Catfish Rising

Catfish Rising
Studio album by Jethro Tull
Released 10 September 1991 (US)
23 September 1991 (UK)
Recorded Early 1991
Genre Progressive rock, hard rock, blues rock
Length 42:49 (Vinyl) 60:24 (CD)
Label Chrysalis
Producer Jethro Tull
Jethro Tull chronology
Live at Hammersmith '84
(1990)
Catfish Rising
(1991)
A Little Light Music
(1992)
Singles from
Catfish Rising
  1. "Rocks on the Road"
    Released: 1991
  2. "This Is Not Love"
    Released: 1991
  3. "Still Loving You Tonight"
    Released: 1991
  4. "Doctor to My Disease"
    Released: 1991
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Catfish Rising is the 18th studio album by the British rock group Jethro Tull, released in 1991. It is the first Tull album to feature keyboardist Andrew Giddings. The album forgoes the synthesizers and electronic instruments that were prominent in Tull's 80's albums, instead opting for a hard rock, blues sound.

Track listing

Vinyl edition

All tracks written by Ian Anderson.

Side one
No.TitleLength
1."This Is Not Love"3:56
2."Occasional Demons"3:48
3."Rocks on the Road"5:30
4."Thinking Round Corners"3:31
5."Still Loving You Tonight"4:30
Side two
No.TitleLength
1."Doctor to My Disease"4:34
2."Like a Tall Thin Girl"3:36
3."Sparrow on the Schoolyard Wall"5:21
4."Roll Yer Own"4:25
5."Gold-Tipped Boots, Black Jacket and Tie"3:38

CD edition

  • "Night in the Wilderness" appeared as the B-side to many Catfish Rising -era singles.
  • The live version of "Jump Start" appeared as the B-side to several single releases of "This Is Not Love".

Personnel

Jethro Tull
  • Ian Anderson – vocals, acoustic and electric guitars, acoustic and electric mandolins, flute, percussion, keyboards, drums
  • Martin Barre – electric guitar
  • Dave Pegg – electric and acoustic bass guitars
  • Doane Perry – drums
Additional personnel
  • Andy Giddings – keyboards on tracks one, four and eight
  • Foss Patterson – keyboards on track 10
  • John Bundrick – keyboards on track 11
  • Matt Pegg – bass on tracks one, four and seven
  • Scott Hunter - drums on track 5[2]

References

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