Songs You May Have Missed #772

Jethro Tull: “Reasons for Waiting” (1969)

Another gem from the deep catalog of a band whose hardcore fans seem to think every release is a masterpiece (they couldn’t be more wrong) but who gets such little mainstream critical respect that, as of this writing, the band hasn’t been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (they couldn’t be more wrong).

Similarly to Fleetwood Mac, Jethro Tull started out as a British blues-rock band, but lineup changes–and perhaps commercial considerations–dictated a musical course correction.

Following the departure of band leader and guitarist Mick Abrahams after their first album, Tull was effectively Ian Anderson’s band (and has been ever since).

After a brief (less than 2 month) stint by future Black Sabbath legend Tony Iommi, guitarist Martin Barre was brought aboard to replace Abrahams on guitar. A more versatile musician, Barre was adept on mandolin and had actually been playing flute longer than Anderson himself.

Tull’s signature sound would be forged by Anderson’s flute and Barre’s guitar licks over the next decade. In the meantime, second LP Stand Up was the record on which the transition from blues-influenced rock to a folk-inflected style began. Soon after, their distinctive folk/progressive rock blend fully unfolded.

But Tull has never truly abandoned its folk-rock leanings under flautist Anderson’s leadership.

“Reasons for Waiting” is nowhere on any Tull fan’s list of favorite songs. But this beautiful Ian Anderson ballad showcases the versatility of the writer better known for such canonical classic rock as “Aqualung”, “Locomotive Breath” and “Thick as a Brick”.

Palmer, 1970’s
Palmer, recent

This was the first song on which the band used orchestration in the studio, and Dee (at the time David) Palmer’s string arrangement is what raises the song to another level.

Palmer, perhaps Jethro Tull’s true unsung hero, would later become a full-fledged recording and touring member of the band, helping to build the lavish arrangements on albums like Songs from the Wood and songs like “Orion”.

Credited as composer of the 1979 Stormwatch album-closer “Elegy”, one of the few Tull songs without an Anderson writing credit, Palmer wrote the song as an ode to her father, writing it within an hour after first hearing he had died.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2013/02/24/songs-you-may-have-missed-340/

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/11/18/songs-you-may-have-missed-242/

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2025/07/12/recommended-albums-100/

After Kennedy Center cancels LGBTQ+ musical, Guster brings cast on stage in protest

(Photo by Justin P. Goodhart)

(via The Handbasket) by Marisa Kabas

Tonight at the Kennedy Center, legendary alternative rock band Guster took the stage to perform with the National Symphony Orchestra. But the audience got an extra surprise when the band brought on part of the cast of Finn—a children’s musical whose run at the center was recently canceled because of the new presidential administration’s vicious crackdown on the arts—to help them perform their song Hard Times.

What used to be one of the most prestigious venues in the nation has fallen from grace since Donald Trump’s inauguration and subsequent dismantling of the cultural institution’s board of directors—and the radical overhaul has led to cancelled performances and fear about what it means to perform at the center in its current iteration. 

The cancellation of Finn’s run at the center was announced shortly after Trump installed a team of loyalists to the board, including Fox News hosts Laura Ingraham and Maria Bartiromo, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Dan Scavino, and Andrea Wynn, the wife of billionaire Steve Wynn.

Read more: https://www.thehandbasket.co/p/guster-finn-kennedy-center

At Kennedy Center, Guster Perform With Cast of LGBTQ+ Musical Canceled by Trump Takeover

(via Rolling Stone) by Daniel Kreps

Guster performed Friday night at the Kennedy Center, with the band using their show to stage a protest of sorts amid the Trump administration’s sweeping changes at the historic Washington, D.C. venue.

During the concert, Guster brought out the cast of Finn – an LGBTQ+ musical with trans themes whose own Kennedy Center performances were canceled after Trump named himself chairman – to perform with the band and the National Symphony Orchestra.

“I have a friend named Michael who wrote the songs for a musical called Finn,” singer Ryan Fisher told the audience (via The Handbasket). “In the before times they were booked to play here at the Kennedy Center. But as all of you know, things happened, and the show is no longer presenting here. As the new administration has made abundantly clear, Finn‘s themes of inclusivity, love, and self-acceptance aren’t going to be welcome in this building while they are in control.”

Fisher continued, “So tonight our band is here to say our stage is your stage. We are your allies, we stand with the LGBTQ community, and we want you to sing with us. Please welcome the cast of Finn and composer Michael Kooman. They belong here.”

Read more: https://www.msn.com/en-us/music/news/at-kennedy-center-guster-perform-with-cast-of-lgbtq-musical-canceled-by-trump-takeover/ar-AA1BUxg0?ocid=msedgntp&pc=LCTS&cvid=fb735e7b084a493682108c7ba104ac0d&ei=12

Editor’s note: “singer Ryan Fisher” should be “Ryan Miller”.

Recommended Albums #95

Jeremy Messersmith: The Reluctant Graveyard (2010)

Minneapolis-based indie-popper Jeremy Messersmith trades in understated, intelligent songs often sung from some sort of outsider/underdog perspective.

Named one of NPR’s top ten albums of 2010, The Reluctant Graveyard is populated with ghouls, monsters, and even a rather pushy “deathbed salesman”.

Messersmith makes surprisingly effective relationship metaphors of these creepy characters on a dark, mostly melancholy-sounding record that evokes some of the Decemberists’ early work.

But lest you think Messersmith and Graveyard are monotonously morose, “Knots” breaks the dour mood with the kind of sprightly pop this guy can pull off every bit as effectively.

Still, the overall vibe is very Tim Burton. If you have a fondness for spooky songs with haunting melodies, you’ll be digging The Reluctant Graveyard

Also the video for “Organ Donor” is rather uh, humerus.

Don’t Miss: “Organ Donor”

Listen to: “Knots”

Listen to: “John the Determinist”

Listen to: “A Girl, a Boy, and a Graveyard”

Listen to: “Deathbed Salesman”

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2018/06/08/songs-you-may-have-missed-628/

Randy Bachman and Burton Cummings Planning 2026 Guess Who Reunion Tour

Donald Weber, Getty Images© Ultimate Classic Rock

(via Ultimate Classic Rock) by Bryan Rolli
 

Randy Bachman and Burton Cummings — founding guitarist and classic-era singer of the Guess Who, respectively — have been in talks about a Guess Who reunion tour in 2026.

“[Burton is] finishing up his stuff this year, I’m finishing up my BTO stuff,” Bachman told American Songwriter. “And we have a plan for 2026 to be the Guess Who, where … we do a set list of about 30 hit songs, and it’s probably gonna be a two- or three-hour Springsteen kind of marathonic show. And we’re all geared to do that in 2026. It’ll be the unveiling of ‘The Guess Who are back.’”

Bachman already has a lot on his plate, as he will embark on an extensive North American tour with the newly revived Bachman-Turner Overdrive from April through August. He’s also promised the band’s first new album in more than 40 years. Cummings, meanwhile, released A Few Good Moments in 2024, marking his first album in 12 years. He has a handful of solo tour dates scheduled through August.

News of a prospective Guess Who reunion tour also arrives after an intense legal battle in which Bachman and Cummings fought to prevent a different version of the band from touring under the name.

Read more: https://www.msn.com/en-us/music/news/randy-bachman-and-burton-cummings-planning-2026-guess-who-reunion-tour/ar-AA1BIYHl?ocid=msedgntp&pc=LCTS&cvid=0dd3a87b40364d2c97da54f72b39bf25&ei=11#

Songs You May Have Missed #771

Band of Horses: “In Need of Repair” (2022)

From their sixth LP, arriving six years after their previous.

Things are Great strips back the band’s sound a bit, and sounds more like the Sub Pop records that made them indie pop darlings than their lusher-sounding more recent major-label work.

Rolling Stone

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2013/02/07/songs-you-may-have-missed-322/

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/06/24/songs-you-may-have-missed-135/

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