bend, rise and slide at places of repose. The stylized bourree flourished as an instrumental form from the early 17th century. Praetorius' "Terpsichore" (1612) included a few examples, all with quite simple phrasing and a homophonic texture. The Kassel Manuscript (ed. J. Ecorcheville, "Vingt suites d'orchestre", 1906/R1970) also contains a number of bourrees, often placed as the second dance in a suite. As the order of dances in a suite became more conventionalized in the familiar allemande-courante-sarabande group, the bourree continued to be included fairly often, coming after the sarabande with other less serious dances like the minuet and the gavotte. In that position it was included in orchestral suites by J.F.C. Fisher, Johann Krieger, Georg Muffat and Bach."
* Erik Arfeuille
A Winter Snowscape
Martin Barre: guitars
Ian Anderson: flute
Andrew Giddings: keyboards
Jethro Tull Christmas Album
Date of Release Sep 30, 2003
For a band that remained relatively consistent (with a few minor exceptions) in their approach to rock & roll since 1968, Jethro Tull also possessed a sound that was uniquely '70s-sounding during their most successful period of 1971-1978. Avid fans have been yearning for the group's return to the style which made them one of the most successful of the guitar-based, mainstream prog outfits. While albums like Broadsword and the Beast and J-Tull.Com touched on their former glory, they didn't fully satisfy. This release could be the album that those fans have been waiting for. With a mixture of re-recorded old songs, Christmas standards and new originals, songwriter/singer Ian Anderson, in a roundabout manner, captures the tradition, warmth, and bittersweet feelings that are inextricably linked to the holiday season. With a generous use of acoustic instruments like mandolin, acoustic guitar, flute, and accordion, this album resembles the production found on Songs from the Wood and Heavy Horses. In fact, three tracks from those two albums were reworked for this release; "Fire at Midnight," "Ring out Solstice Bells," and "Weathercock." Only "Ring out Solstice Bells" appeared to be the obvious choice for a Christmas album, but given Anderson's offbeat perspective of things, the other two tracks assimilate nicely. In addition, "Jack Frost and the Hooded Crow" sounds like it could have emanated from those 1977 and 1978 recordings, as could "Last Man at the Party" from 1974's War Child sessions. From the traditional side of Christmas, Tull gives "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" a jazzy adaptation reminiscent of "Bouree" from Stand Up (which was also revisited on this recording) and "We Five Kings" sounds rhythmically similar to "Living in the Past," particularly the bass guitar line. In addition to Bach's "Bouree," the majestic Gabriel Faurй piece "Pavane" is included, which features guitarist Martin Barre's exceptional acoustic playing. Although this Christmas album doesn't necessarily conjure up images of Santa and the Savior, it does create a mood and feeling reflective of the holiday season. More importantly, it is one of the most satisfying Tull releases in 25 years. - Dave Sleger
1. Birthday Card at Christmas (Anderson) - 3:35
2. Holly Herald [instrumental] (Mendelssohn/Traditional) - 4:15
3. A Christmas Song (Anderson) - 2:47
4. Another Christmas Song (Anderson) - 3:30
5. God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen [instrumental] (Traditional) - 4:33
6. Jack Frost and the Hooded Crow (Anderson) - 3:35
7. Last Man at the Party (Anderson) - 4:47
8. Weathercock (Anderson) - 4:17
9. Pavane [instrumental] (Faure) - 4:18
10. First Snow on Brooklyn (Anderson) - 4:55
11. Greensleeved [instrumental] (Traditional) - 2:39
12. Fire at Midnight (Anderson) - 2:24
13. We Five Kings [instrumental] (Hopkins) - 3:14
14. Ring Out Solstice Bells (Anderson) - 4:03
15. Bouree [instrumental] (Anderson/Bach) - 4:23
16. A Winter Snowscape [instrumental] (Barre) - 4:54
Kenny Wheeler - Engineer
Dave Pegg - Bass, Mandolin
Martin Barre - Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar, Guitar (Electric), Studio Production Coordinator
Andy Giddings - Organ, Bass, Accordion, Keyboards, Keyboard Bass
Doane Perry - Percussion, Drums
Mark Tucker - Studio Production Coordinator
Travis Dickerson - Drum Engineering
Laszlo Bencker - Arranger
Nick Watson - Production Mastering
Jonathan Noyce - Bass
Leslie Mandoki - Studio Production Coordinator
James Duncan - Drums
Gyula Benkц - Viola
Gбbor Csonka - Violin
Andrбs Sturcz - Cello
Sturcz String Quartet
Ian Anderson - Guitar (Acoustic), Flute, Mandolin, Percussion, Arranger, Piccolo, Vocals, Producer, Engineer, Studio Production Coordinator, Development
Igor Vereshagin - Photography
Alex Ivanovich - Engineer
Pйter Szilбgyi - Violin
2003 CD Fuel 2000 061340
Jethro Tull - The Jethro Tull Christmas Album
Released: 2003
Label: Fuel 2000
Cat. No.: 061340
Total Time: 59:11
Reviewed by: Keith "Muzikman" Hannaleck, January 2004
Could there be a more appropriate day than Christmas Eve to listen and review a holiday album by Jethro Tull? This being their very first holiday recording [ever] since their first album [was released] in 1968 (This Was) makes it a real jewel for the ages, particularly for the many progressive rock enthusiast such as yours truly. [The 1991 reissue of This Was did contain "Christmas Song" as a bonus track -ed.]
I got a taste of this music this past summer at a concert in Tanglewood (Lenox, Mass.) [see review] and thought it was very entertaining with just enough classic JT sound (think of "Heavy Horses" and "Songs From The Wood") to make it interesting. The Jethro Tull Christmas Album has plenty of tradition sprinkled about it to qualify it as a seasonal recording, although at times I got so wrapped up in the progression of the music I forgot I was listening to the spirit of the season. That factor does not make the album loose its appeal however, as it is one of their best recordings, right up there with the many classic releases that they have given us over the past four decades.
Tracks like "Holly Herald" will get you in the mood and make you feel like you are on an old-fashioned backcountry English horse and sleigh ride whilst coming about to a sudden stop to do an Irish gig (in between a swift musical change). Those are just some of the wonderful changes the music goes through during the course of one composition, and that is exactly what makes Jethro Tull so magnificent and this album so extraordinary. The variety and spice is plentiful in every song on this album, you can count on that.
The music is truly magical and filled with great musicianship, the kind I have come to expect from Ian Anderson and his band of merry men. I always feel like I can step out my world and live in enlightenment for short time thanks to this great music. Ah yes, tidings of comfort and joy came out of my speakers on this day. Merry Christmas and God bless Jethro Tull.
Rating: 5/5
More about The Jethro Tull Christmas Album:
Track Listing: Birthday Card at Christmas (3:37) / Holly Herald (instrumental) (4:16) / A Christmas Song (2:47) / Another Christmas Song (3:31) / God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen (instrumental) (4:35) / Jack Frost And The Hooded Crow (3:37) / Last Man At The Party (4:48) / Weathercock (4:17) / Pavane (instrumental) ( 4:19) / First Snow On Brooklyn (4:57) / Greensleeved (instrumental) (2:39) / Fire At Midnight (2:26) / We Five Kings (instrumental) (3:16) / Ring Out Solstice Bells (4:04) / Bourйe (instrumental) (4:25) / A Winter Snowscape (instrumental) (4:57)
Musicians:
Dave Pegg - Bass, Mandolin
Martin Barre - Acoustic and Electric Guitars
Andy Giddings - Organ, Bass, Accordion, Keyboards, Keyboard Bass
Doane Perry - Percussion, Drums
Jonathan Noyce - Bass
James Duncan - Drums
Gyula Benko - Viola
Gabor Csonka - Violin
Andras Sturcz - Cello
Sturcz String Quartet
Ian Anderson - Acoustic Guitar, Flute, Mandolin, Percussion, Piccolo, Vocals Peter Szilagyi - Violin