Songs from the Wood (song)

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B-side"Jack-in-the-Green" (NZ)
Released19 May 1977 [1]
Recorded1976
"Songs from the Wood"
Single by Jethro Tull
from the album Songs from the Wood
B-side"Jack-in-the-Green" (NZ)
Released19 May 1977 [1]
Recorded1976
Genre
Length4:52
LabelChrysalis
SongwriterIan Anderson
ProducerIan Anderson
Jethro Tull singles chronology
"The Whistler"
(1977)
"Songs from the Wood"
(1977)
"Moths"
(1978)

"Songs from the Wood" is the title track off of English rock band Jethro Tull's album Songs from the Wood. Written by frontman Ian Anderson, it features a folk-rock style that characterizes the Songs from the Wood album.

Inspired by English folk tradition, the song was named by Ian Anderson as one of his top Jethro Tull songs. The song has since received critical acclaim and was released as a single in New Zealand in 1977.

"Songs from the Wood" was inspired by a book of English folk stories Ian Anderson had been given. He explained, "I wrote 'Songs From the Wood' based on elements of folklore and fantasy tales and traditions of the British rural environment. Our PR guy, Jo Lustig, had given me a book about English folklore as a Christmas present, and I thumbed through it and found lots of little interesting ideas and characters and stories and things that I decided to evolve into a series of songs."[2]

The song starts off with a cappella vocals before the flute and acoustic guitars make their appearance. Afterward, the rest of the band comes in. Anderson promises in the lyrics, "Songs from the wood make you feel much better."[3] Anderson later reflected, "[The song] is quite a nice one, because it has a lot of carefully contrived harmonies which I sang myself in the studio."[2]

When asked about the song in 2015, Anderson said, "This, the title song of our 1977 album, was unashamedly twee. It’s decorative folk rock. It openly extols the virtues of the countryside, and the values you want to impart through this to other people. I suppose it is country rock, but in the British sense. It’s all delivered with a fair amount of hefty music. There are big guitar riffs and a lot of flute as well. And it does get a little angry, but with a purpose."[4] He ranked the song as one of his top 10 Jethro Tull songs.[4]

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