Saturday, 11 November 2023

Jethro Tull - Stand Up (1969)

Year: 25 July 1969 (CD ????)
Label: Chrysalis Records (Europe), 252 657-222
Style: Gothic Rock, Folk Rock
Country: Bedfordshire, England
Time: 37:53
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 226 Mb

No, Jethro Tull is not just another English blues band. This Was, their first album, made some gestures in that direction, obligatory, in a way, for the time (summer of ’68); in its differences it was intriguing even as it disappointed. Its inadequacies were unconventional; the essential problem seemed to be a style in search of a subject.
Bob Dylan once said that the English know how to pronounce “marvelous” better than Americans, but that they have a little trouble with “raunchy.” Stand Up!, Jethro Tull’s new album, has a fairly low raunch quotient, true to form, but it is quite marvelous. For one thing, the band’s orientation is more definite than before. With the removal of Rick Abrahams to form Blodwyn Pig, the musical tug-of-war which could be heard on the first album has here been effectively curtailed. Ian Anderson simply dominates the proceedings — doing all the writing and singing, and playing a potpourri of instruments. He revels a melodic gift on this album not apparent on the earlier one, a fuller awareness of the coloristic possibilities of the flute, and a catholicity of taste.
Stand Up! has great textural interest, due, in part, to a more sophisticated recording technique, in part to the organ, mandolin, balalaika, etc., which Anderson plays to enrich each song. The band is able to work with different musical styles, but without a trace of the facile, glib manipulation which strains for attention. I can hear ethnic influences throughout the album — a hint of Greek rhythms on the flute break of “We Used to Know” and in the body of “Four Thousand Mothers” — but they are too well assimilated to be easily pinpointed. “Bourree” has that unmistakable baroque swing, a suggestion of the traditional English round, some jazz interludes, and a straight-forward yet breathtaking bass solo before, it winds its way to completion. “Jeffrey Goes to Leicester Square” has a sense of the vague, charming disorganization of medieval music. “Look into the Sun,” which finishes side one, is in its melodic twists and turns, a song of genuine poignance, with Martin Barre’s guitar playing a model of lyricism and understatement.
On the second side, “We Used to Know” employs what could be called a fade-in, beginning softly and then building in volume, with Barre wah-wahing madly by the end. Only “Reasons for Waiting” is slightly marred, there being a superfluous string section.
As I’ve said, the album is not really funky; rather, it is a meticulously crafted work (no sterility implied) which deserves careful listening. At a time when many of the established stars are faltering, it is a particular pleasure to hear an important new voice.
(rollingstone.com/music/music-album-reviews/stand-up-192622/) Review by Ben Gerson. December 13, 1969

01. A New Day Yesterday (04:09)
02. Jeffrey Goes To Leicester Square (02:11)
03. Bouree (03:47)
04. Back To The Family (03:49)
05. Look Into The Sun (04:21)
06. Nothing Is Easy (04:24)
07. Fat Man (02:52)
08. We Used To Know (03:59)
09. Reasons For Waiting (04:06)
10. For A Thousand Mothers (04:13)

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