Ian Anderson. Einer der ALLERGRÖSSTEN. SUPER. SUPER. Und DANKE FÜR ALLES.
@MattJaissleFilms
5 жыл бұрын
A fantastic songwriter as well as wonderful with the flute. I love all the Jethro Tull albums. Thanks for the interview!
@WalterDavidRiffmon
6 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this interview. I liked his summary of various musical trends through the decades and also his advice to play for personal enjoyment. I found it to be encouraging to me as a flutist. I saw the girl eager to play for Ian too. I felt bad for her. I’m not sure if Ian noticed her attempt to play or not. Ian’s music has spoiled me. Ive been a Tull fan since 1972. Nothing compares to the intricate and thoughtful compositions throughout the body of work. I have a hard time listening to simple music. Who cares if he’s not perfect. Who is? But he’s a musical genius who happened to be a pretty smart business man too.
@aqua7cn
9 жыл бұрын
Thanks
@daylefloyd6404
21 күн бұрын
I wish that you were as humble about your flute improvisations as you are in other areas of your life.
@bogatibokorakos
6 жыл бұрын
I love Ian!!!!
@james9789
4 жыл бұрын
Ians honest admissions self depricating only reinforce for me his greatness.
@MyVeryHappyDay
5 жыл бұрын
Nice interviewer.
@olafsrensen9578
4 жыл бұрын
not a classical fluteplayer : thanks god.Thats why Ian has been such an original and great fluteplayer with a rytmic cavelity.eisides that his tone is very warm and beatifull.
@clsieczka
Жыл бұрын
Ian was Tull, let’s face it. No doubt, anyone who played with him had to more than special. A lot more. Martin made Tull amazing along within Ian as well. We know this.
@jasondotson
7 жыл бұрын
Cool. Anne Coulter's finally branching out of politics.
@johnnynbk
5 жыл бұрын
she is much nicer than anne coulter
@matthewcannon9699
7 жыл бұрын
Ian learned circular breathing so that he could talk uninterrupted ... then realised it might be useful for flute playing.
@timramm1
5 жыл бұрын
He's good if I was a pro id learn to read id have the time and income so why not do it
@davelogan9221
4 жыл бұрын
First 4 Album's ..Jethro Tull..This Was..Stand Up..Benefit..Living in the Past/Aqualung..After that still good..not great. or remarkable..During 68-72..right up there with Zepplin..Doors..Floyd..then Popeye voice ..and redundent progressions of folklore and adventure tunes..Glenn Cornick and Clive Bunker chemistry long gone..
@MyVeryHappyDay
4 жыл бұрын
Wrong, Dave Aloneagain.
@SongSwan
5 жыл бұрын
Anderson has always had that self deprecating attitude as if his success came as a pure accident through no fault of his own and completely undeserved,if you watch his performances from 40 years ago until today they all have that silly court jester persona.
@serenityfields7514
9 жыл бұрын
Why not listen to other players. He could enrich himself even further!!! and by appreciating other people other than just himself? I appreciate Ian's flute playing immensely. He has been able to describe feelings in the human soul that could not be expressed other wise, there is a freedom to "be" unshackled.. how ever there is only one sad word that comes to mind in the psychological realm of ailments, by the way he talks on and on. It starts with a big letter "N" . So sorry to see this truth and I'm sure he knows it. He is the one who is miserable.
@vikrampinto
9 жыл бұрын
Serenity Fields I'd like to come to Ian's defense. I see your point and it is a good one but there is a larger question at stake. Ian is well aware and very honest and open about his limitations as a flute player and not unlike many others, he has managed to turn it into his strength by working within those boundaries and cultivating his characteristic style and identity. But from your comment, I'm guessing that's something your already understand. But going further, I think there is an urge in most of us and I'm sure it's very strong in Ian, not only to be influenced easily but to draw comparison between oneself and others and strive towards perfectionism in the areas where one is lacking, which can be quite debilitating to someone who is simultaneously striving to "describe feelings in the human soul." So the conscious decision not to listen to other players has a lot to do with the danger of spreading oneself too thin, that means to say...being easily pulled in various directions at once that would dilute one's artistic voice and power of expression.
@serenityfields7514
9 жыл бұрын
What about the soul of the female flutist that wanted so much to play for him but he ignored her and you could tell she was embarrassed. ouch! Did you see that part? .
@justgivemethetruth
8 жыл бұрын
+Serenity Fields I think personally Ian really has something wrong with him. I am glad he is a success, and I am glad he found an outlet in music that doesn't leave toxic traces of it too much in his "product" ... but there are many times in his concert banter or his interviews you just seem someone who thinks they are so much better than other people ... like the way he makes sure to go on and tell people the world owes them nothing. It's funny but I think a lot of celebrities exist by creating an image of what they want people to think of them and if the world knew them they would never spend a cent on them.
@justgivemethetruth
8 жыл бұрын
+Vikram Pinto I see Ian's comments as betraying a kind of accounting mentality ... that everything he does he does for success and money. That is why I wonder when I listen to Tull's early music how much collaboration took place, and it seems like there was a lot more effort packed into the music, and for example in Homo Erraticus ... the adjective "thin" comes to mind. it is thin and repetitive. Even TAAB2 had a lot more going on in it. Half of HE is company names. Ian just seems kind of unhappy in his core ... and I don't understand why, but then a lot of bigshot musicians are, I guess the world is all about them. Same with lots of rich successful people, and I think most of them are uneased at the difference between what they know is their image and their reality.
@justgivemethetruth
8 жыл бұрын
+Serenity Fields That was fucked up ... he carefully ended the interview right at that point. Everything is all about him. Imagine his poor kids ... one has to wonder what he was ever able to give them as a father.
@bababoombaboom2465
6 жыл бұрын
Hm. He's a little bit full of shit about the banality of rock music, in the broad sense he's using the term. Yeah, most everything on the radio is about falling in or out of love but top-40 ... that's a pretty narrowly constrained genre. As advice to musicians - "if you play rock music you must accept that it's pretty boring and emotionally self-involved" - it's not really true at all.
@krollpeter
6 жыл бұрын
He is capable forming complete multi-part sentences with commas and full stops, not making a single grammatical mistake. I bet most here lose him after the 5. word, and then because they don't understand what he is saying think it's him who is stupid. My two sentences probably contain more grammatical mistakes then he did in the last 25 years.
@portcullis5622
6 жыл бұрын
Intelligent people, even those who can write and punctuate well, are still capable of talking a load of shit at times. One only has to listen to politicians!
@handebarlas6248
4 жыл бұрын
@@krollpeter I could not agree more. My feelings and thoughts exactly.
@justgivemethetruth
7 жыл бұрын
24:00 - Ian is the one who seems to have this bitterness. He never smiles when he is working or interviewing. He is always negative without really talking about what has got his knickers in such a twist. The more I listen to this annoying know-it-all prig the less I love his music ... and I really hate that. Someone who write the Ian Anderson/Jethro Tull music I listen to should not be such a jerk. AND, I am sorry to anyone who I offended by saying that, but I have bought a lot of records, gone to a lot of concerts and watched a lot of videos.
@boleslawzajac4729
7 жыл бұрын
I've never heard such a silly and subjective opinion about one of the most brilliant composer!
@justgivemethetruth
7 жыл бұрын
really?
@federicomarevalo
6 жыл бұрын
You know, i have a very different vision on that particular part of the interview. I think, just like Ian says, you should always play music just for fun and because you like, or even love doing it. If you are lucky enough to get paid for it, that's great for you and you should be thankful for being paid to do such an enjoyable activity. The fact that he acknowledges that is luck what got him where he is, only make me admire him even more. Luck is more a factor in life than what most people would like to account for, so if you happen to be a really talented musician but you're not making it as a pro the way you think you should, you should enjoy it anyway, because you can play beautiful music whether you are lucky enough to get paid money for it or you are not. Sorry for the long reply and any english deficiency, i'm from Argentina
@anthonycerniglia6708
6 жыл бұрын
just give me the Truth.....You don't Know what You are Talking About....Sad....
@stever128
6 жыл бұрын
I just am not sure if I have watched the same interview as the one you commented on? I have always found Ian in interviews to be quite serious however self deprecating. He always tries to give very good quality answers as well interesting. He makes music I like as well. So all round good egg.
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