Crest of a Knave - Jethro Tull

Crest of a Knave

Jethro Tull

  • Genre: Rock
  • Release Date: 1987-09-01
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 10

  • ℗ 2005 Parlophone Records Ltd, a Warner Music Group Company

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Steel Monkey 3:37 USD 0.99
2
Farm On the Freeway 6:31 USD 0.99
3
Jump Start 4:53 USD 0.99
4
Said She Was a Dancer 3:41 USD 0.99
5
Dogs In the Midwinter 4:29 USD 0.99
6
Budapest 10:05 USD Album Only
7
Mountain Men 6:21 USD 0.99
8
The Waking Edge 4:47 USD 0.99
9
Raising Steam 4:12 USD 0.99
10
Part of the Machine 6:54 USD 0.99
Crest of a Knave - Jethro Tull
Cover Album Crest of a Knave - Jethro Tull

Reviews

  • Still the best album over Metallica....
    4
    By Drummer4Ever
    The catagory was Hard Rock/Heavy Metal. Jethro Tull is not heavy metal but a great rock band. The music industry was afraid to tear down the slash and let the two genres stand on their own. I think the music business was trying to bury heavy metal in America but couldn't stop it in Europe.
  • Respectable comeback.
    3
    By Reckia6
    Steel Monkey is one of my all time favorite Jethro Tull songs. It's a tune I can never get sick of. The next two songs are also quite good but I rarely venture past these three songs. Not that the rest of this is bad, just not particularly memorable. Ian Anderson sings like Gordon Lightfoot on a few songs. I don't mind that Tull sound like Dire Straits and ZZ Top at times. Good album. Three and a half stars.
  • One of my favorite Tull albums
    4
    By broom grass
    This is one of my favorite Tull albums. There isn’t a bad song in the bunch. Track 4 in particular reminds me of some of Dire Straits’ work.
  • 10/10
    5
    By Steelmonkey23
    Ten songs.....ten Tull bullseyes...Budapest among best Tull cuts ever....Jump Start, Farm on the Freeway and Part of the Machine ear-boggling.
  • Digital 80's
    4
    By Sogggyyy
    Won best heavy metal album award at the Grammys. Great Tull album but not heavy metal. I would say this Grammy win was a bad omen to be for the greedy recording industry.