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Wilco Tickets

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Wilco

Wilco specialize in approximating Americana backdrops, orchestral pop-like arrangements, and the ability to teeter back and fall apart during a song, only to catch themselves and pull it all together by the end. Following the 1994 breakup of Alternative Country pioneers Uncle Tupelo, co-founder Jeff Tweedy formed Wilco and recorded the rootsy A.M. album. Being There took Wilco's sound to heartfelt and cerebral depths, while Mermaid Avenue, an album of Woody Guthrie lyrics for which the band (and Billy Bragg) wrote music, earned them a Grammy nomination. In 1999, Summer Teeth found Wilco running towards a sunny, West Coast-inspired pop utopia of complex introspection. Wilco's endearing characteristics remain consistent through each of their recordings as Tweedy's raspy vocals sometimes sound like a pubescent boy's voice changing, while on other songs he affects a more groggy and hungover inflection. Upon recording their fourth album, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot the band parted ways with founding member and guitar player Jay Bennett (the big, white guy with the David Pirneresque dreadlocks). Then for a long time, nothing happened (their album was shelved by The Man). The band later bought the tapes of this adventurous album from Warner/Reprise for $50,000 and released it on a smaller (and obviously much cooler) label. It is with this fourth album that Wilco succeeds at leaving Alt Country geekyness (and Alt Country geeks) behind to sojourn into more moody, dislocated songwriting that blends deconstructed Power Pop with an almost Radioheadesque sparseness, all tangled up inside sonic noise experiments and amputated guitar leads.

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Upcoming Schedule
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City
Dates
Auburn Hills
12/7/08
 
Halifax
11/29/08
 
Kanata
12/2/08
 
Montreal
12/1/08
 
New York
12/15/08
 
Philadelphia
12/12/08
 
Toronto
12/4/08
 
 

About Wilco

This US quintet was initially viewed as part of the "No Depression" movement of neo-country rock acts in the early 90s - one of a clutch of bands eschewing the melancholia and sentimentality associated with the genre but retaining its musical traditions. The band was formed from the ashes of Uncle Tupelo, a unit with similar musical inclinations and one that also accrued significant critical respect during its lifetime. Jeff Tweedy (vocals/guitar) is the creative engine behind both bands (in Uncle Tupelo's case with Jay Farrar, who enjoyed subsequent success heading Son Volt), his songs regularly attaining a universality and intimacy that has reminded some of Sebadoh.

Wilco was formed with fellow Uncle Tupelo members John Stirratt (bass), Ken Coomer (drums) and multi-instrumentalist Max Johnson. Their 1995 debut A.M. was a continuation of Uncle Tupelo's sound, but sold modestly. Johnson was replaced by the less traditional Jay Bennett for the follow-up, Being There. The band agreed to take a cut in their royalties in order to facilitate the release of this double album, and Tweedy was rewarded with further critical plaudits, including several comparing the album favorably to the Rolling Stones' Exile On Main Street. This time much of the material was informed by the birth of his son, Spencer Miller Tweedy. As he told Billboard magazine in 1996: "It was actually really healthy to understand what real life is about for the first time." The ever productive Tweedy also recorded two albums with Golden Smog, a side project involving, among others, members of the Jayhawks and Soul Asylum. In 1998, the whole band worked with English singer-songwriter Billy Bragg on the acclaimed Mermaid Avenue project, adding music to lyrics bequeathed by American folk legend Woody Guthrie (a second volume was released two years later). In contrast, the next Wilco release Summer Teeth was an album swimming in the lush pop sounds of synthesizers, mellotrons and brass.

Despite the critical plaudits for their last two albums, the band left Reprise Records in August 2001 following a dispute over the bold digital textures of their projected album. The news was accompanied by the departure of songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Bennett. The band made the disputed material available on Tweedy's website, before signing a deal with the Warners-affiliate Nonesuch Records for the release of the album. Ironically, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot proved to be Wilco's most ecstatically praised and bestselling release to date. During the same period Tweedy composed the music for the Ethan Hawke movie, Chelsea Walls and collaborated with Yankee Hotel Foxtrot mixer Jim O'Rourke and Wilco drummer Glenn Kotche on the Loose Fur project. The next Wilco album was delayed while Tweedy underwent rehab for an addiction to painkillers, brought on it transpired by the crippling migraines he had suffered for most of his adult life. Nevertheless, 2004's A Ghost Is Born was another artistic triumph with the presence of O'Rourke as co-producer spurring Tweedy and company on to an even less conventional take on the basic country rock format of their earlier albums. This was readily apparent on the 15-minute harmonic drone of "Less Than You Think" and the free jazz style guitar workout on "Spiders (Kidsmoke)". In the same year jazz rock guitarist Nels Cline joined the band.

External linkOfficial site (http://www.wilcoworld.net/)

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