| Thick as a Brick 2 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | ||||
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 2 April 2012 [1] | |||
| Recorded | March 2011, November 2011 | |||
| Genre | Progressive rock | |||
| Length | 53:45 | |||
| Label | Chrysalis/EMI Records 50999 6 38726 2 0 F2-38726 | |||
| Producer | Ian Anderson | |||
| Ian Anderson chronology | ||||
| ||||
Thick as a Brick 2, abbreviated TAAB 2 and subtitled Whatever Happened to Gerald Bostock?, is the fifth studio album by Jethro Tull frontman Ian Anderson, released in 2012 as a sequel album to Thick as a Brick , Jethro Tull's 1972 parody concept album. It entered the Billboard chart at No. 55.
According to Anderson, TAAB 2 (which he pronounces /tæbˈtuː/ ) focuses on Gerald Bostock, the fictional boy genius author of the original album, forty years later. "I wonder what the eight-year-old Gerald Bostock would be doing today. Would the fabled newspaper still exist?" [2] The follow-up album presents five divergent, hypothetical life stories for Gerald Bostock, including a greedy investment banker, a homosexual homeless man, a soldier in the Afghan War, a sanctimonious evangelist preacher, and a most ordinary man who (married and childless) runs a corner store; by the end of the album, however, all five possibilities seem to converge in a similar concluding moment of gloomy or pitiful solitude. [3] In March 2012, to follow the style of the mock-newspaper cover (The St Cleve Chronicle and Linwell Advertiser) of the original Thick as a Brick album, an online newspaper was set up, simply titled StCleve.
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| PopMatters | 5/10 [1] |
| Sputnik Music | 4.0/5 [5] |
AllMusic gave three stars to the album, calling it: "cleaner and streamlined, not as indulgent or idealistic as [Anderson's] younger work, boasting a more sensible structure, yet it still bears all of his signatures from the flute to rambling folk-rock". [6]
The album debuted at No. 55 on the Billboard chart, at No. 13 in the German Albums Chart, [7] at No. 12 in the Finnish Album Chart, [8] at No. 19 in the Austrian Album Charts, [9] at No. 30 in the Norwegian Album Charts, [10] at No. 31 in the Swiss Album Charts, [11] at number No. 74 on the Canadian Albums Chart, [12] at No. 35 on the UK charts, [13] at No. 76 in the Dutch Album Chart [14] and at No. 99 on the Spanish charts. [15]
Anderson performed the entire album live on tour in 2012. [16] In August 2014, Jethro Tull's Ian Anderson released CD/DVD/Blu-ray Thick as a Brick - Live in Iceland . The concert was recorded in Reykjavík, Iceland on 22 June 2012 and featured complete Thick as a Brick and Thick as a Brick 2 performances by the Ian Anderson Touring Band. [17]
The original Thick as a Brick consists of only two long tracks comprising a single song, while TAAB 2 lists 17 separate songs merged into 13 distinct tracks (some labelled as medleys), although also all flowing together much like a single song.
All tracks are written by Ian Anderson.
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "From a Pebble Thrown" | 3:05 |
| 2. | "Medley: Pebbles Instrumental / Might-Have-Beens" | 4:21 |
| 3. | "Medley: Upper Sixth Loan Shark / Banker Bets, Banker Wins" | 5:41 |
| 4. | "Swing It Far" | 3:28 |
| 5. | "Adrift and Dumfounded" | 4:25 |
| 6. | "Old School Song" | 3:07 |
| 7. | "Wootton Bassett Town" | 3:44 |
| 8. | "Medley: Power and Spirit / Give Till It Hurts" | 3:11 |
| 9. | "Medley: Cosy Corner / Shunt and Shuffle" | 3:37 |
| 10. | "A Change of Horses" | 8:04 |
| 11. | "Confessional" | 3:09 |
| 12. | "Kismet in Suburbia" | 4:17 |
| 13. | "What-ifs, Maybes and Might-Have-Beens" | 3:36 |
| Total length: | 53:45 | |
The 2-disc edition includes a DVD-9 with the following contents:
| Chart (2012) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Billboard Top 200 [18] | 55 |
| Top Rock Albums [18] | 18 |
| UK Albums Chart [19] | 35 |
| Hungarian Albums Chart [20] | 2 |
{{cite web}}: |archive-url= is malformed: timestamp (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)