Picturing himself on stage
Jennifer K Mahal
A homeless man huddled on the sidewalk inspired “Aqualung.”
Impressions of extremist groups prior to Sept. 11 led to “Roots to
Branches.”
Some people write music from words. Some from melody. Ian Anderson,
lead singer and flutist for Jethro Tull, writes music from images.
“With ‘Aqualung,’ I have picture of a homeless figure, indicative of
the kind of ostensibly sad figure who inspired a lot of mixed emotions in
us, the observer, the better-off city walker,” he said from his office in
England. “You can pass him on the street . . . We’re uncomfortable with
homeless people, who are the ill, the aged.”
Anderson, who will play an almost sold-out concert at the Orange
County Performing Arts Center tonight, said that image is among those
that have stayed with him the longest. Thereare usually pictures in his
head when he writes songs and when he sings them in concert.
“Look at the visual arts -- form, tone, color -- those are words that
curiously apply to the form of music,” said the 54-year-old, who quit art
school to become a working musician in the ‘60s. “There’s a common
language that works here.”
The job of songwriters, he said, is to make sense of all of the
conflicting and confusing emotions. It’s a job that will never be boring.
“As a songwriter, you draw off [emotions] to the surface and let them
bubble up,” Anderson said, “but not because they’re nice and pretty and
tied in a pink bow.”
Pink bows and Jethro Tull are incongruous -- for all Anderson’s antics
in the ‘70s with tights and codpieces, neither of which he wears anymore.
The band won a rather controversial Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance
Grammy in 1989 for “Crest of a Knave,” controversial in part because the
band has never been a critic’s favorite, no matter how popular with the
masses.
Tull, named after an 18th century English agricultural pioneer, has
changed members a number of times over the years. Anderson, playing flute
and mandolin, has always been at its center. The current members of the
band include Martin Barre on electric guitar, drummer Doane Perry,
keyboardist Andrew Giddings and Jonathan Noyce on bass.
The group is currently on its 2002 tour, “Living With the Past,” which
coincides with the release of a new CD and DVD. The music may have the
sounds of a flute, but no one would mistake it for classical, even if it
is being performed at the Center.
“What better place to hear a group like Jethro Tull than Segerstrom
Hall, an actual concert venue that is acoustically ideal for great
performers,” said Jerry Mandel, the Center’s president.
Anderson has a more practical reason for enjoying venues like the
Center -- clean bathrooms. Being a flute player, he is very particular
about the cleanliness of his hands.
“The good thing about these places is, on average, the backstage
plumbing is of a much higher caliber than the sports places, where the
closest thing to a working toilet is an empty Evian bottle,” he said.
And though Len Fico of Fuel 2000, the record company behind Tull’s new
album, may enthuse about how the venue creates a more intimate experience
with Tull, Anderson said he plays his music for only one person --
himself.
“I’m there to make me feel good. That’s why I’m a musician and not a
bank manager,” Anderson said. “On a good night, if things go my way . . .
that communicates to audience and then they have a good time. But if I go
out there and try to entertain, then I become a despicable low life Vegas
entertainer, and that’s not what I want to do.”
What he wants to do is have a good time, and the number of tickets
left at the concert’s box office -- only around 160 of 3,000 as of
Thursday morning -- show that there are plenty of people in Orange County
who will pay to see it.
FYI
WHAT: Jethro Tull
WHEN: 8:30 p.m. today
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
COST: $35-$65
CALL: (714) 755-5799
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