After the conclusion of the
A tour in late February 1981, Jethro Tull was in need of a new keyboardist and drummer, as keyboardist
Eddie Jobson, who billed himself as a "special guest" when performing with Tull, and drummer
Mark Craney had departed with the conclusion of the tour.
Cat Stevens drummer
Gerry Conway was recruited due to being a longtime acquaintance of the band as well as his connections to
Fairport Convention, Tull bassist
Dave Pegg's band. Anderson, Barre, Pegg and Conway began recording sessions in March 1981 at Maison Rouge Studios with Anderson playing keyboards, recording until July when the band took a four-month break. While the sessions had produced several tracks, only two ("Beastie" and "Watching Me, Watching You") would make it to the final album, with the rest cut as Anderson felt that "overall they didn't have a theme or a concept about them that was driving them towards a certain conclusion." In late summer,
Peter-John Vettese was hired as the band's new keyboardist after answering an ad for the position placed in
Melody Maker.
Chrysalis Records had suggested that the band pursue working with an outside producer on their next album. Canadian producer
Bob Ezrin, known for his work with
Alice Cooper,
Kiss and
Pink Floyd, was initially selected; however after Ezrin had to pull out at the last minute, American producer
Keith Olsen was selected. Recording resumed at Maison Rouge in November 1981 with the newly completed band and Olsen producing. The band quickly found Olsen's working style clashing with theirs; while Anderson described Olsen as "a nice enough chap" he described his method of recording with no
equalization or effects as "a way of working that was completely alien to me". Other members of the band also found themselves in disagreement with Olsen, including Pegg who described Olsen's selection as "record company shite". The band were also disturbed that Olsen's "personal lifestyle choices were not those of the rest of us." Former
Yardbird Paul Samwell-Smith was ultimately brought in as a new producer for the album after a recommendation from Conway, who had previously worked with him in Cat Stevens' band. Samwell-Smith arrived in mid-December and the band recorded with him until the album was mastered in February 1982. Samwell-Smith, who described his role on the album as "very much a case of looking to Ian to see what he wanted and then to help him do it", was praised by the band who found him easy to work with. The album was the last recorded by Tull at Maison Rouge, as Anderson sold it in 1983. The album was originally intended to be called
Beastie, corresponding to the first track on side one. But during production, the band deliberated over the preference between
Beastie and
Broadsword, the first track on side two. In the end, they decided (as on
Aqualung) to give each side its own title and thus its own identity, and this time to combine both in the album title. ==Artwork and packaging==