Jethro Tull homepage banner Musicians Tour Dates Store Fans Discography Management Jethro Tull home

vitals
Released: 1975
Remastered 2002

Charts: 20 (U.K.), 7 (U.S.)

tracks
Minstrel In The Gallery
Cold Wind To Valhalla
Black Satin Dancer
Requiem
One White Duck/0¹º = Nothing At All
Baker Street Muse
Pig Me And The Whore
Nice Little Tune
Crash Barrier Waltzer
Mother England Reverie
Grace
Summerday Sands*
March The Mad Scientist*
Pan Dance*
Minstrel In The Gallery (excerpt)*
Cold Wind To Valhalla (excerpt)*


quick fact
The last album to feature the legendary bassist Jeffrey Hammond-Hammond.

The ‘bonus’ tracks on the remastered CD were lifted from the B-side of the “Minstrel In The Gallery” single (“Summerday Sands”), the “Ring Out Solstice Bells” EP (“March The Mad Scientist” and “Pan Dance”) and a BBC radio session (“Minstrel In The Gallery” and “Cold Wind To Valhalla”).





more discography: studio | | video

Minstrel in the Gallery

Webmaster's note: many thanks to Martin Webb of "A New Day," the independent Tull fan magazine, for penning this overview with some modest contributions from yours truly.

Aqualung” and “Thick As A Brick” tend to be cited as defining the 1970s’ Jethro Tull – but arguably “Minstrel in the Gallery” is the quintessential 1970's Tull album.

The band had decamped to a studio in Monte Carlo (Jeffrey Hammond-Hammond having ridden there from England on a motorbike which he managed to spectacularly crash on the way) which is pictured on the back of the album sleeve with the five minstrels standing in its gallery. The size of the studio also made it ideal for impromptu games of badminton, while the local beach provided its own temptations. Ian has since opined that such distractions and other personal problems within the band meant that it was not functioning as well as a unit as it had on previous albums, and he found himself taking more of a prominent and introspective role than he would have wished.

The upside of that was that the album contained a liberal sprinkling of the type of personal acoustic ditties which had graced the “Aqualung” album, with the string-adorned “Requiem” being possibly the most romantic song Ian has ever written, and the closing “Grace” – more whimsical in its romanticism - clocking in at a whole thirty seven seconds. And after the forty-plus minute “Thick As A Brick” and “A Passion Play” epics, Ian once again dabbled with an extended suite of music with “Baker Street Muse”, a seventeen minute four-part observation of the seedier side of his then home town of London.

The acoustic guitar and strings are to the fore in most of the other songs, but the likes of “Cold Wind To Valhalla” and “Black Satin Dancer” then explode into full-blown rockers, with Martin Barre’s electric guitar taking the spotlight as the band thunders along behind him in an adventurous exploration of unpredictable key-changes and time-signatures. That juxtaposition of acoustic and electric has been a feature of Jethro Tull’s music throughout their career, but is perhaps never better exemplified than on “Minstrel In The Gallery” which, after earlier albums’ tags of ‘blues’ and ‘prog’, is unequivocally a ‘rock’ album, albeit with a maturity and sophistication both lyrically and harmonically which highlighted Tull’s originality.

Though "Minstrel" is heavily acoustic, songs from the disc rarely appear in concert set lists in recent years. Partly, this could very well be due to "Minstrel's" rather dark, often very personal subject matter and tone for many of the acoustical tunes. Ian was just coming off a divorce and "One White Duck/0¹º = Nothing At All" addresses the end of his marriage. "One White Duck" is related to a common British concept (and even wall ornament) that a married couple have their "ducks in a row." A sole duck, hence, represents separation.

In February 1975 Jethro Tull sold out five nights at the 20,000-seater Los Angeles Forum, prompting the Melody Maker to run the headline “Jethro – Now The World’s Biggest Band?” Indeed the venues became so huge that by 1976 Tull had become one of the first bands to use giant screens for stadium shows – nicknamed “Tull-A-Vision”.

Jeffrey Hammond-Hammond’s final live show with Tull was in November 1975, after which he ceremoniously burnt his stage clothes and retired from the music biz to resume painting.


   Ian Anderson - flute, acoustic guitar, saxophones, vocals
   Barriemore Barlow - percussion
   Martin Barre - electric and spanish guitars
   John Evan - piano, organ, synthesisers, piano accordion
   Jeffrey Hammond - bass guitar and string bass
   David Palmer - (orchestral arrangement and conducting)

Guest Musicians
Patrick Halling (lead violin)
Elizabeth Edwards (violin)
Rita Eddowes (violin)
Bridget Proctor (violin)
Katharine Thulborn (cello)

album trivia

"Pan Dance" was written for whom?

BBC TV Top Of The Pops dance troupe Pan’s People as guests for a Tull concert in London.

benefit back covercollectorsMInstrel French Seven Inch Cover
The 7” “Minstrel In The Gallery” single was an edited version, without the long guitar intro. As ever, European picture sleeves are the most collectable, such as this French release.