CD 14 tracks, 51:34
British Progressive Rock, Progressive Rock
Jethro Tull - Stand Up (Digitally Remastered with Bonus Tracks)
Chrysalis Records Ltd. (1969)
In Collection

Rating:
10

Owner:
Jean-Henry Berevoescu
01  A New Day Yesterday 04:11
02  Jeffrey Goes to Leicester Square 02:12
03  Bouree 03:47
04  Back to the Family 03:53
05  Look into the Sun 04:23
06  Nothing is Easy 04:26
07  Fat Man 02:52
08  We Used to Know 04:03
09  Reasons for Waiting 04:07
10  For a Thousand Mothers 04:21
11  Living in the Past 03:23
12  Driving Song 02:44
13  Sweet Dream 04:05
14  17 03:07
Personal Details
Purchase Date 2/13/2003
Price $10.92
Store BarnesNoble.com
Details
Studio Morgan Studios, London
Cat. Number 7243 5 35458 2 6
Packaging Jewel Case
Recording Date 1969
Spars ADD
Sound Stereo
Notes
The group's second album, with Ian Anderson (vocals, flute, acoustic guitars, keyboards, balalaika), Martin Barre (electric guitar, flute), Clive Bunker (drums), and Glen Cornick (bass), solidified their sound. There are still elements of blues present in their music, but except for the opening track, "A New Day Yesterday," it is far more muted than on their first album - new lead guitarist Martin Barre had few of the blues stylings that characterized Mick Abrahams' playing. Rather, the influence of English folk music manifests itself on several cuts, including "Jeffrey Goes to Leicester Square" and "Look Into the Sun." The instrumental "Bouree," which could've passed for an early Blood, Sweat & Tears track, became a favorite concert number, with an excellent solo bit featuring Cornick's bass, although at this point Anderson's flute playing on-stage needed a lot of work. As a story-song with opaque lyrics, jarring tempo changes, and loud electric passages juxtaposed with soft acoustic-textured sections, "Back to the Family" is an early forerunner to Thick As a Brick. Similarly, "Reasons for Waiting," with its mix of closely miked acoustic guitar and string orchestra, all hung around a hauntingly beautiful folk-based melody, pointed in the direction of that conceptual piece and its follow-up, A Passion Play. The only major flaw in this album is the mix, which divides the electric and acoustic instruments and fails to find a solid center, but even that has been fixed on recent CD editions. The original LP had a gatefold jacket that included a pop-up representation of the band that has been lost on all subsequent CD versions, except for the Mobile Fidelity audiophile release. In late 2001, Stand Up was re-released in a remastered edition with bonus tracks that boasted seriously improved sound. Anderson's singing comes off richer throughout, and the electric guitars on "Look Into the Sun" are very well-delineated in the mix, without any loss in the lyricism of the acoustic backing; the rhythm section on "Nothing Is Easy" has more presence, Bunker's drums and high-hat playing sounding much closer and sharper; the mandolin on "Fat Man" is practically in your lap; you can hear the action on the acoustic guitar on "Reasons for Waiting," even in the orchestrated passages; and the band sounds like it's in the room with you pounding away on "For a Thousand Mothers." Among the bonus tracks, recorded at around the same time, "Living in the Past," "Driving Song," and "Sweet Dreams" all have a richness and resonance that was implied but never heard before. [The reissue includes four bonus tracks: "Living in the Past," "Driving Song," "Sweet Dream," and "17".]