by Bruce Eder
Released just as punk was taking hold on the public's imagination in America and making groups like Jethro Tull seem like dinosaurs on their way to extinction, Bursting Out became a seemingly perpetual denizen of the cutout bins for years afterward. However, it happened to be a good album, a more-than-decent capturing of a live Tull concert from Europe. The sound is remarkably good, given the group's arena rock status at the time, and the repertoire is a solid representation of the group's history, going all the way back to &A New Day Yesterday& from their second album and up through 1977's Songs from the Wood, with stops along the way for &Bouree,& &Aqualung,& &Locomotive Breath,& &Cross-Eyed Mary,& and a compact reprise of Thick as a Brick. Some of these tracks work better than others -- the tendency here is to play loud and hard, and sometimes that just doesn't translate well on record; seeing &Locomotive Breath& probably worked better than hearing it.