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Live At Madison Square Garden 1978

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Download links and information about Live At Madison Square Garden 1978 by Jethro Tull. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 01:18:35 minutes.

Artist: Jethro Tull
Release date: 2009
Genre: Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 11
Duration: 01:18:35
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49
Buy on Songswave €2.21

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Sweet Dream (Live) 6:52
2. One Brown Mouse (Live) 3:24
3. Heavy Horses (Live) 7:22
4. Thick As a Brick (Live) 11:23
5. No Lullaby (Including Flute Solo) [Live] 9:00
6. Songs from the Wood (Live) 4:53
7. Quatrain (Live) 0:41
8. Aqualung (Live) 8:04
9. Locomotive Breath (Including Dambusters March) [Live] 15:40
10. Too Old to Rock 'N' Roll (Live) 4:17
11. My God / Cross-Eyed Mary (Live) 6:59

Details

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This package by Jethro Tull was taken from a concert at Madison Square Garden in 1978 and simultaneously broadcast via satellite on the BBC's Old Grey Whistle Test. The DVD contains audio only of the first three songs, followed by the entry of the visual with an introduction for the live feed, and the performance commences with full visual from the fourth selection (the video limitations were based on the network's time slot limits) a roaring, 11-minute "Thick as a Brick." The band runs through a handful of other cuts, including the title track of the then-current album Heavy Horses, "Aqualung," and "Locomotive Breath" (which ends partway through since it was officially the encore). After this, the broadcast video ends and we go back to the audio-only format for the remainder of the concert and the complete encore: an unedited version of "Locomotive Breath," with "Dambusters March" embedded within it. Therefore, the concert is presented in its entirety, though only a little more than half of it can be seen on the DVD. The audio is terrific in 5.1. The CD, on the other hand, contains 77 minutes of the show, though every track is represented and makes for a very fine JT live album. Much of Anderson's commentary is left out, as well as the opening BBC intro and most of the on-stage banter. The band introduction by Anderson is left off the CD though it does appear on the DVD. The disc does contain the proper track order, however, and it is also in 5.1. While the band footage is certainly interesting, this will certainly appeal to hardcore fans of the vintage Tull — as will the package in its entirety, more than likely.