Product Details
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| 1. Kissing Willie (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 2. The Rattlesnake Trail (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 3. Ears Of Tin (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 4. Undressed To Kill (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 5. Rock Island (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 6. Heavy Water (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 7. Another Christmas Song (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 8. The Whalers Dues (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 9. Big Riff And Mando (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 10. Strange Avenues (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 11. Christmas Song (Live From Zurich) (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 12. Cheap Day Return/Mother Goose (Live From Zurich) (2006 Digital Remaster) |
| 13. Locomotive Breath (Live From Zurich) (2006 Digital Remaster) |
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Most helpful customer reviews
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
GREAT LISTENING,
By Luap Van Horn "THE NOSE" (Niagara Falls, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rock Island (Audio CD)
Not an overly easy CD to get but once gotten, it's well worth listening to!!!
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.7 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews) 11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Rocking the Boat (a little harder than usual),
By Eugenius Dobson - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Rock Island (Audio CD)
I remember hearing Kissing Willie on the radio a week or so before the album was released and it sounded to me like the Jethro Tull of yore returned with guitars and flute to the fore. Yes the lyrics are a bit obvious but it's a good sexual romp through a rocking tune, and while the record does rock more than is usual for the Tull, (even the mandolins occasionally sound almost heavy metal!) it does so through a landscape of interesting lyrics that range from the sexual to the political, the introspective to the observational, even taking a side trip on a sleigh to the seasonal. Musically it has moments that are both straight forward rock to more complex rocking arrangements. I think Kissing Willie, Ears of Tin, Rock Island, Another Christmas Song, The Whaler's Dues, Big Riff and Mando and Strange Avenues are the standout tracks. However they are standout tracks that stand out in a bunch of great songs that all stand up to shake their collective behinds in a very dramatic and boisterous manner.The bonus tracks are from the Zurich dressing room tapes. While they have appeared elsewhere they're always good to hear, and they do help to bring the listener down a little more gently and less abruptly than the original release did. The sound quality on this remaster is a great improvement over the original release of Rock Island. All of the instruments shine through clearly now and the sound is completely lifted up out of the muddier waters it used to lay in. 5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Electric Tull,
By Mark Indy - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Rock Island (Audio CD)
"Rock Island" is an album for those Jethro Tull fans who are more inclined toward the heavy rock side of Tull over their folkier, accoustic side. It opens with the fast paced rocking "Kissing Willie" and is followed by the riffy "The Rattlesnake Trail" complete with Martin Barre's searing guitar fills.Then comes my personal favorite from the album "Ears of Tin." It's one of those 'stop-go' songs. The verses are melodic, featuring mandolin and flute while the refrains contain pulsating hard rock. Next is "Undressed to kill," a slow, steady rocking song. Then comes the title song, which is fairly subdued until the fast paced instrumental break. "Heavy Water" is another moderate to slow paced rocker, which is followed by the subdued and melodic "Another Christmas Song." Then comes the another of my personal favorites: the slow, brooding "The Whaler's Dues." Between Martin Barre's jagged electric guitar fills and Ian Anderson's wheezing flute, the song just gets under your skin and stays there. The last two songs from the original release, "Big Riff and Mando" and "Strange Avenues" are lackluster, in my opinion. But overall, "Rock Island" is a consistently enjoyable album. The song quality might not be as high as on their previous release, "Crest of a Knave," but it has the advantage (or disadvantage, depending on taste) of containing far fewer ballads than 'Crest.' There are many who believe that the quality of Jethro Tull's music began a permanent decline following "Aqualung" in 1971 or "A Passion Play" in 1973. However, the music on "Crest of a Knave," "Rock Island" and "Catfish Rising," Tull's 1987, 1989 and 1991 releases, convinces me that Ian Anderson's songwriting has, if anything, improved over time. As with most Tull albums, you'll need to give this one a half dozen spins in your CD player before familiarity breeds enjoyment. 2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rock Island rocks! - Plain and Simple,
By John Prothero - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Rock Island (Audio CD)
What really sold me on this album is how it holds up to the classic sound of all my favorite Jethro Tull albums before it. While the album overall is nothing less than "fantastic", my favorite tracks are the title song "Rock Island", "The Rattlesnake Trail", "Ears Of Tin", "Heavy Water" and "The Whaler's Dues". This CD will always be on my best Jethro Tull albums list and comes highly recommended.
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