PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • A Passion Play
rdfs:comment
  • A Passion Play is the sixth studio album by Jethro Tull, released in 1973. Like its predecessor, Thick as a Brick (1972), it is a concept album comprising a single continuous song (which is split into two parts on the original vinyl LP release). The theme of the concept is apparently the spiritual journey of one man in the afterlife. Upon its original release, it received generally negative reviews. Nevertheless, it sold well enough to reach No. 1 on the charts in the United States. In the United Kingdom it reached only No. 13.
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Length
  • 240.0
  • 72.0
  • 134.0
  • 269.0
  • 64.0
  • 43.0
  • 95.0
  • 118.0
  • 71.0
  • 258.0
  • 74.0
  • 260.0
  • 2705.0
  • 238.0
  • 235.0
  • 1295.0
  • 278.0
  • 1410.0
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Label
Extra
  • The 2003 release includes this additional 7-minute QuickTime video, which was used in the original APP concerts.
Producer
Name
  • A Passion Play
Genre
Type
  • Album
headline
  • Bonus tracks
  • Side one
  • Side two
  • Gold CD Edition
collapsed
  • yes
Title
  • Epilogue
  • Best Friends
  • Prelude
  • 1.0
  • 2.0
  • 608.0
  • Memory Bank
  • Critique Oblique
  • Flight from Lucifer
  • Forest Dance No. 1
  • Forest Dance No. 2
  • Lifebeats
  • Magus Perdé
  • Overseer Overture
  • Re-Assuring Tune
  • The Foot of Our Stairs
  • The Silver Cord
  • The Story of the Hare Who Lost His Spectacles
Last album
  • Living in the Past
This Album
  • A Passion Play
Cover
  • A_Passion_Play.jpg
Next album
  • War Child
Released
  • --07-23
  • --07-06
Artist
Recorded
  • March 1973, Morgan Studios, London
Reviews
  • *Allmusic *Melody Maker *New Musical Express *Rolling Stone *Sputnik Music 3.5/5
extra column
  • Notes
abstract
  • A Passion Play is the sixth studio album by Jethro Tull, released in 1973. Like its predecessor, Thick as a Brick (1972), it is a concept album comprising a single continuous song (which is split into two parts on the original vinyl LP release). The theme of the concept is apparently the spiritual journey of one man in the afterlife. Upon its original release, it received generally negative reviews. Nevertheless, it sold well enough to reach No. 1 on the charts in the United States. In the United Kingdom it reached only No. 13.