Tag Archives: jeff tweedy

Video

Fun or funny?

Jeff Tweedy At The Opera House

Behind the Scenes with Wilco Frontman Jeff Tweedy – September 2011 – St. Louis Magazine from St. Louis Magazine on Vimeo.

This Whole Love, Wilco’s new disc, comes out on Sept 27. Nice that St. Louis magazine got head honcho Jeff Tweedy to strum one of the new tunes, “Dawned On Me,”  in a plush seat at the local Opera House (the singer grew up in local bedroom community Belleville). It’s usually Wilco stringman Nel Cline emoting over a phrase, but see if you can tell when Tweedy makes one of his “guitar faces.” Below you’ll find another song from the new disc.

Here’s the St. Louis Q&A

THIS WHOLE LOVE

01 “Art of Almost”
02 “I Might
03 “Sunloathe”
04 “Dawned On Me”
05 “Black Moon”
06 “Born Alone”
07 “Open Mind”
08 “Capitol City
09 “Standing O”
10 “Rising Red Lung “
11 “Whole Love”
12 “One Sunday Morning (Song For Jane Smiley’s Boyfriend)”

BTW, you know what Tweedy thinks of dissonance, don’t you?

Enter the Dragon:

Tweedy’s Solid Sound Includes Skronk

Was speaking with Jeff Tweedy about Nels Cline, and the conversation trickled into the way that noise has found a natural place in our culture (and therefore our music) at this late date. Wilco’s music has certainly bent to make way for an artful smidge of the stuff. The arrival of Nels a few years ago helped that along. Tweedy and company curate their Solid Sound Festival at Mass MOCA this weekend. Here’s the singer’s take on how rough sounds and jazz entered his life.

I personally feel like I’ve always responded to those elements. Being a child of punk rock, noisy music was my first loves, and to be honest I feel that even the early Dylan albums have a fair share of dissonance, whether its intentional or not. Those albums feel very chaotic to me. Early on I felt that I owned folk and country music  for myself a lot easier than I owned the things I loved about noise and dissonance. Initially, it felt harder for me to put them into the music honestly.  I feel like I grew into it with time, and at some point they became as easy to incorporate as anything else. But as far as as the larger culture, I don’t see why people would hear them as being weird anymore, and actually most people probably don’t. It shouldn’t be anything odd. It’s just a part of rock ‘n’ roll. People ask me all the time: Why are the last three records less experimental than the other ones? I don’t think any of records have been experimental. Those experiments were done 30 years ago, the data is in, it all works, it’s great: carry on. I don’t think the point is to shock any more. The point is to create something you haven’t heard before, something that creates a certain amount of magic and feeling, and hopefully conveys that feeling in a way that can penetrate someone’s consciousness and heart. It’s much, much simpler than people make it out to be.

more…

Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy: Dissonance, Schmissonance

Was speaking with Jeff Tweedy about Nels Cline, and the conversation trickled into the way that noise has found a natural place in our culture (and therefore our music) at this late date. Wilco’s music has certainly bent to make way for an artful smidge of the stuff. The arrival of Nels a few years ago helped that along. Tweedy and company curate their Solid Sound Festival at Mass MOCA this weekend. Here’s the singer’s take on how rough sounds and jazz entered his life.

I personally feel like I’ve always responded to those elements. Being a child of punk rock, noisy music was my first loves, and to be honest I feel that even the early Dylan albums have a fair share of dissonance, whether its intentional or not. Those albums feel very chaotic to me. Early on I felt that I owned folk and country music  for myself a lot easier than I owned the things I loved about noise and dissonance. Initially, it felt harder for me to put them into the music honestly.  I feel like I grew into it with time, and at some point they became as easy to incorporate as anything else. But as far as as the larger culture, I don’t see why people would hear them as being weird anymore, and actually most people probably don’t. It shouldn’t be anything odd. It’s just a part of rock ‘n’ roll. People ask me all the time: Why are the last three records less experimental than the other ones? I don’t think any of records have been experimental. Those experiments were done 30 years ago, the data is in, it all works, it’s great: carry on. I don’t think the point is to shock any more. The point is to create something you haven’t heard before, something that creates a certain amount of magic and feeling, and hopefully conveys that feeling in a way that can penetrate someone’s consciousness and heart. It’s much, much simpler than people make it out to be.

The jazz records I wouldn’t want to live without are things that early on I fooled myself  into thinking I could possibly do. I like Thelonious Monk and Albert Ayler and stuff like that. For some reason, before I understood how difficult it was to do that stuff, I responded to ’em on the same level that I responded to Woody Guthrie. I was attracted to it because it sounded like something I could possibly do. I don’t know why that would make a difference to me, or why I respond more to that, but I could definitely relate to it.  Maybe because I could still hear a tune there. There’s sort of an irreverence about all of those guys.  Putting Woody in that trio probably isn’t the first thing that would come to a lot of people’s minds, but to me there’s a real similarity to the approach to music making. They’re all about a doing a very natural act.

To celebrate the new disc being released by their own, new dBpm imprint, they rerocked Nick Lowe’s timeless “I Love My Label.” (Shoulda recorded it as they submitted YFH to WB, no?)

CoverSongs.com has it for yr enjoyment (dig that Beatledelic outro!)

Jeff Tweedy on Nels Cline

Maybe it’s a bit naïve on my part, but I always assumed that guys with Nels’ kind of chops shunned more traditional kinds of guitar playing. Then I saw him with the Geraldine Fibbers playing a Neil Young cover and he played circles around everybody. He seemed so conversant with a rock ‘n’ roll approach. It was eye-opening and great. 

I told him I had confidence that there’d be room for both of us to explore in Wilco. I knew I’d reached the limit of my abilities to express myself with the guitar. I love the guitar. But it’s not my main thing. I want to focus on songwriting, and Nels being here makes that a lot easier.

more