Lyrics to
March The Mad Scientist

Released by Jethro Tull in 1975
From the Album: Minstrel In The Gallery |

This version of March The Mad Scientist was released by Jethro Tull in 1975.

Our Jethro Tull Songs profile has March The Mad Scientist lyrics from 1975 and most if not all of the lyrics by Jethro Tull that we have here at Decade Lyrics.

Here's more interesting things in songs and lyrics tied to Jethro Tull or about the 1970s in general.

What would you like for Christmas:
a new polarity?
You’re binary, and desperate to deal in high figures
that lick us with their hotter flame
lick each and everyone the same.
And March, the mad scientist,
brings a new change
in ever-dancing colours.

He rings it here and he rings it,
but no one stops to see
the change of fate and the fate of change
that slips into his pocket
so he locks it all away from view
and shares not what he thought you knew.
And April is summer-bound,
And February’s blue.
And no one stops to see the colours.


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Jethro Tull has released many songs over the years besides March The Mad Scientist. Jethro Tull released songs from 1968 to 2003 spanning across albums like This Was, Stand Up, Benefit, Aqualung, Living In The Past, Thick As A Brick, A Passion Play, Warchild, Minstrel In The Gallery, Too Old To Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young To Die!, Songs From The Wood, Heavy Horses, Stormwatch, A, The Broadsword And The Beast, Under Wraps, Crest Of A Knave, Rock Island, Catfish Rising, Nightcap, Roots To Branches, J-Tull Dot Com, and The Jethro Tull Christmas Album. Decade Lyrics has over lyrics & songs by Jethro Tull.

If you're a fan of 1970s songs looking for more songs from 1975 or the 1970s overall, you've come to the right place!

About Lyrics and March The Mad Scientist by Jethro Tull

The lyrics to March The Mad Scientist are just the words, phrases, verses and chorus that Jethro Tull used when the song was created in 1975. The lyrics to March The Mad Scientist have both easy-to-spot meanings and hidden metaphors that have been discussed by the music press and fans, but only Jethro Tull and any collaborators know all of the inspirations for the song.

If you like etymology or breaking apart phrases and words, it is easy to understand the lyrics to March The Mad Scientist by Jethro Tull. The word "lyric" itself derives from the Latin word lyricus, with the actual English word lyrics applied to the definition "words set to music" listed in Stainer and Barrett's 1876 Dictionary of Musical Terms. Continuing the chain, the Latin word lyricus derives from the Greek word λυρικός or lyrikós. This somewhat means "poetry accompanied by the lyre" or "words set to music." You can easily see that by looking at the background of the word lyric, that the "lyrics to March The Mad Scientist" means the words set to the music of March The Mad Scientist, or poetry accompanied by the lyre played by Jethro Tull. The singular form "lyric" is still used to mean the complete words to a song. However, the singular form lyric is also commonly used to refer to a specific line (or phrase) within a song's lyrics. Hence, by this analysis of word structure, you could say that the lyric to March The Mad Scientist and the lyrics to March The Mad Scientist are both one and the same thing. None of this talk about the word Lyrics is really relevant to fans of Jethro Tull who came here looking just for the lyrics to March The Mad Scientist, but we feel it is still fun to learn what's behind commonly used words and lyrics in songs.

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