Off topic but I've been wanting to buy that doll in your profile pic for over a month now since I saw it in a magazine. I'll take this as a sign to go ahead and order one
Glenn Cornick was truly a great bass player and oh so underrated. Always so musical and tasteful. This Tull lineup was the coolest band ever. Electric troubadours from the Renaissance with the original Pied Piper up front.
1977's "Songs From The Wood" was one of their best. It was medieval rock and had what could be called Pagan hymns ("Cup Of Wonder", Ring Out, Soltice Bells" and "Beltane").
@@adamjacobrogers9155 That was the Grammy people that did that. Tull didn't do it. What the Grammy people did was listen to Metallica, look at each other and go "This sucks!" and then give this new heavy metal grammy thing that they didn't really know what to do with to "some band that potheads listen to". I remember this incident well. I didn't care for Metallica, LOVED Jethro Tull, but I still thought it was bullshit to give Tull a heavy metal grammy. Shoulda gone to Iron Maiden or Twisted Sister. If Ozzy could have landed Blizzard of Ozz at this much later date, it would have been a shoo-in.
I might surprised you! I don't have the time to figure it out exactly but I'm very sure that Bourree is written in the Aeolian-or-Dorian mode. That doesn't only sound very ancient Greece, it is!
Bourree In E minor by Johann Sebastian Bach was rock'n'roll itself but what Jethro Tull created here is just mind blowing - musicians who really feel and understand music are going extinct
Compare and contrast Jethro Tull and the group Focus from the Netherlands- Front man plays flute, both did instrumentals, both eclectic, both influenced by classical music, etc.
Ian Anderson, not only a great flautist but one hell of a performer and front man. Saw them twice, 20 years apart, they were just as good 20 years later!
Ian come command an arena of 20,000 with a wave of his flute. Your right. One of the best frontmen and performers ever. To be in the audience of a Jethro Tull concert was pure magic 🎸
Sacrées années 70 décalage total avec toutes époques.Ceux qui ont vécus cette décennie auront eut un privilège qu'aucune génération passé ou futur n auras.
Les années 60 plutôt et le début des années 70. Après 1975-76 je trouve que l'esprit change... Enfin, perso j'ai pas connu... je me fie aux années de production/concerts/émissions... 😢
Well said my French friend I am hailing from Detroit, MI! What a beautiful collection of words you have used to illustrate and paint a picture that I can touch, feel, and almost see with your description! Bravo!
@@e.b.4872 Yes, indeed and there was a great reason for the changes and that would’ve been the end of the Vietnam horrible war were many young men lost their lives for the rubber tree!
At least the director knew to focus on Glenn. I had the pleasure of getting to know him briefly in the 70's when around the time Paris broke up. He came to our apt several times and was the nicest guy. I remember asking him about the bass solo on Bouree as a bass player myself. He said he had forgotten how to play it. He came over several times over the next few months and we never pushed him on anything other than, want something to drink and we'd talk shop then a ton of other things. He even got to the point where he crashed on the couch one night as it was so late and we told him to just hit the sack here. Anyway to make very long story short, that next morning we were sitting around having a bite to eat and he said to me...you know I remember every note of Bouree but got so fucking sick of every fucking bass player asking how to play it so I started telling people I had forgotten it. I apologized for having asked him when we first met those months ago. He said grab your bass and we sat down and he showed me the entire solo. Fucking blew me away. When I heard he had died in Hawaii, I like all of us was very sad but felt it a bit more as I felt privileged as hell for him hanging out and then showing me the solo that one morning at the table. Fucking great guy and a loss.
In retrospect I think Jethro Tull started its decline when Glenn left the band. They managed Aqualung without him, but after that, they lost spirit and musical direction. As a person with no personal musical knowledge myself, I could tell that Cornick was a stand-out bass player who was key to the sound of that band.
Do you happen to know what bass he actually used on the recording of Bouree? It's clearly not an EB-3. Something long scaled; a Jazz, Thunderbird something like that I'm hearing. Precision even ...
Happy Birthday Ian Anderson born on August 10, 1947. He is a Scottish musician best known for his work as the singer, flautist, acoustic guitarist and primary songwriter of British rock band Jethro Tull. He is a multi-instrumentalist who also plays harmonica, keyboards, bass guitar, bouzouki, balalaika, saxophone and a variety of whistles. - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Anderson
There’s much to be learned here. Anderson once remarked that as a teenager, he wanted to be part of the music scene that had started in the 1950s . He liked what he saw, but didn’t know exactly what part he would play ? Wasn’t much of a singer , couldn’t master the drums or guitar . So he tried a few other instruments and eventually settled on the Flute. This isn’t an easy instrument to play either or a piece of cake to reach the level of skill he did. Nonetheless, he did and with perseverance the rest is history. The lesson here is to never give up at something .
@@coltentrammel7744 They were literally not even playing their instruments. Drummer was off with the crash and the bassist was not even plugged in. Same shit as mumble rappers with backing tracks. Then again, the rappers at least actually rap.
@@coltentrammel7744 Jethro Tull are irrelevant outside of Aqualung and Thick as a Brick lol. No one gives a shit about them in the entire rock scene. Also, Blueface is a pretty random rapper to be using to talk shit on someone's musical tastes. You must be listening to rap yourself.
@@coltentrammel7744 its funny when tards make universal their limited musical knowledge. if you dig in jazz/creative music scene nowadays theres great musicians. tigran hamasyan, miles okazaki, steve lehman to name a few. of course you stopped diggin and just accept any shit media give beside our eyes. so you assume.
Il batterista non suona in modo tanto semplice...è un ritmo swing lento ma pieno di compings, di abbellimenti molto raffinati e perfettamente eseguiti.
@@GrandeCapo_PallaPesante The drummer, who is the great Clive Bunker, taught himself to play by listening to American jazz records, as did many British drummers of the time.
Ce morceau de jean-sebastien Bach revisité par Ian Anderson et le groupe est tout bonnement magnifique, un pur moment poétique, magique !!! 🕊️🤗J'ADORE JETHRO TULL ! 💎❤️🔥
J'ai commencé à écouter Jethro Tull en 1971 avec Aqualung,j'avais 13 ans,çà m'a bouleversé, je détestais Cloclo et toute cette merde dont on nous gavait,comme tout bon ado qui se cherche,et il reste un de mes groupes préférés des années 70,et je déteste toujours autant Cloclo et certaines mièvreries françaises de ces années là 😀
Al escuchar esta canción de jetro me transporto a los 60's...me eriza la piel...es una obra de arte muy adelantada para su época.... GRACIAS INGLATERRA, GRACIAS IAN ANDERSON...en México también habemos quienes sabemos de buena música.
esto fue inglaterra en su prime, pensar que entre finales de los 60s e inicio de los 70s nacieron o llegaron a su cúspide bandas como Tull, Sabbath, Zeppelin, Purple y Pink Floyd, es para volarse la cabeza. Les debemos mucho a los Ingleses.
My wife and have these friends, the husband owns a music store. One day my wife tells me they've invited us to a party; I said I didn't feel like going, I had shit to do around the property. OK, my wife goes and when she comes back she tells me they had a little band there, the music store owner and his friend from Scotland. She said they were good and shows me a picture. I said "that's Glenn Cornick." She said "yeah, that's Ken's friend from Scotland". She had no idea. I regret not going to that party. RIP Mr. Cornick. I dug the Paris albums he did with Bob Welch and Wild Turkey. Great musician.
Grandissima bravissima eccezionale band guidata dal bravissimo eccezionale grandissimo ian anderson splendida bellissima voce leader di questi bravissimi musicisti grandissimo eccezionale flautista e chitarrista visti a Roma molti anni fa concerto indimenticabile grazie tantissimo per le splendide emozioni che ci avete regalato con le vostre splendide canzoni ❤❤❤❤thank you so much you are wonderful ❤❤❤❤
There's been a concerted effort from the top levels of the industry to de-emphasize instrumental skill. There are NO "instrumentals" riding high "on the charts" any more! Nobody gets famous anymore strictly as an instrumentalist. I'm old, (72), but that's not 100, & for about half my life there were always a few celebrity instrumentalists..and not just guitar players. That's been over for decades & it's no accident. It's a loss!
@@pyannaguy4361 I don't think there's Ever been world famous pop stars that have made solely instrumental music Ever? Maybe the ventures, Link vray, Steve vai, Joe satriani, chet Atkins, dick dale, the Shadows... And that's about it? It all depends on how famous are we talking about? But i do agree, compared todays musicians to musicians from the 90s, hell even the 2000s and back, artists at least played their own instruments, that doesen't happen today in mainstream pop music.
@@eouroshopper4423 I'm going back a ways, but Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass sold in the millions. Agreed, not huge, sexy Pop Star idol types, but Booker T. & The MGs were another group with a few big instrumental hits. There was always an instrumental or two on the Top 40 stations when I was a kid in the 60s.
Nj Osborne. I am a stage 3 colon cancer survivor, onward and upward !!! It is not an end game for anything, stay strong, stay positive, bring in all the energy that is positive and run with that, the emotions that go on while going through treatments or at the end of treatments can be intense. Fight the good fight and you will get through this, I send positive vibes to you my friend....
Li ho sentiti dal vivo a Treviso nel 1972.............questa canzone mi commuove particolarmente..... I heard them live in Treviso in 1972 ............. this song moves me particularly ..... Los escuché en vivo en Treviso en 1972 ............. esta canción me conmueve particularmente ..... Я слышал их вживую в Тревизо в 1972 году ............. эта песня меня особенно трогает ... Je les ai entendus en concert à Trévise en 1972 ............. cette chanson m'émeut particulièremen
Nunca un bajo, fue más alto, ni una flauta, fue una orquesta, mágica, sublime. Bourée en manos de Ian Anderson, permanece como un lienzo fresco, en el Museo Británico, en el Prado, en el Louvre, en el Moma, en los más grandes museos. Permanece eterno.
This is why I love RUclips. So many rare performances. This was French TV, so who in the U.S.A. today would see it, if not out on RUclips? The music, the performance, the outfits, the backdrop: This is such a beautiful timepiece, and a timeless piece of music. The French must have loved the "Bouree" tribute to their music.
Never mind that it's the studio version we're hearing, and multiple seconds out of sync - just watch the players... Glenn Cornick - one of the finest bass players ever. Martin B. in languid repose - blithely strumming away. Clive B. being the engine room - on a sparse but adequate kit - and ol' Ian being Ian - looking like he really IS playing both flute parts simultaneously! Man, the memories this brings back... Thank you for posting! Tre Bien! Merci!
@@abundantYOUniverse J. S. Bach Loquitur I, Johann Sebastian Bach, musician, cantor of Saint Thomas’s School in Leipzig, being near my end, praise God for his mercies; for although I am blind so I was not always, for the Lord gave me great power among all men to sing unto His greatness; witness my works which I leave behind me. For I strove long in anguish of spirit, with my soul I battled long with the Lord’s angels, knowing it was to His glory. Though I was in darkness yet I saw Him. Though I am in darkness yet I see Him. In music I saw Him, I walked with Him before the gates of Paradise, the smooth and glowing pearl, they fled apart, I walked within and heard the music of His courts echoing, twining before Him in divine, subtle-ordered canon. In my striving with His angels too I heard songs of Zion; these I have sung with deep notes of organ and organ’s sweetness I have adored Him, with choir and strings and trumpets I have praised Him greatly, and with tenderness of oboe mourned for Him. All men know me and no man, for I went alone before Him, and strove alone. Now Lord take me, for I am blind, I am blind yet the eyes of my spirit see: the ears of my spirit hear the songs of Zion no man else heard. Now take me Lord, Bach, cantor of Thomas’ school, at my end.
I'm a bass player and this is one of the only songs I've ever learned pretty much note for note, way back when this was new. I can still play it even though I've never used it in my life.
Bach was the first rocker, 300 years ago! Tull does him justice!
It’s 2023, 11.15 at night, had a couple of ales-what better way to end the evening than a bit of classic Tull!
hope you enjoyed.........
Yeah!
2024 Hong Kong a few beers and .......haha same same
Enjoy-now in Glasgow-couple o pints n yup-The Tull yet again. Certainly improves the stress of 2024!
Can we just appreciate that the bassist is PLAYING CHORDS in his solo? Amazing!
Glen was an amazing bassist check out wild turkey his post tull band quite a few hidden gems
Pity they ain’t playing live ,bands hardly ever do in tv studios
Much easier to hold a chord with a short scale bass
So rare a Gibson Bass for such a kind of music. Great.
Wow he can bar four strings 😂
It was a perfect storm of amazingly talented musicians and a pool of inventive minds . And a sense of humour. Astounding group .
The bass solo is in a class all by itself
This should be a roadside sobriety test. Cop hands you a flute and tells you to stand on one leg and play "Bouree" by Jethro Tull.
Love to see anyone try that, even sober.....
If you can do it you’re definitely drunk.
Off topic but I've been wanting to buy that doll in your profile pic for over a month now since I saw it in a magazine. I'll take this as a sign to go ahead and order one
raine Buy me one too! 👽😃
😂😂😂😂😂😅😅😅😅
je suis étonné que je suis le seul en langue Française à faire un commentaire ce disque est génial souvenirs !!!!!
Les Français écoutent du rap et des mièvreries, il ne faut pas être étonné.
C’est magnifique!❤
@@richardfaucheraux4873 C'est surtout que c'est pas très jeune😄
Mais noooon,,, on est tous là !!!
51 years after ths show and it still sounds modern and necessary in this world
I totally agree !!!
But they look like they aren't plugged in. Is it all pantomime and not a musical performance?
Ian Anderson the quirkiest rock and roll star for all eternity. So much great stuff early on by Jethro Tull. This is a gem.
Glenn Cornick was truly a great bass player and oh so underrated. Always so musical and tasteful. This Tull lineup was the coolest band ever. Electric troubadours from the Renaissance with the original Pied Piper up front.
Agree. First two albums, "This Was" and "Stand Up" are the Best of Jethro Tull.
Very agree-- he's up there with my all time fav bass guys
@@benjamin8011 I have to add "Benefit" in there...
1977's "Songs From The Wood" was one of their best. It was medieval rock and had what could be called Pagan hymns ("Cup Of Wonder", Ring Out, Soltice Bells" and "Beltane").
Well, troubadours were medieval and this is a baroque piece, but apart from that ...
This band open my eyes and mind to a new world of sounds and experiences, they are legend
Having been a sort of oddball band, the later incarnation totally fucked Metallica out of a Grammy XD
to drugs basically
@@leandroantelo7154 maybe you are talking about YOUR experience 🤣
@@leandroantelo7154 Their music is drug by itself. I’m proud that I’m addicted.
@@adamjacobrogers9155 That was the Grammy people that did that. Tull didn't do it. What the Grammy people did was listen to Metallica, look at each other and go "This sucks!" and then give this new heavy metal grammy thing that they didn't really know what to do with to "some band that potheads listen to". I remember this incident well. I didn't care for Metallica, LOVED Jethro Tull, but I still thought it was bullshit to give Tull a heavy metal grammy. Shoulda gone to Iron Maiden or Twisted Sister. If Ozzy could have landed Blizzard of Ozz at this much later date, it would have been a shoo-in.
When hippies were hippies. there will never be another Jethro Tull
Why you speak of him like he was dead ? x)
@@highvoltage379 it's not a him. Jethro Tull was a band, genius
@@jupiteral8217 Oh, my bad ! I discovered h.. this band recently. But they are still kinda active if I am correct
Ian Anderson hates hippies lol
Lol King Crimson did this shit way better. And at least played their instruments.
Its amazing how Ian Anderson can play the flute and a second flute harmony at the same time!
😎
A friend of mine told me that he does things with the flute that you are just not supposed to be able to do.
@@christopherbacon1077 He does, but this is just the audio from the studio version :p
They get a great sound from their instruments without even being plugged in!
Martin actually can play some flute, too. Though not while also playing guitar!
H.I.P Glenn Cornik, the best bass!
Happy Birthday today (12\30\21) to drummer Clive Bunker.
One of the most original bands to come out of the '60s!
If I had youtube at 13 years I never would have done ANY homework
How true.
This is homework mate.
Homework?
@@Aristotelezz This is not for Ancient Greece. 😁☝
I might surprised you! I don't have the time to figure it out exactly but I'm very sure that Bourree is written in the Aeolian-or-Dorian mode. That doesn't only sound very ancient Greece, it is!
Bourree In E minor by Johann Sebastian Bach was rock'n'roll itself but what Jethro Tull created here is just mind blowing - musicians who really feel and understand music are going extinct
Compare and contrast Jethro Tull and the group Focus from the Netherlands- Front man plays flute, both did instrumentals, both eclectic, both influenced by classical music, etc.
@@someguy2135 Lot of best rock musician had a classical background. Paul Kossoff comes to mind
Yes, when w*n£er$ like Harry Stiles get the plaudits these days.
This version is actually in D minor.
The timing, the seamless execution between drummer, bass and flute , spot on....
It's taped
@@JS-te4gz that’s right…it’s not live
It is not live, it does not matter. We can listen to the studio performance, one of the best in rock history.
This is when Tull,was Tull! 👏👏👏👏👏
Ian Anderson, not only a great flautist but one hell of a performer and front man. Saw them twice, 20 years apart, they were just as good 20 years later!
Ian come command an arena of 20,000 with a wave of his flute. Your right. One of the best frontmen and performers ever. To be in the audience of a Jethro Tull concert was pure magic 🎸
Aqualung tour was mind blowing in a college gymnasium.Stony Brook N.Y.
He was a terrible flautist, which is how he achieved his unique sound. Tull's first four albums are great and remain among my favorites.
Ian is the best all around rocker ever!
First heard this tune in my car, I had to stop and listen. Totally blown away,
There is no time limit for this music , Awesome !
Fans are invited to celebrate Bach, today the Maestro 's birthday, discovering huge imense Bach is never enough, this spectacular track might help 🎉❤🎉
Sacrées années 70 décalage total avec toutes époques.Ceux qui ont vécus cette décennie auront eut un privilège qu'aucune génération passé ou futur n auras.
Les années 60 plutôt et le début des années 70. Après 1975-76 je trouve que l'esprit change... Enfin, perso j'ai pas connu... je me fie aux années de production/concerts/émissions... 😢
Well said my French friend I am hailing from Detroit, MI! What a beautiful collection of words you have used to illustrate and paint a picture that I can touch, feel, and almost see with your description! Bravo!
@@e.b.4872
Yes, indeed and there was a great reason for the changes and that would’ve been the end of the Vietnam horrible war were many young men lost their lives for the rubber tree!
That bass solo is the best bass solo I’ve ever heard.
regretté Glen Cornick ....
It really cooks
solo!? it was like its own movement, best one ive heard too though tbh.
Best solo goes to geezer butler in NIB, but this shit slaps too
Bass
This makes J S Bach happy
The original bouree. Fantastic.
At least the director knew to focus on Glenn. I had the pleasure of getting to know him briefly in the 70's when around the time Paris broke up. He came to our apt several times and was the nicest guy.
I remember asking him about the bass solo on Bouree as a bass player myself.
He said he had forgotten how to play it. He came over several times over the next few months and we never pushed him on anything other than, want something to drink and we'd talk shop then a ton of other things. He even got to the point where he crashed on the couch one night as it was so late and we told him to just hit the sack here.
Anyway to make very long story short, that next morning we were sitting around having a bite to eat and he said to me...you know I remember every note of Bouree but got so fucking sick of every fucking bass player asking how to play it so I started telling people I had forgotten it.
I apologized for having asked him when we first met those months ago.
He said grab your bass and we sat down and he showed me the entire solo. Fucking blew me away.
When I heard he had died in Hawaii, I like all of us was very sad but felt it a bit more as I felt privileged as hell for him hanging out and then showing me the solo that one morning at the table. Fucking great guy and a loss.
Great story. Thanks for sharing.
Wouldn't the trick be to have learned it on your own so you could just ask him "am I playing it right?"
In retrospect I think Jethro Tull started its decline when Glenn left the band. They managed Aqualung without him, but after that, they lost spirit and musical direction. As a person with no personal musical knowledge myself, I could tell that Cornick was a stand-out bass player who was key to the sound of that band.
Do you happen to know what bass he actually used on the recording of Bouree?
It's clearly not an EB-3. Something long scaled; a Jazz, Thunderbird something like that I'm hearing. Precision even ...
@@KozmykJ, cool fable.
Happy Birthday Ian Anderson born on August 10, 1947. He is a Scottish musician best known for his work as the singer, flautist, acoustic guitarist and primary songwriter of British rock band Jethro Tull. He is a multi-instrumentalist who also plays harmonica, keyboards, bass guitar, bouzouki, balalaika, saxophone and a variety of whistles. - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Anderson
Who Else in the World could do This, nobody but Ian Anderson!
You obviously are uneducated on Jazz, look up Bobbi Humphrey. She definitely played circles around Ian. I do enjoy Jethro Tull though in all fairness.
The ending of this song is just exquisite.
There’s much to be learned here. Anderson once remarked that as a teenager, he wanted to be part of the music scene that had started in the 1950s . He liked what he saw, but didn’t know exactly what part he would play ? Wasn’t much of a singer , couldn’t master the drums or guitar . So he tried a few other instruments and eventually settled on the Flute. This isn’t an easy instrument to play either or a piece of cake to reach the level of skill he did. Nonetheless, he did and with perseverance the rest is history. The lesson here is to never give up at something .
Except guitar and drums
You've got your story somewhat mixed up. Anderson is an excellent guitar player, both acoustic and electric.
@@brianhammer5107 Totally agree with you. And I would add an good singer too.
ruclips.net/video/5WSulenOUb0/видео.html
Certa vez um jornalista perguntou pra ele em quem ele se inspirou pra tocar flauta e ele respondeu : "Eric Clapton"😀
Wasn't much of a singer? I think he is a great singer!
I miss those uplifting psych stage decors. I may be born in 1968, but the colors and music of that age always feel kindred and 'at home' to me.
Back when everyone was brilliant, creative and I took it for granted.
@@coltentrammel7744 They were literally not even playing their instruments. Drummer was off with the crash and the bassist was not even plugged in. Same shit as mumble rappers with backing tracks. Then again, the rappers at least actually rap.
@@coltentrammel7744 Jethro Tull are irrelevant outside of Aqualung and Thick as a Brick lol. No one gives a shit about them in the entire rock scene. Also, Blueface is a pretty random rapper to be using to talk shit on someone's musical tastes. You must be listening to rap yourself.
@@coltentrammel7744 rap does take talent, don't tell us why something is bad if you don't even understand it
@@fionahodkinson8346 fuck u bitch
@@coltentrammel7744 its funny when tards make universal their limited musical knowledge. if you dig in jazz/creative music scene nowadays theres great musicians. tigran hamasyan, miles okazaki, steve lehman to name a few. of course you stopped diggin and just accept any shit media give beside our eyes. so you assume.
This beautiful arrangement introduced me to Jethro Tull in 1973! And still listen to them! Thanks for sharing!
no soy musico, pero esa banda era brutal como el bajista le daba, el baterista tan sencillo pero tan marcante... DIOS HERMOSA EPOCA..
Il batterista non suona in modo tanto semplice...è un ritmo swing lento ma pieno di compings, di abbellimenti molto raffinati e perfettamente eseguiti.
@@GrandeCapo_PallaPesante The drummer, who is the great Clive Bunker, taught himself to play by listening to American jazz records, as did many British drummers of the time.
@@GrandeCapo_PallaPesante hermoso sonido del baterista sin duda..
@@thomasbell7033 es increíble..
Who in the world would give a dislike to this track?!?! ...the fools never die
Ah quel beau playback, les guitares sans fils, on était benêt dans les années 70!
Didier🙂
Ce morceau de jean-sebastien Bach revisité par Ian Anderson et le groupe est tout bonnement magnifique, un pur moment poétique, magique !!! 🕊️🤗J'ADORE JETHRO TULL ! 💎❤️🔥
J'ai commencé à écouter Jethro Tull en 1971 avec Aqualung,j'avais 13 ans,çà m'a bouleversé, je détestais Cloclo et toute cette merde dont on nous gavait,comme tout bon ado qui se cherche,et il reste un de mes groupes préférés des années 70,et je déteste toujours autant Cloclo et certaines mièvreries françaises de ces années là 😀
Al escuchar esta canción de jetro me transporto a los 60's...me eriza la piel...es una obra de arte muy adelantada para su época.... GRACIAS INGLATERRA, GRACIAS IAN ANDERSON...en México también habemos quienes sabemos de buena música.
la canción es original de Johan Sebastian Bach
esto fue inglaterra en su prime, pensar que entre finales de los 60s e inicio de los 70s nacieron o llegaron a su cúspide bandas como Tull, Sabbath, Zeppelin, Purple y Pink Floyd, es para volarse la cabeza. Les debemos mucho a los Ingleses.
RIP Glenn Cornick ... he would have been 73 years old today. Born on April 23, 1947
My wife and have these friends, the husband owns a music store. One day my wife tells me they've invited us to a party; I said I didn't feel like going, I had shit to do around the property. OK, my wife goes and when she comes back she tells me they had a little band there, the music store owner and his friend from Scotland. She said they were good and shows me a picture. I said "that's Glenn Cornick." She said "yeah, that's Ken's friend from Scotland". She had no idea. I regret not going to that party. RIP Mr. Cornick. I dug the Paris albums he did with Bob Welch and Wild Turkey. Great musician.
Glen Cornick, one of, if not the best bass guitarists of his time
Fantastic bass player.
Glen was one of the coolest guys i ever met, I just wish I was old-mature enough at the time to really listen to his stories
Che meraviglia la musica di ieri era bellissima e autentica. Geni ormai rari, grazie sempre Stefano
What a collection of talent, and so well integrated, so creative.
Jethro Tull is an awesome band. They are excellent live.
One of my favourites from a very underrated band.
Superbe musique, que je ne me lasse pas à écouter (de plus à sa sortie en 1969 j'avais 14 ans)
Grandissima bravissima eccezionale band guidata dal bravissimo eccezionale grandissimo ian anderson splendida bellissima voce leader di questi bravissimi musicisti grandissimo eccezionale flautista e chitarrista visti a Roma molti anni fa concerto indimenticabile grazie tantissimo per le splendide emozioni che ci avete regalato con le vostre splendide canzoni ❤❤❤❤thank you so much you are wonderful ❤❤❤❤
I love it how hilariously dubbed the performance is
I know. I like Jethro Tull but it's badly dubbed. Sign of the times I guess.
Yeah the tune is good and I like the video but they really don’t match. Kinda like watching a video with music in the background
I think whoever posted this video has ovedubbed a stereo track in place of the original.
There was no original. They were not even remotely playing
It was probably on purpose. They did the same thing with "the witches promise" on BBC
Greatest flute rock star. Jethro Tull one of most amazing progressive rock band
@68’ Rumble Bee Stu Mackenzie bra, listen to Hot Water
Great combination of flute and bass guitar. Why can't these so-called musicians of today be this great?
There's been a concerted effort from the top levels of the industry to de-emphasize instrumental skill. There are NO "instrumentals" riding high "on the charts" any more! Nobody gets famous anymore strictly as an instrumentalist. I'm old, (72), but that's not 100, & for about half my life there were always a few celebrity instrumentalists..and not just guitar players. That's been over for decades & it's no accident. It's a loss!
@@pyannaguy4361 I don't think there's Ever been world famous pop stars that have made solely instrumental music Ever? Maybe the ventures, Link vray, Steve vai, Joe satriani, chet Atkins, dick dale, the Shadows... And that's about it? It all depends on how famous are we talking about?
But i do agree, compared todays musicians to musicians from the 90s, hell even the 2000s and back, artists at least played their own instruments, that doesen't happen today in mainstream pop music.
@@eouroshopper4423 I'm going back a ways, but Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass sold in the millions. Agreed, not huge, sexy Pop Star idol types, but Booker T. & The MGs were another group with a few big instrumental hits. There was always an instrumental or two on the Top 40 stations when I was a kid in the 60s.
Possibly because there are more "producers" than actual musicians.
This is playback. They are just pretending to play.
However they were great live, too
ruclips.net/video/iWJgJkVL0xM/видео.html
gods of rock ,,, my favo lineup,, thanks a lot Hector.
One of the best bands in the world ever.
Truly one of the all time great bass players. That solo is easily top 3
Still listening to these guys all the years long
Nostalgie , quand tu nous tiens !
I’m 4weeks into chemo and a tired, way too much
THIS IS Just what I needed to get up and move.
Thanks, bro.
Get well soon brother!
best wishes for you!
Nj Osborne. I am a stage 3 colon cancer survivor, onward and upward !!! It is not an end game for anything, stay strong, stay positive, bring in all the energy that is positive and run with that, the emotions that go on while going through treatments or at the end of treatments can be intense. Fight the good fight and you will get through this, I send positive vibes to you my friend....
Hope you're doing ok...
In the same situation my friend stay strong and God bless you
EXCELENCIA!!!
Músicos de verdad!!!
Li ho sentiti dal vivo a Treviso nel 1972.............questa canzone mi commuove particolarmente.....
I heard them live in Treviso in 1972 ............. this song moves me particularly .....
Los escuché en vivo en Treviso en 1972 ............. esta canción me conmueve particularmente .....
Я слышал их вживую в Тревизо в 1972 году ............. эта песня меня особенно трогает ...
Je les ai entendus en concert à Trévise en 1972 ............. cette chanson m'émeut particulièremen
Nunca un bajo, fue más alto, ni una flauta, fue una orquesta, mágica, sublime. Bourée en manos de Ian Anderson, permanece como un lienzo fresco, en el Museo Británico, en el Prado, en el Louvre, en el Moma, en los más grandes museos.
Permanece eterno.
Everything about this song is amazing
Totally Rad!!!!!!!!!
Saw them in Rotterdam in the 80s and was deeply impressed by their craftsmanship. Still Artists with a capital A!
I used to play along with my recorder in 1970. I was 16 then. Every time it this tune came on the radio I would grab my recorder and play.
Jethro tull siempre magistral buena música la diferencia con otros grupos la pone la flauta un saludo emilito cerro Badajoz
One of the best bass solos ever.
The stage art is just as intriguing as the music performance itself !!!
Musicos geniales, que tristeza me da oir las chatarras de hoy, grande, monumental JETHRO TULL, fantástico.
best of the besttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt.Hi from Greece.
Superb musicianship throughout the band.
This is why I love RUclips. So many rare performances. This was French TV, so who in the U.S.A. today would see it, if not out on RUclips? The music, the performance, the outfits, the backdrop: This is such a beautiful timepiece, and a timeless piece of music. The French must have loved the "Bouree" tribute to their music.
The Germans even more, since it is J. S. Bach 🙂.
Yes, YOU TUBE GOLD!
and if we did see it. We only saw it once until youtube came into being.
I'd like to visit back there again for just a while.
Brano immortale...grandi pilastri del progressive rock e non solo...non mi stanco mai di ascoltare sti mostri sacri. 😜😘❤️
This is the stuff I grew up on......I want to cry for my kids.
This song is amazing, one classmate , a musician, told me at the time about JS Bach : "you put the back beat and you get jazz"
When I hear the music I think of my father. He always tried to do the Ian Anderson stand on the song to impress me.
RIP Dad, i miss you so much.
Never mind that it's the studio version we're hearing, and multiple seconds out of sync - just watch the players... Glenn Cornick - one of the finest bass players ever. Martin B. in languid repose - blithely strumming away. Clive B. being the engine room - on a sparse but adequate kit - and ol' Ian being Ian - looking like he really IS playing both flute parts simultaneously! Man, the memories this brings back... Thank you for posting! Tre Bien! Merci!
I think the tv requested playback. But yes definitely this is the studio version. There's no one playing the 2nd flute...
Gosh, sounds just like the record. Imagine that.
never, ever have I ever heard of a better bass solo in my life. I wish it was longer.
Impresionante el solo de bajo de Glenn Cornick, uno de los mejores músicos de Jethro Tull
Astounding!!! I had to watch this several times and each time...wow! ❤️
British music was untouchable.
Best wishes
👍 🇬🇧
One of the best Bass players ever ..
Glenn Cornick!
brian beller is good at technique. But no groove and no sentiment
just my opinion I also like Cliff Burton is Brian better then he was ?
Definitely Glen..
Cliff was also really good. He had more toys to play (FX) with than Glenn did back then. Totally different music, but both were great.
Some credit should perhaps be given to the original composer of this piece, one J S Bach. He was pretty good too.
I liked Bach till he got too commercial.
@@abundantYOUniverse J. S. Bach Loquitur
I, Johann Sebastian Bach, musician, cantor of Saint Thomas’s School in Leipzig, being near my end, praise God for his mercies; for although I am blind so I was not always, for the Lord gave me great power among all men to sing unto His greatness; witness my works which I leave behind me. For I strove long in anguish of spirit, with my soul I battled long with the Lord’s angels, knowing it was to His glory.
Though I was in darkness yet I saw Him. Though I am in darkness yet I see Him. In music I saw Him, I walked with Him before the gates of Paradise, the smooth and glowing pearl, they fled apart, I walked within and heard the music of His courts echoing, twining before Him in divine, subtle-ordered canon. In my striving with His angels too I heard songs of Zion; these I have sung with deep notes of organ and organ’s sweetness I have adored Him, with choir and strings and trumpets I have praised Him greatly, and with tenderness of oboe mourned for Him.
All men know me and no man, for I went alone before Him, and strove alone. Now Lord take me, for I am blind, I am blind yet the eyes of my spirit see: the ears of my spirit hear the songs of Zion no man else heard. Now take me Lord, Bach, cantor of Thomas’ school, at my end.
@@davidford694 wow thanks
David : yes this guy was not so bad.
Joke
More than one brother has credited Bach with being the world's first jazz musician.
Bravissimi il Progressive Rock si arricchisce sempre di più di tante fusioni di generi musicali
Toujours aussi bon de les entendre , même des décennies après !
The tune that ran through my head for years and years.
I love when the electric
bass and guitar somehow manifest their sound into the mix without need of plugging in.
Just goes to show how 'magic' the psychodelic era really was ! LOL.
This is over effing fifty years old and still gives me goosebumps!
Jethro Tull: uno de los grandes.
I love the independent direction Jethro Tull took -- they didn't bother with the repetitive boy/girl songs of the sixties
Poetic, thoughtful music, the best😎
The entire reason I learned to play flute and many other instruments. Ian Anderson is Amazing
I was lucky enough to see these guys twice in small venues in the mid 1990s. Such a dynamic group.
i like how the drummer is actually pretending to be playing some of the time
they all do, pretending. It's quite obvious, especially when 1 flutist plays the sound of 2 flutes.
Clive Bunker definitely does not want to be there.
Itchy neck.
When you play the flute with your eyebrows.....
While being possessed by a goatman
Both flute parts even (there are two flutes playing). No wonder he can make these funny faces; he's Milli Vanilli'ing us!
...Like some kind of escaped Muppet.
and one-leg
Lol
Great acting to their classic jam, love that retro stageset.
The original bombastic side eye at the beginning.
👁️👁️
I'm a bass player and this is one of the only songs I've ever learned pretty much note for note, way back when this was new. I can still play it even though I've never used it in my life.
Love this song, takes me way bach...
the best band that never made it into the rock and roll hall of shame and still better than half that DID....
They were so good they won a Grammy for music they don't play......
@@newgunguy4176,... YEAH ~ REALLY FUNNY !!!
I Like Classics combined with modern Rock music. Beautiful, IT reminds Me of my youth