War Child (album)
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War Child | ||
Studio album by Jethro Tull | ||
Released | October 14, 1974 (US) | |
Recorded | 1974 | |
Genre | Progressive rock | |
Length | 39:11 | |
Label | Island Records (UK) Chrysalis Records (US) |
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Producer(s) | Ian Anderson, Terry Ellis |
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Professional reviews | ||
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Jethro Tull chronology | ||
A Passion Play (1973) |
War Child (1974) |
Minstrel in the Gallery (1975) |
- For other uses of the name War Child, see the disambiguation page.
War Child is the eighth album by Jethro Tull, released in October 1974.
Originally meant to accompany a film project (the album was planned as a double-album set), it was reinstated as a ten-song, single-length rock album after failed attempts to find a major movie studio to finance the film. ([1])
The "War Child" movie was written as a metaphysical black comedy concerning a teenage girl in the afterlife, meeting characters based on God, St. Peter and Lucifer portrayed as if shrewd businessmen. Ballet dancer Leonard Rossiter was to have been featured, Margot Fonteyn to have choreographed, while Monty Python veteran John Cleese was pencilled in as a "humor consulant".
Tracks slated to accompany the film such as "Quartet", "WarChild Waltz" and "SeaLion II" were unearthed and released in Tull's 20 Years Of Jethro Tull boxed set in 1988, in several Tull compilations since, and finally on the 2002 CD reissue.
Three of the songs, "Only Solitaire", "Bungle In the Jungle" and "Skating Away On The Thin Ice Of A New Day", were left over from the 1972-1973 writing sessions for was to have been the follow-up to Thick as a Brick. "Two Fingers" is a rearrangement of "Lick Your Fingers Clean", a track from the Aqualung recording sessions that was not included on that album's original release.
The back side of the album contains images of people, including the five members of the band, friends, wives, girlfriends, Chrysalis Records staff, and manager Terry Ellis, all related to the song titles. Anderson's personal touring assistant (and future wife) Shona Learoyd appears as a ringmaster, while Terry Ellis appears as a leopard skin-clad, umbrella-waving aggressive businessman.
[edit] Track listing
(All songs written by Ian Anderson).
- "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 A New Day" – 4:09
- "Bungle In The Jungle" – 3:35
- "Only Solitare" – 1:28
- "The Third Hoorah" – 4:49
- "Two Fingers" – 5:11
The 2002 remaster of the album included the following bonus songs:
- "Warchild Waltz" – 4:21 (bonus)
- "Quartet" – 2:44 (bonus)
- "Paradise Steakhouse" – 4:03 (bonus)
- "Sealion 2" – 3:20 (bonus)
- "Rainbow Blues" – 3:40 (bonus)
- "Glory Row" – 3:35 (bonus)
- "Saturation" – 4:21 (bonus)
[edit] Charts
- Peaked at #2 on the Billboard pop albums chart
[edit] External links
- War Child (1974) at All Music Guide
- War Child (2002) at All Music Guide (bonus tracks)
- (([2] Except of War Child movie storyboard))