Jump to content

John Glascock: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Link
No edit summary
Line 8: Line 8:
He played on the albums [[Too Old to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die!]], [[Songs from the Wood]], [[Heavy Horses]], [[Live - Bursting Out]] and [[Stormwatch (album)|Stormwatch]].
He played on the albums [[Too Old to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die!]], [[Songs from the Wood]], [[Heavy Horses]], [[Live - Bursting Out]] and [[Stormwatch (album)|Stormwatch]].


Glascock replaced longtime friend of [[Ian Anderson (musician)|Ian Anderson]], [[Jeffrey Hammond]]. Besides being a far better musician than Hammond, Glascock added vocal ability, allowing Anderson the luxury of having vocal harmony on-stage, something previously confined to the studio using [[overdubbing]]. He also played electric guitar on-stage when Anderson's arrangement required it, as for instance in performances of ''"Skating Away (On the Thin Ice of the New Day)"'' when the rest of the band was playing [[xylophone]], [[glockenspiel]] and percussion.
Glascock replaced longtime friend of [[Ian Anderson (musician)|Ian Anderson]], [[Jeffrey Hammond]]. He also played electric guitar on-stage when Anderson's arrangement required it, as for instance in performances of ''"Skating Away (On the Thin Ice of the New Day)"'' when the rest of the band was playing [[xylophone]], [[glockenspiel]] and percussion.


Glascock's health problems became apparent when he was unable to perform on the ''[[Heavy Horses]]'' tour, missing a transatlantic [[simulcast]] from [[Madison Square Garden]]. Despite the diagnosis of heart valve damage caused by an infection, he continued his previous lifestyle, which involved heavy drinking and wild parties. His health continued to deterioriate. Ian Anderson gave him several warnings before finally laying him off with pay during the production of ''[[Stormwatch (album)|Stormwatch]]'', completing most of the bass guitar parts himself. During the subsequent promotional tour with a replacement bass player, Anderson learned of Glascock's death and had to break the news to the rest of the band. Glascock's close friend [[Barriemore Barlow]] was devastated. He left the band at the end of the tour. The resulting dislocation, and Ian Anderson's own artistic vision, prompted a complete overhaul of the lineup, leaving only Anderson and [[Martin Barre]] as full members.
Glascock's health problems became apparent when he was unable to perform on the ''[[Heavy Horses]]'' tour, missing a transatlantic [[simulcast]] from [[Madison Square Garden]]. Despite the diagnosis of heart valve damage caused by an infection, he continued his previous lifestyle, which involved heavy drinking and wild parties. His health continued to deterioriate. Ian Anderson gave him several warnings before finally laying him off with pay during the production of ''[[Stormwatch (album)|Stormwatch]]'', completing most of the bass guitar parts himself. During the subsequent promotional tour with a replacement bass player, Anderson learned of Glascock's death and had to break the news to the rest of the band. Glascock's close friend [[Barriemore Barlow]] was devastated. He left the band at the end of the tour. The resulting dislocation, and Ian Anderson's own artistic vision, prompted a complete overhaul of the lineup, leaving only Anderson and [[Martin Barre]] as full members.

Revision as of 23:04, 12 August 2007

Template:Otherpeople4 John Glascock (born May 2, 1951 in Islington, North London - November 17, 1979, in London) was the bassist for the rock band Jethro Tull from Dec 1975 until Aug 1979. He died in 1979, at the age of 28, as a result of a congenital heart defect.

Glascock joined Jethro Tull after having played in Carmen - a British-American band that blended progressive rock with flamenco - from 1973 until 1975, when the band broke up.

Before Carmen, John Glascock had played with The Juniors (1962 - 1964), The Gods (Early 1965 - June 1967, Sep 1967 - Feb 1969), Head Machine (1970), Toe Fat (Jun 1969 - Dec 1970) and Chicken Shack (Jan 1971 - Mar 1972).

He played on the albums Too Old to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die!, Songs from the Wood, Heavy Horses, Live - Bursting Out and Stormwatch.

Glascock replaced longtime friend of Ian Anderson, Jeffrey Hammond. He also played electric guitar on-stage when Anderson's arrangement required it, as for instance in performances of "Skating Away (On the Thin Ice of the New Day)" when the rest of the band was playing xylophone, glockenspiel and percussion.

Glascock's health problems became apparent when he was unable to perform on the Heavy Horses tour, missing a transatlantic simulcast from Madison Square Garden. Despite the diagnosis of heart valve damage caused by an infection, he continued his previous lifestyle, which involved heavy drinking and wild parties. His health continued to deterioriate. Ian Anderson gave him several warnings before finally laying him off with pay during the production of Stormwatch, completing most of the bass guitar parts himself. During the subsequent promotional tour with a replacement bass player, Anderson learned of Glascock's death and had to break the news to the rest of the band. Glascock's close friend Barriemore Barlow was devastated. He left the band at the end of the tour. The resulting dislocation, and Ian Anderson's own artistic vision, prompted a complete overhaul of the lineup, leaving only Anderson and Martin Barre as full members.

Template:UK-bassist-stub