﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?>
<album>
  <review>Too Old to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die! (1976) is the ninth studio album released by British band Jethro Tull. It is widely considered a concept album. The remastered 2002 CD version contains two bonus tracks that were cut from the original LP, "Small Cigar" and "Strip Cartoon". This is the first Tull album to feature John Glascock on bass and backing vocals.

The song 'Big Dipper' references the Big Dipper roller coaster in Blackpool Pleasure Beach.

The original idea for the album was to be a rock musical, similar to the Kinks' mid-1970s outputs (e.g., Preservation Act 1, Preservation Act 2 and Schoolboys in Disgrace). It would follow an ageing and retired rock star named Ray Lomas as he wins money on a decadent quiz show, but finds that society has changed so much that, with no one left like him any more, he has no way of enjoying his money the way he did in the 1950s. He then decides to commit suicide via motorcycle crash but fails and lands himself in a hospital in a coma for an undetermined amount of time.

When he awakes he discovers society has changed again, and his style of dress and music are now popular again. In addition, the advanced medicine he is treated with after disfiguring his face and damaging his body in the crash makes him twenty years younger. He has become an overnight sensation with the young kids who now try to dress and act like him.

However, much of this story is only explained in a cartoon strip included with the album. The actual score of the album does not follow the strip exactly, leaving out details or, in some cases, changing the plot.

Jethro Tull frontman Ian Anderson has always said this album was not meant to be autobiographical of him as an ageing songwriter, since he was young at the time. He says the point of the album was to illustrate how his style of music may go out of popularity with every other fashion and fad, but he is determined that if he sticks to it, everything comes back around and the style will rise again.</review>
  <outline>Too Old to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die! (1976) is the ninth studio album released by British band Jethro Tull. It is widely considered a concept album. The remastered 2002 CD version contains two bonus tracks that were cut from the original LP, "Small Cigar" and "Strip Cartoon". This is the first Tull album to feature John Glascock on bass and backing vocals.

The song 'Big Dipper' references the Big Dipper roller coaster in Blackpool Pleasure Beach.

The original idea for the album was to be a rock musical, similar to the Kinks' mid-1970s outputs (e.g., Preservation Act 1, Preservation Act 2 and Schoolboys in Disgrace). It would follow an ageing and retired rock star named Ray Lomas as he wins money on a decadent quiz show, but finds that society has changed so much that, with no one left like him any more, he has no way of enjoying his money the way he did in the 1950s. He then decides to commit suicide via motorcycle crash but fails and lands himself in a hospital in a coma for an undetermined amount of time.

When he awakes he discovers society has changed again, and his style of dress and music are now popular again. In addition, the advanced medicine he is treated with after disfiguring his face and damaging his body in the crash makes him twenty years younger. He has become an overnight sensation with the young kids who now try to dress and act like him.

However, much of this story is only explained in a cartoon strip included with the album. The actual score of the album does not follow the strip exactly, leaving out details or, in some cases, changing the plot.

Jethro Tull frontman Ian Anderson has always said this album was not meant to be autobiographical of him as an ageing songwriter, since he was young at the time. He says the point of the album was to illustrate how his style of music may go out of popularity with every other fashion and fad, but he is determined that if he sticks to it, everything comes back around and the style will rise again.</outline>
  <lockdata>false</lockdata>
  <dateadded>2023-07-15 12:17:12</dateadded>
  <title>Too Old to Rock ’n’ Roll: Too Young to Die!</title>
  <rating>6</rating>
  <year>2015</year>
  <premiered>2015-01-01</premiered>
  <releasedate>2015-01-01</releasedate>
  <runtime>42</runtime>
  <genre>Blues Rock</genre>
  <genre>Classic Rock</genre>
  <genre>Folk Rock</genre>
  <genre>Hard Rock</genre>
  <genre>Progressive Rock</genre>
  <genre>Rock</genre>
  <audiodbartistid>111346</audiodbartistid>
  <audiodbalbumid>2111185</audiodbalbumid>
  <musicbrainzalbumid>a8a1a532-98d6-414b-b740-b10be9171627</musicbrainzalbumid>
  <musicbrainzalbumartistid>ece57992-dc2e-4f67-a269-fa43626c1a3d</musicbrainzalbumartistid>
  <musicbrainzreleasegroupid>f561a859-8e75-3816-a566-75f822166ac4</musicbrainzreleasegroupid>
  <art>
    <poster>/config/metadata/library/28/28ef695c2a5419c431b165553de991dd/folder.jpg</poster>
  </art>
  <actor>
    <name>Jethro Tull</name>
    <type>AlbumArtist</type>
  </actor>
  <actor>
    <name>Jethro Tull</name>
    <type>Artist</type>
  </actor>
  <artist>Jethro Tull</artist>
  <albumartist>Jethro Tull</albumartist>
  <track>
    <position>1</position>
    <title>Prelude</title>
    <duration>00:55</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>2</position>
    <title>Quiz Kid</title>
    <duration>04:03</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>3</position>
    <title>Crazed Institution</title>
    <duration>04:35</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>4</position>
    <title>Salamander</title>
    <duration>02:53</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>5</position>
    <title>Taxi Grab</title>
    <duration>03:50</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>6</position>
    <title>From a Dead Beat to an Old Greaser</title>
    <duration>04:11</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>7</position>
    <title>Bad Eyed and Loveless</title>
    <duration>02:10</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>8</position>
    <title>Big Dipper</title>
    <duration>03:33</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>9</position>
    <title>Too Old to Rock ’n’ Roll: Too Young to Die!</title>
    <duration>05:34</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>10</position>
    <title>Pied Piper</title>
    <duration>04:36</duration>
  </track>
  <track>
    <position>11</position>
    <title>The Chequered Flag (Dead Or Alive)</title>
    <duration>05:22</duration>
  </track>
  <artistdesc>Jethro Tull are  a British rock band formed in Blackpool, Lancashire, in 1967. Initially playing blues rock and jazz fusion, the band soon incorporated elements of English folk music, hard rock and classical music, forging a signature progressive rock sound. The group's lead vocalist, bandleader, founder, principal composer and only constant member is Ian Anderson, who also plays flute and acoustic guitar. The group has featured a succession of musicians throughout the decades, including significant contributors such as guitarists Mick Abrahams and Martin Barre (with Barre being the longest-serving member besides Anderson); bassists Glenn Cornick, Jeffrey Hammond, John Glascock, Dave Pegg, Jonathan Noyce and David Goodier; drummers Clive Bunker, Barrie "Barriemore" Barlow and Doane Perry; and keyboardists John Evan, Dee Palmer, Peter-John Vettese, Andrew Giddings and John O'Hara. 
The band achieved moderate recognition in the London club scene and released their debut album, This Was, in 1968. After a line-up change which saw original guitarist Mick Abrahams replaced by Martin Barre, the band released a folk-tinged second album, Stand Up, in 1969. Stand Up, which reached No. 1 in the UK, gave the band their first commercial success, and regular tours of the UK and the US followed. Their musical style shifted in the direction of progressive rock with albums such as Aqualung (1971), Thick as a Brick (1972), and A Passion Play (1973), and shifted again to contemporary folk rock with Songs from the Wood (1977), Heavy Horses (1978), and Stormwatch (1979). In the early 1980s, the band underwent a major line-up change and moved into electronic rock with the albums A (1980), The Broadsword and the Beast (1982), and Under Wraps (1984). The band won their sole Grammy Award for the 1987 album Crest of a Knave, which saw them returning to a hard rock style. Jethro Tull have sold an estimated 60 million albums worldwide, with 11 gold and 5 platinum albums. They have been described by Rolling Stone as "one of the most commercially successful and eccentric progressive rock bands".
The band ceased studio recording activity in the 2000s, but continued to tour until splitting in 2011. Following the band's split, Anderson and Barre continued to record and tour as solo artists, with Anderson's band billed variously as both "Jethro Tull" and "Ian Anderson" solo. Anderson said in 2014 that Jethro Tull had come "more or less to an end". In 2017, however, Anderson revived the Jethro Tull name and released new studio albums in the 2020s. The current group includes musicians who were part of Jethro Tull during the last years of its initial run, as well as newer musicians associated with Anderson's solo band, without Barre's involvement.

</artistdesc>
  <label>Chrysalis</label>
</album>