Jeffrey Hammond (born July 30, 1946, in Blackpool,
sometimes credited as Jeffrey Hammond-Hammond) was
a bass
player for the progressive rock band Jethro Tull.
One of several band members from Blackpool, England, he met
band leader Ian Anderson in
school when he was 17 years old, eventually joining a band
with Anderson and future Jethro Tull members John
Evan and Barriemore Barlow. After
leaving Grammar School, he opted to study painting
rather than continue with music, but he was convinced to join Jethro
Tull in Jan 1971. During the time of Tull's dramatic stage costumes,
Jeffrey started wearing a black and white striped suit and played a
matching bass guitar, this became his trademark and a feature of Tull's
Thick
as a Brick stage performance.
Hammond burned the suit in Dec 1975 on his departure from the
band. He played on the following albums:
- Aqualung (1971)
- Thick as a Brick
(1972)
- Living in the Past
(1972)
- A Passion Play
(1973)
- War Child (1974)
- Minstrel in the Gallery
(1975)
He then left the band to continue his career in art. According
to Ian Anderson's sleevenotes for the 2002 reissue of Tull's Minstrel in the Gallery,
Hammond "returned to his first love, painting, and put down his bass
guitar, never to play again."
Hammond's replacement as bass player was John
Glascock, a professional musician. Hammond had required considerable
practice and rehearsal to play Jethro Tull's music. Despite his being a
friend of Ian Anderson this
lack of acumen led to some friction and tended to drag out the
rehearsal process.
Before joining the band as a performer, Hammond appears to
have spent much time with them in the background. Ian Anderson wrote
songs about his friend's idiosyncrasies, of which the best known are "A
Song for Jeffrey", and "Jeffrey goes to Leicester
Square". Introducing the first song, in the days before Hammond joined
the band, Anderson would portray him in slightly condescending terms as
someone with emotional problems who lost his way easily, as described
in the first line of the song. His eventual appearance as a band
member, therefore, was something of a surprise.
Hammond narrated the surreal piece "The Story of the
Hare Who Lost His Spectacles" on the album "A
Passion Play", and the related short film. He also received
credit, along with Anderson and John Evan, for writing the piece.
Hammond was also credited with creating the "claghorn", a
hybrid instrument. He took the mouthpiece and bell from a toy saxophone
and attached them to the body of a flute. The result can be heard on
the track "Dharma for One" on the album This Was.
External link
| v • d • e Jethro
Tull |
| Ian Anderson | Martin
Barre | Jonathan Noyce | Andrew
Giddings | Doane Perry |
| Mick Abrahams | Clive
Bunker | Glenn Cornick | Barriemore
Barlow | Jeffrey
Hammond | John Evan | David
Palmer | John Glascock | Mark
Craney | Peter-John Vettese | Eddie
Jobson | Dave Pegg | Gerry Conway | Maartin
Allcock | Dave Mattacks | Tony
Iommi |
| Discography |
| Studio: This Was
| Stand Up
| Benefit | Aqualung
| Thick as a Brick
| A Passion Play
| War Child |Minstrel in the Gallery
| Too Old
to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die! | Songs
From The Wood | Heavy
Horses | Stormwatch
| A
| Broadsword and the Beast
| Under Wraps | A
Classic Case | Crest
of a Knave | Rock
Island | Catfish
Rising | Roots
to Branches | J-Tull
Dot Com | The Jethro Tull
Christmas Album
Live: Nothing
Is Easy: Live at the Isle of Wight 1970 | Bursting
Out | Live at Hammersmith '84
| Jethro Tull In Concert
| A Little Light Music
| Living with the Past
| Aqualung Live
Compilation: M.U. - The
Best Of Jethro Tull - Vol I | Repeat -
The Best of Jethro Tull - Vol II | Original
Masters | 20 Years of
Jethro Tull: Highlights | The
Best Of Jethro Tull - The Anniversary Collection
| Through the Years
| The Very Best of Jethro
Tull | The Essential Jethro Tull
| The Best Of Acoustic
Compilation containing
previously-unreleased material: Living
in the Past | Nightcap
Box set: 20 Years of Jethro Tull
| 25th Anniversary Box Set
|