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  1. 6 de may. de 2024 · Track 3 from Ian Andersons Country Blues Band: Stereo Death Breakdown (LP, Liberty, 1969); Track 4 from The False Beards: Ankle (CD, Ghosts From the Basement, 2013); Tracks 5, 17 from Ian A. Anderson: Book of Changes (LP, Fontana, 1970); Tracks 6, 19 from an Ian A. Anderson radio session, London, 1970;

  2. 17 de may. de 2024 · Our guest for this episode of JAZZIZ Not What You Think is Jethro Tull’s intriguing leader, Mr. Ian Anderson. When Jethro Tull entered the music scene, they opened the eyes and ears of a generation of music fans with their new kind of fusion; mixing rock with folk, blues, jazz and classical music with unusual visual references through Anderson’s coloful lyrics and “stories”.

  3. 15 de may. de 2024 · Ian Anderson's Country Blues Band – Stereo Death Breakdown (Fledg'ling Records – FLED 3073) FLAC Ian Anderson's Country Blues ... Men Are Like Street Cars... Women Blues Singers 1928-1969 (2CD) (MCAD2-11788) FLAC

  4. 8 de may. de 2024 · At the same time, Anderson also had a taste for a completely different flavour of guilty pleasure: synth-rock. Outside of the punk side of the spectrum, Anderson had an affinity for Marc Almond, best known for his work with Soft Cell and his later solo career. Even though the thought of having Ramones and Soft Cell on the same playlist is ...

  5. 12 de may. de 2024 · Iain Anderson. End the day in the company of the song writing masters of country, folk, blues, soul and rock'n'roll. Episodes ( 8 Available) 20/05/2024. End the day in the company of the song ...

  6. 19 de may. de 2024 · Ian Anderson has reunited with Jethro Tull. Not the band, which was quietly laid to rest in 2010, but the man himself—an 18th-century agricultural inventor who came up with a seed drill that apparently revolutionized farming. The band never chose to name themselves after him—that was the work of their booking agent, who’d scored a fast ...

  7. 18 de may. de 2024 · “The Turnpike Inn” is a song by Ian Anderson, released in 2014 as part of his album Homo Erraticus. The lyrics of the song paint a vivid picture of a tollhouse along the superhighway of the past. The tollhouse represents a point of reflection and pause for travelers, urging them to reconsider their choices and the cost they must pay for them.