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Oct 1974
Style: Prog-Rock
Codec: Ape - Mac 3.97 - High Lossless Compression
Encoder: eac095pb4
Covers , Log, Cue
As a return to standard-length songs following two epic-length pieces (Thick As a Brick and A Passion Play), it was inevitable that the material on War Child would lack power. The music was no longer quite able to cover for the obscurity of Tull's lyrics: The title track is reasonably successful, but "Queen and Country" seems repetitive and pointless. "Ladies," by contrast, is one of Tull's folk-based pieces, and one of the prettiest songs on the record, beautifully sung and benefiting from some of Anderson's best flute playing to date. The band is very tight but doesn't get to really show its stuff until "Back-Door Angels," after which the album picks up: "Sealion" is one of Anderson's pseudo-philosophical musings on life, mixing full-out electric playing and restrained orchestral backing, while "Skating Away on the Thin Ice of a New Day" is a beautiful, largely acoustic number that was popular in concert. "Bungle in the Jungle," with a title that went over well, got most of the radio play. [War Child was reissued in an upgraded, remastered edition during November of 2002, with improved sound and seven bonus tracks recorded during the sessions for the album that add 27 minutes to the original running time. The new tracks include the gently orchestrated instrumental "Warchild Waltz", which is really an overture of sorts, quoting from songs off the finished album and mostly a showcase for conductor/arranger David Palmer and the Philomusica Of London chamber orchestra; the instrumental "Quartet", which is exactly what it says, a piece of chamber music for the group with some low-level accompaniment from the orchestra; the slightly rambling electric guitar and flute driven "Paradise Steakhouse"; the silly sounding but catchy "Sealion 2", which is a worthy follow-up to its previously issued namesake; "Rainbow Blues", which ought to have been released before this, as one of the group's better and more memorable hard-rock numbers of the period; the gorgeous, folk-like acoustic guitar driven "Glory Row", which could have been a single B-side; and the hard, crunchy "Sensation", which is superior to at least a third of the songs on the original LP.]
# "WarChild" - 4:35
# "Queen And Country" - 3:00
# "Ladies" - 3:17
# "Back-Door Angels" - 5:30
# "Sealion" - 3:37
# "Skating Away On The Thin Ice Of The New Day" - 4:09
# "Bungle In The Jungle" - 3:35
# "Only Solitare" - 1:28
# "The Third Hoorah" - 4:49
# "Two Fingers" - 5:11

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EAC extraction logfile from 21. March 2006, 14:34 for CD Jethro Tull / WarChild Used drive : LG DVD-ROM DRD8160B Adapter: 0 ID: 1 Read mode : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache Read offset correction : 594 Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No Used output format : C:\eac095pb4\Ape\MAC.exe (Monkey's Audio Lossless Encoder) High Lossless Compression Other options : Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No Installed external ASPI interface Range status and errors Selected range Filename G:\Jethro Tull - War Child\CDImage.wav Peak level 93.5 % Range quality 100.0 % CRC FCF75AAD Copy OK No errors occured End of status report |
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