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View Full Version : Anyone grab the new Wilco album yet?


Slowhand
06-29-2009, 07:02 PM
Just picked it up and I'm liking what I've skimmed through so far. Pretty much picks up where 'Sky Blue Sky' left off, although there's a lot more going on in the background of this album as opposed to 'Sky Blue Sky'.

I'll be giving it a much more thorough run through this evening, so we'll see how that goes.

Wilco (2009)-Wilco

http://i164.photobucket.com/albums/u29/chsretiredathlete/Wilco2009.jpg

Track List:

01. Wilco (The Song) 2:59
02. Deeper Down 2:59
03. One Wing 3:42
04. Bull Black Nova 5:39
05. You And I 3:26
06. You Never Know 4:21
07. Country Disappeared 4:02
08. Solitaire 3:04
09. I'll Fight 4:23
10. Sonny Feeling 4:13
11. Everlasting Everything 4:00


Wilco's seventh disc, Wilco (the album), took shape quickly in January '09 after the band traveled to Auckland, New Zealand to participate in an Oxfam International benefit project. The band began cutting tracks for the new album, producing it themselves with the help of engineer Jim Scott. The sextet completed the disc at its Chicago studio and performed some of the new material in April at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival; where the Times-Picayune praised the band's 'thrilling, nuanced set.'

Wilco (the album) combines the intimacy of its previous studio disc, Sky Blue Sky (2007), with the experimentation of A Ghost Is Born (2004) in a set that boasts strong melodies and gorgeous, often unabashedly pop arrangements. Wilco has clearly laid out the welcome mat to admirers of all aspects of its career; in fact, the disc opens with 'Wilco (the song)' originally unveiled in the group's performance on The Colbert Report last October in which Tweedy & Co. offer their fans 'a sonic shoulder to cry on,' promising,'Wilco will love you, baby.'

Talking to a Rolling Stone reporter, drummer Glenn Kotche calls it 'a great, upbeat song professing our love for our fans.' That said, Tweedy's lyrics remain frank and fascinating; Rolling Stone calls them 'sly, insightful and often heartbreaking.'

As with Sky Blue Sky, most of the tracks are concise in shape; 'Bull Black Nova,' however, features a dramatically building arrangement and thrilling guitar crescendo, more duel than jam. It's followed by the gentler 'You and I,' a duet between Tweedy and Canadian singer-songwriter Feist, and 'You Never Know,' a gloriously anthemic track that is the album's first single. The disc culminates with 'Everlasting Everything' a piano-driven ballad with delicate sonic nuances that lyrically celebrates love's endurance.

jakesford
06-29-2009, 10:24 PM
I haven't gotten it yet, but I love my tweedy... Loosefur or Wilco its all good:cool:

Yale
06-30-2009, 12:13 AM
You know the album premiere was at Good Records on Greenville Ave, right?

Geor!
06-30-2009, 09:30 AM
Never understood why they have such a loyal following.