JETHRO TULL


Rock Island

(1989)



1. Kissing Willie 3'32
2. The Rattlesnake Trail 4'02
3. Ears Of Tin 4'55
4. Undressed to Kill 5'25
5. Rock Island 6'54
6. Heavy Water 4'12
7. Another Christmas Song 3'32
8. The Whaler's Dues 7'53
9. Big Riff and Mando 5'58
10. Strange Avenues 4'09

Total Time: 50:32


Ian Anderson - Vocals, Flute, Keyboards, Mandolin, Acoustic Guitar And Drums On the "Rattlesnake Trail" and "Another Christmas Song"

  • Martin Barre - Guitars
  • David Pegg - Bass Guitar, Acoustic Bass, Mandolin
  • Doane Perry - Drums

    Also:

  • Martin Allcock - Keyboards On "Strange Avenues" and "Kissing Willie"
  • Peter Vettese - Additional Keyboards On "heavy Water" "Rock Island", "Undressed To Kill" and "Ears Of Tin"

    Produced And Engineered By Ian Anderson
    Tracks Mixed by Ian Anderson and Tim Matyear
    Assisted by Martin 8arre and Mark Tucker

    All Songs Written by Ian Anderson
    Published by
    The Ian ANDERSON GROUP OF COMPANIES Under License to CHRYSALIS MUSIC Ltd.
    Colour Illustration by Anton Morris
    Line Illustration by Jim Dibson
    Art Direction by John Pasche

    Recorded At LAN's PLACE

    Pre-production and most Drum Tracks Recorded At: Dave Pegg's WOODWORM STUDIOS

    Special Thanks To:

    PEARL Flutes, SHURE Microphones, PAISTE Cymbals, TAMA Drums, RANDALL Amplification, La BELLA Strings, DOLBY LABS UK., PROJECT ELECTRONICS

    Remastered by Peter Mew at ABBEY ROAD
    Photography: Martyn Goddard

    Special Thanks To Ian Anderson for his Assistance

    Digital Remasters ® 2006

    © 2006 EMI RECORDS Ltd.

    The 1989 release Rock Island moved on from Crest Of A Knave with a darker set of songs. Alienation, dislocated society, environmental questions - generally sombre and reflective, if not actually a musical suicide note ....
    The name refers to my then home location, the Isle Of Skye, a rocky "winged isle" off the West coast of Scotland. One of our Inner Hebrides, it oozes history and wild romanticism.
    The songs fall into two kinds, really. Those that are rock-based and regular solid 4/4 tempo guitar-based tunes and those that are more complex and feature keyboards, flutes etc in greater abundance. They seem to almost alternate in the running order, at least during the first half of the record although I'm not sure if this was, or was not, a conscious decision at the time.

    "Kissing Willie" is a not-to-subtle approach to love and life behind grey factory walls. Actually bassist Dave Pegg inspired this one with a tale, imagined or real, who knows, of an awkward teenage mutual fumble behind the gasworks somewhere on the fringes of his home town of Birmingham in the Midlands of the UK. A rather over-the-top video went with this one and is not one of my proudest moments. Director Storm Jorgensen wanted a Benny Hill kind of thing and so I Bennied, dutifully. Regretfully.
    "The Rattlesnake Trail" is a medium tempo rocker of the ZZ top persuasion. Guitar-based and never performed on stage. Just an excuse for a funky rocking good time.
    "Ears Of Tin" plays on the social disintegration of the West Highlands of Scotland. The move to the big city. The regrets. The longing.
    "Undressed To Kill" is a strip club through-the-keyhole, life of a working girl song. A certain sadness and grim determination lurks in the young female personality behind the lap-dance frivolity of the setting.
    "Rock Island" is a rather good song, I think. Loneliness and detachment. Fear of the far-off unknown. The rock island as metaphor for the isolated but familiar bubble into which we all sometimes retreat. The blue baby blanket security. Back to the womb. For beer, curry and a game of skittles.
    "Heavy Water" reflects on the environmental damage from Chernobyl but was inspired also by the horrors of the acid rain reality of 20th century industrial pollution. Memories of a hot and sticky New York City summer in the early seventies when the rainspots on my sleeve were an ominous black.
    "Another Christmas Song" is probably my favourite piece from the album, being generally uplifting in this sea of misery ! It was actually written as a sequel to the original A Christmas Song, B-side on an early Tull single in 1968. It was also re-recorded for the Jethro Tull Christmas Album in 2003. A song of family togetherness, nostalgia and benevolence. The antithesis of the original, in some ways.
    "The Whaler's Dues" tackles the difficult subject of the moral question of whale-hunting, seen from the perspective of a seaman on board a whaling ship. Set in the contemporary world, it in no way tries to condone or excuse the on-going practice but puts our hero (or villain) up in the dock for sentence and martyrdom. For all my Japanese and Icelandic friends to ponder on.....
    "Big Riff And Mando" is based on the true event of the theft of Martin Barre's mandolin from backstage after a show somewhere in the USA a few months before. Martin was understandably distraught and I made plea via a helpful local Classic Rock radio station to the perpetrator. To our amazement, the mandolin was returned undamaged and lived to fight another day. Why did the thief take it? To brag about? To have as a souvenir? Or to keep for a few years until E-Bay was invented?
    "Marty" is Martin, obviously. Big Riff is the imagined thief and a little story is invented here to portray the character and his motives.
    "Strange Avenues" is a little sequel to the Aqualung setting of 1971. Sometimes it is so nice to revisit an earlier song and re-create, for a moment, the subject in another time and another piece of invaded personal space. Nice musical arrangement and dramatic stuff. Must play it live again some day.

    I would like to dedicate the re-release of this re-mastered album to long-serving fellow Scot - Kenny Wylie - Jethro Tull Production Manager from 1975 until 2004, for all his hard work, enthusiasm and tolerance for the often stressful environment of the backstage area. KW will aways have an All-Access Pass to the rest of our lives.
    - Ian Anderson,
    At home, 2006



    1. Kissing Willie

      Breaking hearts in a market town.
      She eats filet of sole and washes it down with sparkling wine.
      Nice girl, but a bad girl's better.
      Qualifies in both ways to my mind.
      But now she's kissing Willie.

      She shows a leg --- shows it damn well.
      Knows how to drive a man right back to being a child.
      Well, she's a --- nice girl, but her bad girl's better.
      I can read it in her cheating eyes and know that in a while --- Well, she'll be kissing Willie. (My best friend, Willie.)

      Willie stands and Willie falls. Willie bangs his head behind grey factory walls.
      She's a --- nice girl, but her bad girl's better. Me and Willie just can't help come, when she calls.
      Now she's kissing Willie. (My best friend, Willie.)

    2. The Rattlesnake Trail

      Got a hair shirt round my shoulder. Got a cold stew in my spoon.
      And I'm falling on my head, lifting feet of lead --- now it's got me baying at the moon.
      Well, there's a race on for tomorrow. I'm stretching out for what might have been.
      Going to come out from the night, got my second sight --- play rough --- you know what I mean.
      I'm going for the kill. I'm going tooth and nail up that dusty hill --- on the rattlesnake trail.

      Got the law laid down to the left of me. Got the real world to the right.
      Heading up through the middle with my cat and my fiddle --- yeah, looking for a fight.
      Going to ride hard in bandit country --- on the blind side of the bend.
      Keep my nose to the wind while the rabbit's skinned --- bed down at the journey's end. (Be a rattlesnake.)
      I'm going for the kill. I'm going tooth and nail up that dusty hill --- on the rattlesnake trail.

      The rattlesnake trail.
      I'm going on the rattlesnake trail.

      Going to be with wolves in winter --- run in angry packs by day.
      But when you give a dog a bone, he has to be alone --- growl, keep the other dogs away.
      See that thin moon on the mountain. See that cold star in the sky.
      Going to bring them down --- shake them to the ground --- put that apple in the pie. (Be a rattlesnake.)
      I'm going for the kill. I'm going tooth and nail up that dusty hill --- on the rattlesnake trail.

    3. Ears Of Tin

      In the late hours of a sunset rendezvous --- chill breeze against tide, that carries me from you.
      Got a job in a southern city --- got some lead-free in my tank.
      Now I must whisper goodbye --- I'm bound for the mainland.

      Island in the city, Cut by a cold sea.
      People moving on an ocean. Groundswell of humanity.

      Now the sum breaks through rain as I climb Glen Shiel on the trail of those old cattlemen who drove their bargain south again.
      And in the eyes of those five sisters of Kintail there's a wink of seduction from the mainland.

      Island in the city. Cut by a cold sea.
      People moving on an ocean. Groundswell of humanity.
      Storm-lashed on the high-rise --- their words are spray to the wind.
      Blown like silent laughter. Falling on ears of tin.

      Take my heart and take my brawn.
      Take by stealth or take by storm --- set my brain to cruise.
      I can see the glow of the suburb lights.
      I'm fresh from the out-world --- singing the mainland blues.

      There was a girl where I came from.
      Seems a long time, long time gone by.
      Wears the west wind in her hair.
      She calls from the hill --- yeah, she calls in my mainland blues.

      There's a coast road that winds to heaven's door where a fat ferry floats on muted diesel roar.
      And there's a light on the hillside --- and there's a flame in her eyes, but how cold the lights burn on the mainland.

      Island in the city. Cut by a cold sea.
      People moving on an ocean. Groundswell of humanity.
      Storm-lashed on the high-rise --- their words are spray to the wind.
      Blown like silent laughter. Falling on ears of tin in my mainland blues.

    4. Undressed To Kill

      Working on the late shift --- first drink of the day.
      Pull a chair up to the table, have to look the other way.
      What kind of place am I in? And who's this over here?
      Shaking through the silver bubbles climbing through my beer.
      Won't let it move me, but I can't sit still.
      Could you meet the eyes of a working girl undressed to kill?

      Staring through the smoke haze --- plaid shirts in the night.
      Well, I'm making sure that everything is zipped up tight.
      Who's that jumping on the table? Putting tonic in my gin?
      Brushing silken dollars on her cold white skin.
      Won't let it move me, but I can't sit still.
      Could you meet the eyes of a working girl undressed to kill?

      She could have been sweet seventeen. There again, well, so could I.
      There was a tear drop sparkle on the inside of her thigh.
      Going to fetch myself a cold beer. I've got to get a grip.
      Find some place to touch down. Find a landing strip.
      Won't let it move me, but I can't sit still.
      Can you meet the eyes of a working girl all undressed to kill?

      Last one out is a cold duck. Padding down the road.
      I wait outside, my motor running --- got a warm dream to unload.
      Can I face her in the sunshine? In he harsh real light of day?
      She walks out with recognition in her eyes --- I look away.
      Won't let it move me, but I can't sit still.
      Couldn't meet the eyes of a working girl undressed to kill.

    5. Rock Island

      Savage night on a misty island. Lights wink out in the canyon walls.
      Two old boys in a stolen racer. Black rubber contrails in the unwashed halls.
      And all roads out of here, seem to lead right back to the
      Rock Island.

      I've gone back to Paris, London, and even riding on a jumbo to Bombay.
      The long haul back holds faint attraction, but the people here know they're o.k.
      See the girl following the red balloon: walking all alone on her Rock Island.

      Doesn't everyone have their own Rock Island? Their own little patch of sand?
      Where the slow waves crawl and your angels fall and you find you can hardly stand.
      And just as you're drowning, well, the tide goes down.
      And you're back on your Rock Island.

      Hey there girlie with the torn dress, shaking: who was it touched you? Who was it ruined your day?
      Whose footprint calling card? And what they want, stepping on your beach anyway?
      I'll be your life raft out of here, but you'd only drift right back to your Rock Island.

      Hey, boy with the personal stereo: nothing `tween the ears but that hard rock sound.
      Playing to your empty room, empty guitar tune, No use waiting for that C.B.S. to come around.
      `Cos all roads out of here, seem to lead right back to your
      Rock Island.

    6. Heavy Water

      I walked out in the city night,
      A burning in my eyes, like it was broad daylight.
      And it was hot, down there in the crowd.
      The stars went out behind a thunder cloud.
      Chatter in the air, like a telegraph line.
      Big drops hissing on the neon sign.
      Thumping in my heart, and it's hurting me to see.
      Smokestack blowing, now they're pouring heavy water on me.

      She was a southern girl. We stared man to man.
      I move like a stranger in this strange land.
      She was a round hole, I was a square peg.
      I watched the little black specks running down her leg.
      Didn't seem to mind that dirty rain coming down --- shirt hanging open. She was wet and brown.
      Thumping in my heart, and it's hurting me to see.
      Smokestack blowing, now they're pouring heavy water on me.

      What goes up has to fall back down.
      It's no night to be out dancing in a party town when it runs hot and it runs so wide --- running in the street like a thin black tide.
      Chatter in the air, like a telegraph line.
      Big drops hissing on the neon sign.
      Thumping in my heart, and it's hurting me to see.
      Smokestack blowing, now they're pouring heavy water on me.

    7. Another Christmas Song

      Hope everybody's ringing on their own bell, this fine morning.
      Hope everyone's connected to that long distance phone.
      Old man, he's a mountain.
      Old man, he's an island.
      Old man, he's a-walking says
      "I'm going to call, call all my children home."

      Hope everybody's dancing to their own drum this fine morning --- the beat of distant Africa or a Polish factory town.
      Old man, he's calling for his supper.
      Calling for his whisky.
      Calling for his sons and daughters, yeah --- calling all his children round.

      Sharp ears are tuned in to the drones and chanters warming.
      Mist blowing round some headland, somewhere in your memory.
      Everyone is from somewhere --- even if you've never been there.
      So take a minute to remember the part of you that might be the old man calling me.

      How many wars you're fighting out there, this winter's morning?
      Maybe it's always time for another Christmas song.
      Old man he's asleep now.
      Got appointments to keep now.
      Dreaming of his sons and daughters, and proving --- proving that the blood is strong.

    8. The Whaler's Dues

      Money speaks. Soft hearts lose. The truth only whispers.
      It's the whaler's dues.

      I've been running on diesel. Been running on coal.
      Running on borrowed time, if truth's to be told.
      Two whales in the ocean, cruising the night search for each other before we turn out their light.

      Been accused of deep murder on the North Atlantic swell but I have three hungry children and a young wife as well.
      And behind stand generations of hard hunting men who raised a glass to the living, and went killing again.
      Are you with me?

      Money speaks, soft hearts lose. The truth only whispers.
      Now pay the whaler's dues.
      Can you forgive me?

      Now I'm old and I sit land-locked in a back-country jail to reflect on all of my sins and the death of the whale.
      Send me back down the ages. Put me to sea once again when the oceans were full --- yes, and men would be men.
      Can you forgive me?

    9. Big Riff and Mando

      Marty loved the sound of the stolen mandolin.
      Somebody took it on a dare in the night-time.
      Run up to the radio, calling out to the wind.
      Now, bring it, bring it back at least an hour before flight time.
      It was a souvenir, but it was a right arm missing.
      Swap a woodwork rhythm for a humbucking top line.

      Big Riff, rough boy, wants to be a singer in a band.
      A little slow in the brain box, but he had a quick right hand.
      Run left, run right --- everywhere he look --- nobody watching, no, but that was
      all he took last night.

      Running on the power of a stolen mandolin.
      Steal a little inspiration. Steal a little muscle.
      Will he wake in the morning, wondering --- was it really worth it?
      So make a little deal, Yeah, make a little hustle.

      Ringing on the radio --- got a proposition for those English boys.
      I'll make the sing-song --- you can make the background noise.
      One, two, three, four --- one bar and in.
      Give you back the mando, if you'll let this singer sing tonight.

      Marty loved the sound of the stolen mandolin.
      Big Riff took it on a dare in the night-time.
      Now it's four o'clock, and we're waiting at the sound-check.
      Looking for a face staring in from the sunshine.
      We got two strong lawmen from the sheriff's office.
      They're going to lift Big Riff before he plays the first line.

      Big Riff, rough boy, wants to be a singer in a band.
      Yeah, help him on the stage now, put that microphone in his hand.
      Think hard, think right --- nothing in his mind ---
      So Riff did a runner, but he left the mandolin behind.

    10. Strange Avenues

      Strange avenues where you lose all sense of direction and everywhere is Main Street in the winter sun.
      The wino sleeps --- cold coat lined with he money section.
      Looking like a a record cover from 1971.

      And here am I --- warm feet and a limo waiting.
      Shall I make us both feel good? And would a dollar do?
      But in your streets, I have no credit rating and it might not take a lot to be alone just like you.

      Heading up and out now, from your rock island.
      Really good to have had you here with me.
      And somewhere in the crowd I think I hear a young girl whisper
      "Are you ever lonely, just like me ?"