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Jack In The Green: Live In Germany 1970-1993 [DVD] [2008]
 
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Jack In The Green: Live In Germany 1970-1993 [DVD] [2008]

 Exempt   DVD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Frequently Bought Together

Jack In The Green: Live In Germany 1970-1993 [DVD] [2008] + Jethro Tull - Live At Madison Square Garden (DVD + CD) [2009] [NTSC] + Live At Montreux 2003 [DVD] [2008]
Price For All Three: £31.07

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Product details

  • Format: PAL
  • Language English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: Exempt
  • Studio: Eagle Rock
  • DVD Release Date: 1 Dec 2008
  • Run Time: 96 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B001021T2K
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 15,770 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Video Description

TRACKLISTING: Rockpop In Concert 1982: Hard Times / Pussy Willow / Heavy Horses / Jack In The Green / Keyboard Solo / Sweet Dreams / Aqualung / Locomotive Breath / Cheerio. Rocksummer 1986: Hunting Girl. Out In The Green 1986: Thick As A Brick / Black Sunday / Improvisation II / Too Old To Rock 'n' Roll, Too Young To Die. Live In Germany 1993: My Sunday Feeling / So Much Trouble. Beat Club 1970/71: With You There To Help Me / Nothing Is Easy.


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2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Have you seen Jack In The Green?, 21 Sep 2009
By 
Gentlegiantprog "Kingcrimsonprog" (England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Jack In The Green: Live In Germany 1970-1993 [DVD] [2008] (DVD)
The idea of this DVD is almost strange, a collection of Jethro Tull's performances in Germany. In practice it does work, but more Like one concert with bonus material than as a complete collection.
What you get is one very good concert from 1982, during the Broadsword era where songs like 'Fallen On Hard Times' and 'Pussy Willow' mix it up with classic tracks such as 'Heavy Horses,' 'Sweet Dream' and the ever present concert closing duo of 'Aqualung' and 'Locomotive Breath' all of which are performed effortlessly, with a pretty decent audio mix and equally decent visuals.

This part of the DVD is where you feel that you've gotten your money's worth, a well and recorded concert with enough classic material on it to keep you happy that was filmed when Ian's voice was still at its best.

Then however, you get another concert which has worse audio, worse visuals and the performance feels a little flatter and less energetic, with Ian's voice not as strong as on the other aforementioned concert. When thought of as a bonus feature this is fine, but it doesn't stand up incredibly well on its own and while it is certainly good, it doesn't exactly feel great. The performance of 'Thick As A Brick,' is interesting with some jamming and segments from the second half of the piece that the band usually don't play live and then the version of 'Too Old To Rock And Roll...' is solid enough as well.

Then there is a kind of poorly recorded, filmed and mixed version of 'Hunting Girl' that doesn't begin entirely at the beginning, followed by a well shot but very dull TV spot from the early nineties and then an absolutely fantastic 'Benefit,' era live spot where they play a haunting and fantastically recorded version of 'With You There To Help Me,' and a strange version of 'Nothing is Easy,' that's full of mistakes because it looks like Ian's ribs are injured. Then it ends, abruptly.

So, as a collection its rather strange. However, for a Tull fan I look at it as an Excellent concert from the Broadsword tour with an eclectic collection of bonus material. The aforementioned versions of 'Too Old To Rock And Roll' and 'With You There To Help Me' are good enough to make the rest of the DVD feel worthwhile and the 1982 concert would stand up on its own. Additionally, you do get a booklet with detailed linear notes from Mr. Anderson as usual so there is certainly a lot of Material here for a Tull fan to enjoy, however I feel it should lose at least one star for the flat sound in the second concert and the poorer moments of the additional material.

In conclusion, it is not perfect but there's a lot of good stuff for any Tull fan.
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33 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, 7 May 2008
By 
A. Guthrie "Gusssss" (London, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Jack In The Green: Live In Germany 1970-1993 [DVD] [2008] (DVD)
Another great Tull DVD, keep them coming. You get 42 minutes of concert footage from 1982, coincidentally just over 2 weeks after I saw them live the first time at Wembley. Good to see the still shaggy haired Anderson and Martin Barre at an intermediate stage of his transformation, strutting their stuff. I needed to go to the reference books to work out exactly when and where these were filmed, info I would have liked to have seen in the notes. There is more live footage from 1986 and a tv set in 1993; some of my favourite tracks - Hunting Girl, Too Old to Rock and Roll, Too Young to Die, Black Sunday, before the Beat Club footage at the end including John Evan's superb Pathetique piano solo, and a strange, warts-and-all performance of Nothing Is Easy.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.3 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)

53 of 53 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Cool footage from a brilliant band's non-classic period, 23 May 2008
By Matthew Schwarz - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Jack in the Green: Live in Germany [DVD] [2008] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC] (DVD)
This is a nice video for a Tull fan, although it seems odd they would release this when there's no official DVD of their classic golden age throughout the 70s! Despite the "1970-1993" subtitle, most of this DVD comes from the mid-80s Tull with Peter Vettese on keys.
The first 1/2 or so is a show from the Broadsword & The Beast tour. Sadly, despite Ian's liner notes of the elaborate pirate ship stage show, this (and the rest of the disc) has no stage "show" to speak of save musicians playing instruments. The set list (although abbreviated - only about 7 proper songs) is a nice mix of then-new, classic early 70's, and (a treat for us fans who've missed this material in recent Tull performances) some gems from the late 70's. Ian's voice was still great. Martin's guitar is rather shreddingly metal. Gerry Conway's rather basic drumming on the new material is countered with some nice playing on the classic stuff - he adds his own percussive touch to Heavy Horses, not Barrie Barlow but fine drumming nonetheless. Peter Vettese gets a chance to show off his chops in an extended keyboard solo, which is welcome. Dave Pegg, of course, is there to provide his excellent bass skills and some backing vocals. A note - I'm pretty sure it's an abridged version of Heavy Horses, though! There is a nice instrumental jam of "Black sunday" at the end of the show.
The next batch of performances come from a few years later: 1986, where Gerry Conway has been replaced on drums by Doane Perry (who would go on, with a few breaks, to be Tull's longest-standing drummer). The real shock here is how much Ian's voice has deteriorated - unfortunately Tull's least popular album "Under Wraps" also strained Ian's voice (he's never been the same since, although sometimes better than others). It's a shame because thy do some great songs: an (also abridged) rocking version of Hunting Girl, a long (10-minutish) bit of Thick As A Brick, and one of their best early-80's songs "Black Sunday" (this time with vocals). (There's also an OK version of the OK songs "Too Old To Rock'n'Roll, Too Young To Die"). The treat here, though, is some nice instrumental jams - Pegg brings out some of his Fairport folk for a bit, and Martin does a guitar showcase that really gets good when Ian's flute and the band come in. One final note on the '86 stuff - the camera tends to wander off and waste time showing the sound engineers and people walking through the audience for no apparent reason!
Then there's a couple tunes from '93 of old material. A performance of "My Sunday Feeling" sounds great - Ian's voice may be weaker now, but he's using it to best effect at least, and then-new keyboard player Andy Giddings sounds great. The other song from this era is a fun acoustic performance of an old blues standard (at least that's what it sounds like - I'm unfamiliar with the song). The band in these two songs seems to really be enjoying themselves!
The DVD ends with some early TV footage, from 1970. "With You There To Help Me" goes into the (unlisted) John Evan showpiece "By Kind Permission Of" (which would have been a selling point for me - don't know why it's not listed on the DVD case!). Followed by a rocking "Nothing Is Easy" (with a false start) which just ends suddenly mid-way when someone makes a mistake!
It all seems to be TV recordings - only the 80's stuff is actual concert footage, and there's various song titles and program text up on the screen throughout.
Not a bad release, especially for the various jam and improv bits, although it seems a shame we don't get to see the stage show!

19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is great, 20 Jun 2008
By Garry Daniel - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Jack in the Green: Live in Germany [DVD] [2008] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC] (DVD)
This dvd of Jethro Tull live in Germany is, in a word, GREAT. This contains some of the clearest footage of Tull in concert I have ever seen.
And what a treat to see the "Broadsword and the Beast" era Tull on a concert video.And the sound..well, it's very clear and precise, and what more could a Tull fan ask for? In my opinion, the footage of the Broadsword tour is worth the price alone. Highly recommended to any Jethro Tull fan.

24 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 1982 Tour video, 9 May 2008
By David F. Ellis "Longtime tull fan" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Jack in the Green: Live in Germany [DVD] [2008] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC] (DVD)
I own this on VHS and converted it to DVD. An excellent show from German TV in 1982 with multi camera angles, etc. The Broadsword LP live. Eventually I'll probably buy the official release to make up for the mediocre quality my VHS had. Any Tull fan will be happy.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 24 reviews  4.3 out of 5 stars 
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