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| Jethro Tull | Primary Artist |
| Ian Anderson | Acoustic Guitar, Flute, Vocals |
| Martin Barre | Electric Guitar |
| Barriemore Barlow | Percussion, Drums |
| John Evan | Organ, Piano |
| Patrick Halling | Violin |
| Jeffrey Hammond-Hammond | Bass Guitar, String Bass |
| David Palmer | Conductor |
| Rita Eddowes | Violin |
| Elizabeth Edwards | Violin |
| Bridget Procter | Violin |
| Katharine Thulborn | Cello |
| Ian Anderson | Producer |
| Robin Black | Engineer |
| J.E. Garnett | Cover Art |
| David Palmer | Orchestral Arrangements |
| Ron Kriss | Cover Art |
Editorial Reviews
All Music Guide
Minstrel in the Gallery was Tull's most artistically successful and elaborately produced album since Thick as a Brick and harkened back to that album with the inclusion of a 17-minute extended piece ("Baker Street Muse"). Although English folk elements abound, this is really a hard rock showcase on a par with -- and perhaps even more aggressive than -- anything on Aqualung. The title track is a superb showcase for the group, freely mixing folk melodies, lilting flute passages, and archaic, pre-Elizabethan feel, and the fiercest electric rock in the group's history -- parts of it do recall phrases from A Passion Play, but all of it is more successful than anything on War Child. Martin Barre's attack on the guitar is as...