Living in the Past (song)

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"Living in the Past"
Living in the Past - Jethro Tull.jpg
French picture sleeve [1]
Single by Jethro Tull
B-side "Driving Song"
Released2 May 1969 UK [2] [3]
October 1972 US [4]
Recorded3 & 18 March 1969 [5] [6]
Studio Vantone Sound Studio, West Orange, NJ [7] & United Western Recorders, Los Angeles, CA
Genre
Length3:18
Label Island WIP 6056
Songwriter(s) Ian Anderson
Producer(s)
Jethro Tull singles chronology
"Love Story"
(1968)
"Living in the Past"
(1969)
"Bourée"
(1969)
Official audio
"Living in the Past" on YouTube

"Living in the Past" is a song by British progressive rock group Jethro Tull. It is one of the band's best-known songs, and it is notable for being written in the unusual 5
4
time signature
. The use of quintuple meter is quickly noted from the beginning rhythmic bass pattern, though it can also be explained as a distinct 6
8
+ 2
4
syncopated rhythm.[ citation needed ]

Contents

Composition and recording

According to the composer, Ian Anderson, he wrote the tune in approximately one hour in his room at a Holiday Inn 'on the banks of the Charles River,' Boston, Massachusetts, on 12 February 1969. He and his manager, Terry Ellis, were checking in 'a day off here before the show,' ahead of a three-day residency 13 – 15 February 1969 at the Boston Tea Party rock club. When he handed it to Ellis later, he replied, 'Wow! I'll book a studio next week, when we we’re in the New York area.' [9]

At the end of the East Coast leg of their US tour, the backing tracks were recorded at Vantone Sound Studio, West Orange, New Jersey on 3 March 1969 [6] (described by Anderson as a "cheap studio in New Jersey.") Apparently, much of the recording was of "a small local ensemble of session musicians – the cheapest we could find," and later overdubbed by band members. Anderson described overdubbing his vocals in San Francisco during mid-March; [9] but conflicting reports identify 18 March at United Western Recorders, Los Angeles, California, as correct. [5] It was also the date "Driving Song" was recorded, [7] released as the b-side of Jethro Tull's fourth single, "Living in the Past", on 2 May 1969 to UK audiences. [2] Meanwhile, the band returned to London in mid-April to begin work on their second album, Stand Up . [10]

After reaching number 3 on the UK Singles Chart, [11] it was released in several other countries, but only promotionally in the United States in July 1969. It was not until October 1972 that it was commercially released in the US, [4] as the lead single and title track of Living in the Past, a double compilation LP of the band's UK-only releases and outtakes recorded from 1968 to 1971. [7] It became the band's first Top 20 hit in the US, peaking at #11. The 1972 version was remixed, replacing a flute overdub with an organ part. In 1993, a remix on the song went to #31 on the US dance chart. [12] In 2001, it was included as a "bonus track" for the CD reissue of Stand Up. [13] A Steven Wilson remix "sympathetic to both the original and later mixes" [14] was included on the 2016 "Elevated Edition" reissue, alongside flat transfers of the original 1969 mono and (promo) stereo mixes.

"Living in the Past" was ranked the fifth best Jethro Tull song by Rock – Das Gesamtwerk der größten Rock-Acts im Check. [15]

Anderson has described the song as a critical reflection of the hippie lifestyle and a general naivete of the era:

Lines like "we'll go walking out while others shout of war's disaster" reflect my rather cynical view of much of the world in the late sixties.

[...]

I was never drawn to the fashions, the free love, the drug experiences and the drug culture that people seemed willing to get into.

[...]

So when I sang "now there's revolution, but they don't know what they're fighting," I was just saying forget all that stuff, let's stay in a more realistic world with more straightforward values. Not necessarily my personal viewpoint all the time, but as a reaction to that rather trendy pretence at revolution and infatuation with the present, in the sense of living for today and having a good time – something I usually felt a bit awkward about. But I'm a party pooper, you know that."

Ian Anderson, Jethro Tull: Stand Up – The Elevated Edition, page 59

Chart performance

Release history

Personnel

Source: [27]

Jethro Tull

Additional personnel

Cover versions

The song was first covered as an instrumental by CCS in 1970. Other cover versions include: [28]

See also

Related Research Articles

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"Too Old to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die" is a song by British progressive rock band Jethro Tull. Written by frontman Ian Anderson, it was released on their 1976 album of the same name. Written about an aging biker, the song title was inspired by a flight Anderson had taken in the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Teacher (Jethro Tull song)</span> 1970 single by Jethro Tull

"Teacher" is a song by the British rock band Jethro Tull, first released as the B-side to the January 1970 single "The Witch's Promise", on the Chrysalis label. Written by the band's frontman Ian Anderson, the song is a comment on the corruption of self-styled gurus who used their followers for their own gain.

References

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