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ORDER NOW FROM AMAZON USA™ or ORDER
NOW FROM AMAZON UK ™
Just
three years after their founding, Tull played the final day of the legendary
Isle of Wight festival (often called the "British Woodstock")
in 1970. With the crowd estimated at nearly 600,000, the band was one
of the many impressive acts that day, including The Who, Jimi Hendrix,
and the Moody Blues. It was the largest Tull audience ever and indeed,
the largest audience in rock history.
Now, Eagle
Records has released the video of Tull's set worldwide
as "Nothing
is Easy: Live at the Isle of Wight: 1970." The set contains mostly
tunes from Tull's first three albums, along with
an "in
development"
version
of
"My God"
which
would appear later on "Aqualung."
This is not simply a performance video. The production masterfully intersperses
comments from Ian about the "hippie" period,
the festival, the technical and logistic difficulties of the soundcheck,
Tull's legacy, and the band's performance. The DVD also includes a photo
gallery of
Tull from the festival.
This approximately eighty-minute DVD has superior audio, including options
for Dolby Surround 5.1 and DTS (first Tull product ever in those audio
formats).
The sound quality on this new release is remarkable, and Tull
fans now can own this classic, previously unreleased live recording of
the band's
early work. A six-page booklet includes Ian's reflections on the
performance.
Tull fans can also purchase the performance
on CD (sans commentary) with more songs from the performance.
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