JETHRO TULL


Aqualung

(1971)



1. Aqualung* 6'37
2. Cross-Eyed Mary 4'10
3. Cheap Day Return 1'23
4. Mother Goose 3'54
5. Wondr'ing Aloud 1'56
6. Up To Me 3'16
7. My God 7'13
8. Hymn 43 3'19
9. Slipstream 1'13
10. Locomotive Breath 4'26
11. Wind-Up 6'04

Total Time: 43:31


Although two of their later LP's topped the charts and this one didn't, "Aqualung" is unquestionably the locus of the band's legend.
Their first really coherent concept album, it's got plenty of AOR standards that combine heavy rock, driven by Barre's rhythm guitar, with breezy, lyrically arcane folk elements - "Cross-Eyed Mary", "Locomotive Breath",and the title track still get airplay a quarter century on.
But outside of those crafted vehicles, the band gets mired down time and time again with light, monotonous folk-pop ballads, centering on Anderson's moaning, increasingly grating vocals and near-classical acoustic guitar playing; he again wrote all the tunes, despite crediting the title track to his wife.
With the full band laying off most of the time, adding a keyboard player and replacing the bassist doesn't seem to have helped much.
So despite the hits and Anderson's endless supply of melodic riffs, the full album isn't really any better than its predecessor.
The British hit single "Life Is A Long Song", backed with "Up The Pool", came out this year but isn't on the album.
(J A)

  • Ian Anderson - Flute, Acoustic Guitar, Voice
  • Martin Barre - Electric Guitar, Descant Recorder
  • Clive Bunker - Drums, Percussion
  • John Evan - Organ, Piano, Mellotron
  • Jeffrey Hammond-Hammond - Bass Guitar, Alto Recorder, Odd Voices
  • David Palmer - Synthesizer, Arranger, Conductor, Keyboards, Saxophone

    Ian Anderson - Producer
    Terry Ellis - Producer
    Marcia McGovern - Pre-Production
    Roberta Ballard - Production Manager
    John Burns - Engineer
    Steve Hoffman - Remastering
    CCS - Layout
    Burton Silverman - Paintings

    All Songs Written by Ian Anderson
    except
    * Words by Jennie Anderson

    Recorded at ISLAND STUDIOS, London





    1. Aqualung

      Sitting on a park bench --
      eyeing ittle girls with bad intent.
      Snot running down his nose --
      greasy fingers smearing shabby clothes.
      Drying in the cold sun --
      Watching as the frilly panties run.
      Feeling like a dead duck --
      spitting out pieces of his broken luck.

      Sun streaking cold --
      an old man wandering lonely.
      Taking time
      the only way he knows.
      Leg hurting bad,
      as he bends to pick a dog-end --
      he goes down to the bog
      and warms his feet.

      Feeling alone --
      the army's up the rode
      salvation ? la mode and
      a cup of tea.
      Aqualung my friend --
      don't start away uneasy
      you poor old sod, you see, it's only me.
      Do you still remember
      December's foggy freeze --
      when the ice that
      clings on to your beard is
      screaming agony.
      And you snatch your rattling last breaths
      with deep-sea-diver sounds,
      and the flowers bloom like
      madness in the spring.

    2. Cross - Eyed Mary

      Who would be a poor man, a beggarman, a thief --
      if he had a rich man in his hand.
      And who would steal the candy
      from a laughing baby's mouth
      if he could take it from the money man.
      Cross-eyed Mary goes jumping in again.
      She signs no contract
      but she always plays the game.
      Dines in Hampstead village
      on expense accounted gruel,
      and the jack-knife barber drops her off at school.
      Laughing in the playground -- gets no kicks from little boys:
      would rather make it with a letching grey.
      Or maybe her attention is drawn by Aqualung,
      who watches through the railings as they play.
      Cross-eyed Mary finds it hard to get along.
      She's a poor man's rich girl
      and she'll do it for a song.
      She's a rich man stealer
      but her favour's good and strong:
      She's the Robin Hood of Highgate --
      helps the poor man get along.

    3. Cheap Day Return

      On Preston platform do your soft shoe shuffle dance.
      Brush away the cigarette ash that's
      falling down your pants.
      And you sadly wonder
      does the nurse treat your old man
      the way she should.
      She made you tea,
      asked for your autograph --
      what a laugh.

    4. Mother Goose

      As I did walk by Hampstead Fair
      I came upon Mother Goose -- so I turned her loose --
      she was screaming.
      And a foreign student said to me --
      was it really true there are elephants and lions too
      in Piccadilly Circus?

      Walked down by the bathing pond
      to try and catch some sun.
      Saw at least a hundred schoolgirls sobbing
      into hankerchiefs as one.
      I don't believe they knew
      I was a schoolboy.

      And a bearded lady said to me --
      if you start your raving and your misbehaving --
      you'll be sorry.
      Then the chicken-fancier came to play --
      with his long red beard (and his sister's weird:
      she drives a lorry).

      Laughed down by the putting green --
      I popped `em in their holes.
      Four and twenty labourers were labouring --
      digging up their gold.
      I don't believe they knew
      that I was Long John Silver.

      Saw Johnny Scarecrow make his rounds
      in his jet-black mac (which he won't give back) --
      stole it from a snow man.

    5. Wondr'ing Aloud

      Wond'ring aloud --
      how we feel today.
      Last night sipped the sunset --
      my hands in her hair.
      We are our own saviours
      as we start both our hearts beating life
      into each other.

      Wond'ring aloud --
      will the years treat us well.
      As she floats in the kitchen,
      I'm tasting the smell
      of toast as the butter runs.
      Then she comes, spilling crumbs on the bed
      and I shake my head.
      And it's only the giving
      that makes you what you are.

    6. Up to Me

      Take you to the cinema
      and leave you in a Wimpy Bar --
      you tell me that we've gone to far --
      come running up to me.
      Make the scene at Cousin Jack's --
      leave him put the bottles back --
      mends his glasses that I cracked --
      well that one's up to me.
      Buy a silver cloud to ride --
      pack the tennis club inside --
      trouser cuffs hung far too wide --
      well it was up to me.
      Tyres down on your bicicle --
      your nose feels like an icicle --
      the yellow fingered smoky girl
      is looking up to me.
      Well I'm a common working man
      with a half of bitter -- bread and jam
      and if it pleases me I'll put one on you man --
      when the copper fades away.
      The rainy season comes to pass --
      the day-glo pirate sinks at last --
      and if I laughed a bit to fast.
      Well it was up to me.

    7. My God

      People -- what have you done --
      locked Him in His golden cage.
      Made Him bend to your religion --
      Him resurrected from the grave.
      He is the god of nothing --
      if that's all that you can see.
      You are the god of everything --
      He's inside you and me.
      So lean upon Him gently
      and don't call on Him to save you
      from your social graces
      and the sins you used to waive.
      The bloody Church of England --
      in chains of history --
      requests your earthly presence at
      the vicarage for tea.
      And the graven image you-know-who --
      with His plastic crucifix --
      he's got him fixed --
      confuses me as to who and where and why --
      as to how he gets his kicks.
      Confessing to the endless sin --
      the endless whining sounds.
      You'll be praying till next Thursday to
      all the gods that you can count.

    8. Hymn 43

      Oh father high in heaven -- smile down upon your son
      whose busy with his money games -- his women and his gun.
      Oh Jesus save me!
      And the unsung Western hero killed an Indian or three
      and made his name in Hollywood
      to set the white man free.
      Oh Jesus save me!
      If Jesus saves -- well, He'd better save Himself
      from the gory glory seekers who use His name in death.
      Oh Jesus save me!
      I saw him in the city and on the mountains of the moon --
      His cross was rather bloody --
      He could hardly roll His stone.
      Oh Jesus save me !

    9. Slipstream

      Well the lush separation unfolds you --
      and the products of wealth
      push you along on the bow wave
      of the spiritless undying selves.
      And you press on God's waiter your last dime --
      as he hands you the bill.
      And you spin in the slipstream --
      timeless -- unreasoning --
      paddle right out of the mess.

    10. Locomotive Breath

      In the shuffling madess
      of the locomotive breath,
      runs the all-time loser,
      headlong to his death.
      He feels the piston scraping --
      steam breaking on his brow --
      old Charlie stole the handle and
      the train won't stop going --
      no way to slow down.
      He sees his children jumping off
      at the stations -- one by one.
      His woman and his best friend --
      in bed and having fun.
      He's crawling down the corridor
      on his hands and knees --
      old Charlie stole the handle and
      the train won't stop going --
      no way to slow down.
      He hears the silence howling --
      catches angels as they fall.
      And the all-time winner
      has got him by the balls.
      He picks up Gideons Bible --
      open at page one --
      old Charlie stole the handle and
      the train won't stop going --
      no way to slow down.

    11. Wind - Up

      When I was young and they packed me off to school
      and taught me how not to play the game,
      I didn't mind if they groomed me for success,
      or if they said that I was a fool.
      So I left there in the morning
      with their God tucked underneath my arm --
      their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
      So I asked this God a question
      and by way of firm reply,
      He said -- I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays.
      So to my old headmaster (and to anyone who cares):
      before I'm through I'd like to say my prayers --
      I don't believe you:
      you had the whole damn thing all wrong --
      He's not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays.
      Well you can excomunicate me on my way to Sunday school
      and have all the bishops harmonize these lines --
      how do you dare tell me that I'm my Father's son
      when that was just an accident of Birth.
      I'd rather look around me -- compose a better song
      `cos that's the honest measure of my worth.
      In your pomp and all your glory you're a poorer man than me,
      as you lick the boots of death born out of fear.
      I don't believe you:
      you had the whole damn thing all wrong --
      He's not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays.