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Slipstream Hymn 43 (Chrysalis / Island 1971)




  

   Named after the idea from the wordplay of agriculture and becoming Jethro Tull; these Luton's origin group must be one of the ultimate legends to lead the proportional wake up for the Progressive Rock movements back in the early seventies era with the powerful combination left by The Beatles, Pub Rock, Classic Folk and the other side of Motown influences becoming newer form of Pyschedelic Prog Rock that sounded stunning to amazed more audiences globally soon. Led by the best formation of Jethro Tull musicians recording this Aqualung album - the fourth recording release from Ian Anderson (vocals, acoustic guitar, flute), Clive Bunker (drums, percussion), Martin Barre (electric guitar), John Evan (piano, mellotron, organ) to Jeffrey Hammond (bass guitar, odd voice) bringing satisfaction on their blending of full loaded complete sound of aging Rock meets the orchestra meets the Folkish elven influence and distinctive Progessive modules that shall infected the world of Rock Music for a long long time on. The hypnotizing flute harmony mixed with the beats and the piano plays while the guitars gently weeping or barking less louder to interacts with either the natural sources or the audiences like Jethro Tull didn't care about the market perceptions anymore while keep on doing what they loved to do best on Aqualung. Turns out to be the band's best album ever - this record will showing you much lessons to learn about how the early Prog-Rock struggles might looking harder to swallow because of the complicating sounds spawned through every single musical instruments and the better way to uniting the band members' dreams becoming reality within sounds - like the weird mixing between Gandlaf's fireworks in the middle of Shire's celebration before the journey for the ring-destruction conquest begin with the Celts original music meets the modern form of long-term rock sessions. Cross-Eyed Mary, Locomotive Breath, Cheap Day Return, Mother Goose or Wond'ring Aloud shall sounded exactly like how J.R.R Tolkien wanted to make a soundtrack that fits for his Middle-Earth views stories background and you will approved them too.

The amazing works coming in ages from the past to share the originality of Prog-Rock in its early forms to the Millennium ears ...

Aqualung:
https://youtu.be/wUEA5NWlQU0

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