Christmas gigs are sacred not profane
Jethro Tull's cathedral benefit shows bring atheists wonder, writes George Pitcher
I went along to read some Genesis at a local 9 Lessons & Carols service last Sunday evening, wearing the coat I’d worn last week on my annual cathedral benefit tour with the evergreen folk-rock band Jethro Tull.
The coat still bore the stick-on backstage pass, access all areas, that acts as some form of security for band, crew and instruments. I hadn’t had time, or the skill to be honest, to soak it off gently to avoid damaging the fabric.
“Does he still stand on one leg?”
A number of congregants, both men and women – I hesitate, for contemporaneous reasons, to add “of a certain age” – noticed it. “Does Ian Anderson still stand on one leg when he plays the flute?” asked one. “I’ve still got some Tull albums from the Seventies,” added another. “Great band,” affirmed a third.
It strikes me that more church congregants recognise Tull than Tull fans recognise the Church of England. That’s to be expected, given that this is a tribe that grew up with a prevalent post-modern atheism. I remember in the early days following a pair of increasingly hairless old hippies into one of these gigs. “Looks like a flippin’ church,” said one. “That’s because it is a flippin’ church, you idiot,” replied the other (though naturally they didn’t say “flippin’”).
These cathedral shows, of which there have been about 30 now, sell out easily and very soon after tickets go on sale in the summer. We played Bristol and Salisbury (again) last week. The larger cathedrals benefit to the tune of upwards of £25,000 for a couple of hours of Christmassy rock ‘n’ roll. They come because they like the sound of Jethro Tull and Anderson’s songwriting canon.
Ownership of their cathedral
But there’s something else going on. They come, these predominantly unchurched people, to take ownership of their cathedral. They may come because it’s Christmas and it’s the right place to be. They come to be together, if not as the Body of Christ then at least in some sort of communion, which is true of any rock concert gathering in a corporeal way, but which is lent something transcendent in a gothic cathedral.
This raises questions for me. The first is this: Come Christmas, what is it that they and we have all been waiting for, this crowd of people who seem strangely anticipative, not just to hear one of their favourite bands, but to hear something else in the air in a sacred, ancient place?
I have a theatrical role, somewhere between master of ceremonies, band confessor and rocking retainer. Top hat, tails, leggings, codpiece, pixie boots and a knobbed cane. Oh yes, and my clerical collar. It’s the dog collar that connects me to a reality beyond the show business.
Struck by how moved people are
In addition to cavorting, I deliver a Christmas blessing during the intro to the last number of the night (usually “May the joy of the angels, the wonder of the shepherds…” etc.). I’m struck by how moved many people are and remark on it afterwards in the crowd. There’s a real hunger for peace and goodwill in a broken world, not just an appetite for a thumping bass line to swing hips to, as they raise their eyes to a vaulted, lit ceiling far away, sometimes a thousand years old.
My second question is relatedly this: What does a merry Christmas mean in this context? Quite often, Tull’s Christmas song from 1977 will be on the setlist, Ring Out, Solstice Bells. It’s pagan in theme (“seven druids dance in seven time”) but it engenders in this setting a strong folk memory of light and cheer in the darkness. There’s a defiance of the dark here and the cathedral stands as a bulwark against it down the centuries. Be of good cheer because all will be well – that’s what it means to wish a merry Christmas.
Comfort of familiar and eternal
A final question: Why do they come back every year, this motley band of ageing rockers (though there are youngsters too)? Part of the answer to that is the comfort of the familiar and eternal – and I don’t mean only songs that are up to half a century old. It’s a truth among other truths that religious observance is growing in some societal pockets, among Gen Z men for example.
Cathedrals aren’t like parish churches, where you may feel part of a small community. Cathedrals are a part of the world, in all its harsh reality. Katherine Amphlett has written of Coventry cathedral (where Tull has played) and a feeling of how Christmas is far from twee in these settings – the Christmas story is hard and subversive. To my mind, it’s a story about persecution, homelessness, displacement, oppression, refugees and misogyny.
A cathedral is big and strong enough to bring all that to. It always has been. We see some of that recognised in the audiences for these Christmas shows. Perhaps you’ll join us at a cathedral near you next year? Meanwhile, merry Christmas.
George Pitcher is a visiting fellow at the LSE and an Anglican priest
Salisbury was my fifteenth Christmas show. You, Reverend Pitcher, always recognize me. I come over from San Francisco for these events, no one I know understands why I do it (repeatedly) as it is a particularly unpleasant time to be in England. I am not a person of faith so much as a spiritual human. Christmas, at its best, teaches lessons of what humans can be, should be, and often are not. Why yes, I did have several Jethro Tull albums and enjoy the older bands. But it is not that. I could see them in many venues at warmer times of the year, sometimes close to where I live. It is the way that these songs, these magnificent places, the seasonal aspirations, and, Reverend Pitcher, the things you say and your presence, keep me returning. Come April I am searching daily to discover what cathedrals will be hosting that year. Your blessing one year noted that this time of year can remind us to care for those in need. That has stayed with me. Yes, the setlist is mostly the same, and yes, the travel to these far flung locations from London is often long, but I will keep returning, in part to celebrate my ability to do so, to celebrate Ian's presence, to hear your blessing, and to be reminded of the higher aspirations that humanity may seek. These mean the world to me. Fred Walder, San Francisco
Whenever I see that battered top hat I'm reminded of the scene in Armageddon when the Owen Wilson character is psychologically assessed for spaceflight. Asked what really annoys him, he says " I'll tell you one thing that really drives me nuts, is people who think Jethro Tull is just a person in the band". When space opera met prog rock.