** ____ __ __ ____ ___ __ __ **
** / /_/ /_ /_ / / / /_ / / /_ **
** / / / /__ __/ / . /___ /___ /__ \/ /__ **
** **
** ___ __ ___ ___ __ **
** / /_/ /_/ / / /\ / / / / /_ **
** /___ / / / \ /__/ / \/ / /___ /___ /__ **
The St. Cleve Chronicle Monday, 3 Jun 1996 Volume 7 : Issue 55
Today's Topics:
May 26 Statement from Ian !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Jethro Tull 6th most collectable band
Tull article in Record Collector
Catfish..Bad?; Worst Tull Song?
Songs that don't fit/Grammys
Random Debris...
some old stuff
young Tull Fans
Jethro Tull, Drugs & Creativity
Re: The St. Cleve Chronicle V7 #45
Interview with Ian (fwd)
Re: The St. Cleve Chronicle V7 #45
NY Tour Dates
T.O. TULL TICKETS WANTED
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: ELN/aa...@norway-f1.it.earthlink.net
Date: Thu, 30 May 96 23:50:41 -0700
Newsgroups: alt.music.jethro-tull
Subject: May 26 Statement from Ian !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The following is a statement from Ian before leaving Australia:
"Following a week in a Sydney hospital to stabilise and reduce the deep
vein thrombosis in my left leg, I have now had the final round of tests
and been given the go ahead to return to England later this week, for
ongoing treatment.
"I am deeply saddened to have had to cancel the many concerts in
Australia, New Zealand, and throughout Europe, and very much regret the
disappointment of and inconvenience to our fans who had already purchased
tickets.
"I must thanks all those who have written and phoned to express their
support including Paul Dainty who has been most understanding and
sympathetic.
"I hope to spend some of my recuperation time in the recording studio and
will work hard to regain my fitness and pick up the concert schedule
later in the year.
"The doctors, nursing staff, and physio therapists here have been
fantastic and their confidence and professionalism have helped me
enormously through these worrying couple of weeks.
"I can't think of a better place to get sick than Australia.
"In a few months, I should be running around the stage again and hope to
get back to Australia before too long to do it properly next time.
"It's nice to play the flute on one leg, but better as an option than
a necessity."
Ian Anderson
Sydney, Sunday May 26
That's it for now on the ongoing saga-more as I get it.
Cheers
Larry Babbin
------------------------------
From: jonh...@anglianet.co.uk (Jon Hinchliffe)
Newsgroups: alt.music.jethro-tull
Subject: Jethro Tull 6th most collectable band
Date: Thu, 02 May 1996 17:35:31 GMT
Organization: BT Internet
The May 1996 edition of Record Collector lists the results of it Most
collectable artists poll. Tull are up to 6th from last years 13th.
They comment "Jethro Tull are even more of an Enigma in RC Poll terms
than Pink Flloyd, as their recent albums and tours have attracted none
of the international media attention of their late 60's rivals. But
the mid-90's have seen them register increasingly weighty votes, at a
time when their eclectic brand of defiantly British music is still
virtually ignored by the rock press - Apart from "Record Collector".
Always a cult band their loyal fan-base turned out in force this
year."
Jon
(I now have a small page on NWOBHM group Praying Mantis at
http://www.anglianet.co.uk/~jonhinch/)
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 4 Jun 1996 13:47:25 GMT+1000
From: Simon Huggard <Simon....@lib.monash.edu.au>
Subject: Tull article in Record Collector
Organization: Monash University
This is a rather late message to inform you that there is
a very good article (and cover photo) about the whole
collection of Jethro Tull (English) releases in the
magazine: Record Collector for March 1996. (No. 199).
The article runs for 10 pages and has a full English discography
plus notes accompanying each release. Some of the information
is very interesting and not all that well known.
For example, the notes regarding 1972 mention the following details
about the Chateau D'Isaster Tapes:
"During 1972 the band decamped to the famous Chateau D'Herouville
studio near Paris, where they recorded the backing tracks and some
overdubs and vocals for three sides of a double album. But technical
difficulties in the studio - Ian nicknamed it the Chateau D'Isaster -
and dissatisfaction with the direction of the music led to the
project being scrapped. Again, Tull fans assumed that the rejected
tapes would never see the light of day."
Regarding 1974 it says:
"The band had been planning a break to work on Anderson's next
project, a musical film called 'War Child' about a child's
experiences in the after-life. The script was written, and a large
chunk of a soundtrack album was recorded with members of the band
playing with a full orchestra; but the project failed to get
financial backing, and the only piece of work released was the
complementary group album of the same name."
It's definitely worth buying (2.40 Pounds Sterling which equated
to $6.75 Australian Dollars).
Simon Huggard
Melbourne, Australia
_________________________________________________________________________
Simon Huggard Email: Simon....@lib.monash.edu.au
Monographs Orders Librarian Phone: (03) 9905 2693
Technical Services Fax: + 61 3 9905 2617
Monash University Library
Clayton Vic 3168 Australia
------------------------------
Date: 08 May 96 21:32:50 EDT
From: "Richard J. Hutchinson" <10222...@CompuServe.COM>
Subject: Catfish..Bad?; Worst Tull Song?
Hello Tullsters:
>I told her that I am going to have to get it
>eventually in order to finish my colection, and I would really like to
>know what all the fuss is about. Is this CD really that bad?
Personally, it doesn't jump in my cd player like some of their others.
Like all the albums it's got some great songs (Sparrow...) but it's
just not a favorite.
On the worst song thread:
In the 20th box set Ian talks about "....these quirky little pieces...you
probably know which are the three or four I really hate..."
My vote is that one of these is "A Stitch In Time" Ugh. That's it, ugh.
Rich
------------------------------
Date: 08 May 96 21:32:53 EDT
From: "Richard J. Hutchinson" <10222...@CompuServe.COM>
Subject: Songs that don't fit/Grammys
Hello Tullsters:
>Finally, the entire album Under Wraps seems out of place with the Tull
>discography. Ian Anderson sounds like he underwent surgery on his vocal
>chords. Ironically, this album was selected Best Heavy Metal/Hard Rock
>by the Grammy people. What was the group trying to accomlish with this
>album?
1. Agree on UW; not a bad album, just doesn't sound like a Tull album,
by and large.
2.Actually Crest won the Grammy, beating out Metallica of all people.
The cluelessness of these awards people never ceases to astound me,
but this is the worst in history (hyperbole anyone? :)). They need
music 101:A. Tull is NOT a metal band! B. Metallica IS a metal band!
Man what a joke! <Whew> end of rant :)
I think UW sprang from IA and Peter Vettese working on Walk Into
Light. Just trying something different. Very different.
Rich
------------------------------
From: tomh...@nylink.org
Date: Wed, 8 May 1996 21:34:43 -0400
Subject: Random Debris...
> This is in reply to TR's little discourse on women & rock.
> Maybe I ought to check my sex because I REALLY ENJOY hard
> driving music & I always thought I was a woman.
I play drums. I've played in all kinds of bands: classic rock
(Beatles, Zepplin, Pink Floyd, Yes, etc), alternative rock
(Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Nirvana, etc.), jazz, blues,
top-40, american standard (Perry Como, Frank Sinatra, Tony
Bennett, etc.), even country (don't hit me!). The one thing I
found is that the majority of people out to see *all* of the
bands I was in were women; some single, some with dates, many in
groups. This notion that rock - in particular - is predominantly
enjoyed by males isn't borne out in my experience.
> In reply to Mark A. Hausman question on the original date of Tull
> appearing on Regis/Kathy Show: It was Nov. 15th 1996.
Should I set my VCR?
> I feel inclined to point out Tori Amos' own version, available
> on the Winter single. Hers seems to be the middle road between
> the darker Tull and lighter Yes songs.
Tori Amos and Jon Anderson (of Yes) reportedly (by Yes Magazine)
recorded some songs together. No word on when and how these will
be released.
> Subject: Tull and ELP show, August 23, Meriweather Post Pavillion,
> MD This was announced as August 27 in the Washington Post on
> Friday, April 19. The venue's Web page said the date was June
> 27. I inquired about the discrepancy. The pagemaster responded
> that the correct date is August 23, and has changed the Web
> page accordingly.
Really? I've seen many listings that this date was a Syracuse,
NY date. Can someone confirm, please? I have plans to visit my
old High School friend Paul and get back into some of that '70s
feeling! (Hi, Paul!)
> New discussion thread: what are your *least* favorite Tull songs?
I *despise* "Hymn 43". Absolutely hate it. I've had to play
this out on gigs, and I'd rather play a whole set of "Proud
Mary" and "Achey-Break Heart", looped - back-to-back. I'm also
not terribly fond of "Too Old to Rock and Roll (and Too Young to
Die)" - the song; most of the album's OK, 'though it took me
quite a while to appreciate it (coming as it did after MitG).
> I can think of several examples of this phenomenon. Where the hell does
> "Teacher" come from on the Benefit album? It sounds like it came from
> another planet or something compared to the rest of the album, because
> it so polished and sophisticated. How about Aqualung, the song? I know
> the album kind of revolves around this song, but it seems different from
> the other somgs. Can't quite put my finger on it.
How about THICK AS A BRICK following AQUALUNG? Now, there's a
radical departure; as severe in it's own way as Yes' FRAGILE to
CLOSE TO THE EDGE.
> Ironically, [UNDER WRAPS] was selected Best Heavy Metal/Hard
> Rock by the Grammy people.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't it CREST OF A KNAVE that won
the Grammy?
> On that note, Trevor Rabin has left Yes, the present lineup is,
> Anderson, White, Wakemann, Howe, and Squire, ( I think).
You're right.
> They are supposedly working on a new album due out soon.
They have finished studio work on the new material, reportedly
long-format material similar to their '70s style. They recently
did a three-night gig in San Louis Obispo California [sp?],
recording material for the CD - the new disk will mix the new
studio material with live material - and filmming for upcoming
video release. They did "The Revealing Science of God", "Turn of
The Century", some old standards, and some rare material. They
rehearsed "South Side of The Sky", but didn't play it. I don't
know when the CD is scheduled for release, but I would expect it
by fall. No word yet on a tour, 'though one is expected.
Tomas
"Life's Short,
Take A Nap"
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 8 May 1996 22:18:59 -0400 (EDT)
From: Zigmond A Kozicki <zako...@alpha.delta.edu>
Subject: some old stuff
Hello SCCers. I haven't really been up to date on the SCC since December
but have been going through all of the files still in my mailbox and have
decided to add my 2 cents on what I have found so far.
First is the CD recently released, I think it is called "Tull at
Hammersmith Oedon" or something like that. I may be crazy but I KNOW I saw
it in one of my local music stores as a 2CD set, not one. I remember this
now because it was around $20 instead of around $10 (like most single CDs
are at the stores I shop at). Besides this it had a sticker saying
"Import," meaning not from the US as well as a sticker saying 2CD set.
Another thing I noticed was that the cover of the 2CD release was a little
better picture and the background color was different. (It was still the
same picture, I think the packground color in the single CD was red, and
the other one had a green background or vice versa.)
And for Tull spottings:
There was obviously the posting on the SCC (back when I was up to speed)
that on one of the episodes of "The Simpsons" there was a character that
looked, and acted like Aqualung. I also saw on the same show (but on an
older episode in reruns during the daytime) that one of the teachers at
Bart's school was named Mr. Glascock. Maybe a reference to John Glascock.
And I have heard a few references to Tull on other TV shows that have the
poeple the same age as the characters in "Beautiful Girls."
And finally, for now, to the nice gentelman who wnated to know about the
Aqualunag tye dye shirt. Unfortunately I find no Tull memoriabelia (sp?)
in stores, I got mine at the concert in Detroit last November.
from: Ben Kozicki
zako...@alpha.delta.edu
I don't beleive you, you had the whole damn thing all wrong, He's not the
kind you have to wind up on Sundays. - IA
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 8 May 1996 23:17:27 -0400 (EDT)
From: Zigmond A Kozicki <zako...@alpha.delta.edu>
Subject: young Tull Fans
(Boy I've really been thinking alot tonight, more thinking that when I do
"work" in school)
I really should have put this in the message I sent to Mr. Steiner a half
hour ago, oh well.
I think the reason so many young people are getting turned on to Tull is
that we (I'm 16) are discovering the record collections of our parents and
we are liking what we hear. (Tull, Zeppelin, Who, Pink Floyd) Some of this
attraction may be in the "grunge" or "alternative" movement or may just be
part of the counterrevolution for people who don't really like alternative
(which has really become mainstream) like me.
Ben Kozicki
zako...@alpha.delta.edu
And as we wind on down the road And if you listen very hard
Our shadows taller that our soul The tune will come to you at last
There walks a lady we all know When all are one and one is all
Who shines white light and wants to show To be a rock and not a roll.
How everyting still turns to gold
-Led Zeppelin, Stairway to Heaven
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 09 May 1996 01:24:49 -0800
From: Harlan Marshall <hmar...@polarnet.com>
Subject: Jethro Tull, Drugs & Creativity
On Sat, 13 Apr 1996 00:40:21 GMT "Martin O'Nions" wrote:
> Hmmm. Valid, but there's been precious little evidence presented to
> show that they do - the fact that something makes sense to one person
> only in the light of drug experience doesn't mean that other people
> can't relate to it without. Or indeed, that you're tuning in to what
> the originator meant to say. As on some of the alt.fan/alt.book groups,
> there seem to be people who won't give up on their pet theory, even
> when the person who wrote the material under discussion has clearly
> stated their point of view. Unless you can show some actual evidence
> that Ian Anderson is lying about his not using drugs, then I think
> his version has to be considered definitive.
I'm not saying that Ian Anderson uses drugs. It would seem from the evidence
so far that he doesn't and I don't believe that drugs are required for the
kind of musical and lyrical genius he posesses. I was responding to the
narrow viewpoint that drugs are never a factor in the creative process and
in particular to the mindset that anything external, not welling up from
within, is artificial and somehow not genuine. I apologize for taking this
discussion away from our favorite band, but I couldn't sit and let this
opportunity scroll by.
Anything that can disrupt our comfortable frame of reference, whether it's
physical hardship, mental or physical illness, or intoxication has the
potential to produce creativity and often does. This is NOT equivalent to
saying that these forces alone can inspire creativity.
> If you can find meanings that make you happy, then fine. But don't
> spout the bullshit about your view being valid because you've modified
> your attitude chemically, or someone will point out that the converse
> also holds good - maybe, just maybe if you hadn't fried your brain, you'd
> have found the real truth ;)
I'm tired of refuting things that I never said so I'll pass here. Since I
fried my brain I haven't been too concerned with the *real* truth <winky>
<winky>.
<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
Harlan Marshall
Skyline Computing Services
hmar...@polarnet.com
Skating away on the thin ice of a new day ...
<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 9 May 1996 17:43:40 GMT
Subject: Re: The St. Cleve Chronicle V7 #45
From: blu...@usa.pipeline.com (bludog3)
Cc: gwi...@banyan.com
Greetings to all fellow Tull-followers,
I am a fairly "new" fan to JT (less than 5 years), but in the short
time I have been faithfully listening, I've come to view this band as the
"all-time best" in the history of music!
I only recently began subscribing to SCC, but have a question to ask,
and a comment to make:
First the comment. Seems I've read mainly criticism of one album in
particular, Catfish Rising. In, my opinion, this is a terrific album, with
many songs that merit heart-felt fondness, not to mention some deep lyrics
which will forever be in my mind...Maybe, it is simply a matter of taste to
those others who flame it, just as the way I would flame an utterly
"senseless" group of so-called musicians, as in Michael Bolton, or any
other excuse of an artist.
Sure, some of JT's albums I like better than others, but to say the
band should retire because they are versatile, and not every album sounds
like I think it should, would be throwing an injustice at the band, and
it's followers!
Now the question: I am curious as to the nature of the constricture
on Ian's pinky finger. Anyone know how this came to be?
BTW, I am a female fan, true-blue, and die-hard!!
Sossity57
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 9 May 1996 14:07:57 -0400 (EDT)
From: Timothy Esposito <espo...@alpha.lasalle.edu>
Subject: Interview with Ian (fwd)
OK, here is an interview with Ian that was published in the City Paper
back in March before the concert at the Electric Factory. I only got
around to typing it out now. This was in the City Paper, which is
a free publication in Philadelphia.
20 Questions: An interview by Howard Altman
Ian Anderson
Biography:
Ian Anderson is a little miffed, having arrived in Rio two hours
late. The 49-year-old flutist from Dunfurimland, Scotland, "has only one
family I'll admit to. My wife Shona, 29, and my two children, Janels and
Gael, aged 17 and 18. now you see I am lying about my wife's age."
If that were her real age, Shona would have been one when Anderson's
Jethro Tull put out its first album. Since then, there have been 27 other
Anderson albums, mostly Tull, some solo, including Divinities, an exploration
of religion and its influences. Last year Tull released Roots to Branches,
the band's first studio album in four years.
?: "Valley," a song on your new release, seems to be about intolerance. Is
it applicable to the recent resumption of hostilities between the IRA and
the British?
IA: The song is applicable to that, and to the problems of Bosnia, and, I
guess, it is also applicable to the nationalistic concerns of the Chinese
over Taiwan. It's about the fact that people do not like their neighbors to
be different.
?: What's your take on the IRA and Gerry Adams, leader of Sein Fein?
IA: Gerry Adams is one of those guys who sits in the middle, refusing,
like many people, like the Syrians, to condemn terrorism and the killing
of innocent women and children. I have to say, I am really pissed off with
you Americans. Really, really pissed off for letting Gerry Adams into
your country to once again campaign for the IRA. Make no mistake. The
IRA are liars. They are killers. Don't believe their bullsh*t. Don't
believe the f*cking president. Your f*ucking president is looking for
votes from the Irish community. Tell your f*cking president and that
f*cking Gerry Adams that Ian Anderson from Jethro Tull said those things.
You have had bombings in recent years. You know what bombings are, yet
your f*cking president is chasing cheap, bloodstained votes.
?: Do you ever get involved politically?
IA: You know, I am really upset that my plane was two hours late arriving
in Rio, because Adams was speaking to our friend Larry King and I wanted
to phone in. I am not usually political, but I am when it comes to women and
children having their lives taken through no fault of their own. Then
I become intensely political.
?: Do you mix politics and music?
IA: I don't normally let those things into my music. Music is not about
preaching politics. It is not about preaching ideology. I don't think
that you should use music as a platform for politics or any type of vote
gathering or brainwashing.
?: What is acceptable?
IA: What should be encouraged in music, painting, making movies, is to post
the question to people. To give them the incentive to query, to ask
questions of themselves.
?: Any examples?
IA: It is hard to cite examples, primarily because the people in the pop and
rock business are not able to convey, given the simplistic nature required
of popular music. What you hear are the bleatings of post-punk
Nirvana-tortured angst, which is rather low on intelligence and short on
brain cells -- oh, poor me, I'm just a crazy, mixed-up kid in a mixed-up
world. That's not political. It just adopts the complaining stages of
disillusioned youth. It is part of growing up. We all go through that and
it's really out there, but you have to get on with your life and become
a jet pilot or journalist or something else.
?: Where does Jethro Tull fit into all that?
IA: Not very much at all. Tull has always been a band not in the
mainstream of pop or rock. The stuff that Tull does is kind of out in
the little are of its own, where, I suppose, I have to compare us, albeit
in a lesser level, to Pink Floyd, Zappa and others that don't toe the line
but who sell tens of millions of records. It is kind of a nice thing to
do, to be successful and not within the mainstream -- MTV and the single-
format video. That explains Tull's rather nebulous position somewhere
on the third tier of very minor rock legends.
?: Are you happy with that "third tier" status?
IA: It means that I don't need body guards, though I might given what I
just said about Clinton and Adams. normally, I don't. I don't have to
wander around in the haze of rock star self delusion. I don't demand the
promoters send limousines to the airport to take me and the band.
?: So how do you get around?
IA: We usually take taxis. Since 1971, we have been the Taxi Band. We
send limos away empty to the gig. I remember once sending empty limos to
Madison Square garden. We took Checker Cabs to the back door, so we could
slip in. Nobody noticed. Our style has always been like that. It saves
a lot of money. I live in a nice house and my wife drives a limo. Just
kidding. She has a couple of nice cars. The reason we have those things
is because we don't waste a lot of money pretending to be rock and roll
stars. My wife is organizing the promotion schedule. She is frantic and
giving me the five-minute sign.
?: The last time you were in town, at the Tower, you and the band were
joking around, bowing down to rock critics. What's that all about?
IA: It was just something that I did. We ad-libbed it and made a gag out of
it. The only problem with critics is that, sometimes, they don't always
stay for the whole show. They come to the show and have already decided
what to write. But I am a person who doesn't have a bad relationship
with any individual from the press. I am not going to pull my hair out
about a bad review. Indeed, when the record companies in various countries
send us reviews of concerts, I always tell them not to send me the good ones,
only the bad ones. The good ones I have read before. It is nice to be given
a pat on the head, but I don't need that to feel good. But one of the bad
ones, maybe somebody will tell me something constructive about what I am
doing wrong.
?: What do the folks at Chrysalis, your record label, think about that?
IA: They think I'm crazy, because a lot of musicians don't want to see
the bad reviews. Me, I think it's logical. I don't know if Bon Jovi
feels the same.
?: What do you listen to?
IA: It falls into two broad categories. Relaxation music, things that
sound good to me if I am sitting back and making dinner...
?: What do you like to cook?
IA: I tend to cook spicy food. I grow my own chilis. They call me
Mr. Habenero at my house. The cleaning lady, the gardener have to keep
out of the way of what I grow or else they turn pink or resemble something
from a science fiction movie. I tell them not to touch the habeneros
while I am away.
?: Or else?
IA: The whole house has to be evacuated, Though it is illegal in my
country, the closest thing I can compare to my habeneros would be mace
for restraining very violent criminals. But let me get back to what I like
to listen to. I like Muddy Waters, Sonny Boy Williamson, the stuff that I
grew up with. Fairly black, very American and probably in mono.
?: Do you ever think about playing more blues in concert?
IA: I don't think I could do that. I am fairly white, not very American.
I liked to listen to blues when I was a youngster and even from time to
time today to get musical satisfaction and pleasure. But it is not
something I try and make a living from. That's someone else's culture
and I have too much respect for the black American source of music,
not only from me, but almost anyone you have heard of from the UK.
?: Any Philly stories?
IA: I have one story. What the h*ll happened to that great band from
Philadelphia? That great, great band? A folk-influenced band. It used
to be really big in Philly. I have some of their albums. Oh, The Hooters!
What happened to the Hooters? I haven't seen them in a while. One of my
best memories of Philly was four or five years ago meeting one of the
Hooters. They're a nice bunch of guys. Great Musicians.
- ---------------
OK, that's it. It took me about an hour to type that in. The City Paper
is not one of the classiest papers in Philly, needless to say.
I don't remember the Hooters. Anyone recall them? If you want a
copy of this article, feel free to send me email about it.
Sorry for any misspellings. I hope you enjoyed it!
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
"There are some who call me ... Tim?" -MPatHG
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-Tim E
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 07 May 1996 11:49:02 -0700
From: John Kilbane <sti...@one.net>
Subject: Re: The St. Cleve Chronicle V7 #45
> Date: Fri, 19 Apr 1996 09:49:28 -0500
> From: Adrian Burd <adr...@calanus.tamu.edu>
> Subject: ELP and Tull US tour.
>
> Greetings all,
> There seem to be rumours (along with a confirmed booking
> in Maryland) of an ELP/Jethro Tull double billing tour of the US this
> summer. I have tried contacting local ticket agencies but no-one here
> knows a thing. Does anyone have any information on this tour?
>
> Many thanks in advance....
>
> Adrian
Ticketmaster in Cincinnati Ohio has a Concert scheduled at Riverbend
on Friday Sept 6. I believe that ELP will be on the bill also.
Sticks
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
John "Sticks" Kilbane sti...@one.net
Administrative Computer Specialist CVG ATCT
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
------------------------------
From: Voo...@aol.com
Date: Tue, 7 May 1996 15:32:23 -0400
Subject: NY Tour Dates
I need the tour dates for the Jethro Tull and ELP during their summer tour in
NY. If anyone has the tour dates and knows where they are playing, I would
GREATLY appreciate it. Thank you in advance. (If anyone wants to give me a
free ticket, I would be even more appreciative, ha ha).
Graig
Reply to : Voo...@aol.com
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 8 May 1996 16:49:41 -0400
From: shl...@terraport.net (Steven Levy)
Subject: T.O. TULL TICKETS WANTED
I am looking to upgrade my Tull tickets for the Toronto concet at kingswood.
If anyone out there has some good tull tickets they are looking to sell or
trade please e mail me.
thanx s.l.
------------------------------
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For administrative matters (additions, deletions, changes, etc.),
send mail to:
Back issues of The St. Cleve Chronicle are available via anonymous ftp
on jtull.rutgers.edu (128.6.13.3) in the subdir /pub/JethroTull. The
issues are listed in the form vXnY.MM-DD-YY (eg. v1n75.11-20-90).
Lyrics to many of the Tull albums are now also available at this site,
in the /pub/JethroTull/Lyrics subdirectory. For those without ftp
access, these can be obtained through mail by the St.C.C. Mail Archive
Server:
Send the word "help" in a message by itself for information on how to
use the archive server. To get a list of what's available use the
command "send 00Index". Commands should always go into the body of
the message since the Subject: line is ignored. Problems or questions
about the archive server should be sent to
jtull-arc...@jtull.rutgers.edu.
The Jethro Tull WWW Server at URL http://jtull.rutgers.edu/JethroTull/
contains the discography, song lyrics, a FAQ, subscription info,
pointers to other Progressive servers and more.
The contents of the The St. Cleve Chronicle are solely the opinions and
comments of the individual authors, and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of the authors' organizations or the digest moderator.
Copyright 1996 The Jethro Tull mailing list.
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Stay tuned for the next exciting issue of The St. Cleve Chronicle!
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