Strat wrote:I just enjoy my tweedy drugged up on pain pills. You know?
Agreed 100% with this.
Strat wrote:I just enjoy my tweedy drugged up on pain pills. You know?
Interesting. I find myself listening to yhf and the whole love the most of all.Kevin Davis wrote:"The Whole Love" feels to me like a fairly deliberate attempt to recapture with a band of well-rehearsed pros a similar creative spirit to that which the internally unstable Wilco of 2001-2004 happened upon out of a sense of wonder. I respect the effort and ultimately agree that it is a better record than its two predecessors, but I find myself compelled to play it less frequently -- whatever their weaknesses, "Sky Blue Sky" and the self-titled album possess for me some weird, undefined sense of intrigue that keeps me coming back, wondering if I'd missed something.
I hope we get a new album at some point but I wonder if the rarities and hits sets weren't kind of the band's way of putting a pin in Wilco as a creative venture for a while. I still haven't listened to the Tweedy album, though his songwriting has always been the big appeal of Wilco for me (can't imagine what else would be, as it's been the only constant), so I should really check it out...
Chris_H_2 wrote:And I still think they tried too hard to pigeonhole Matt Cameron into a Pearl Jam "sound." And because of that, the songs themselves continue to suffer.
God I hate songs like The Fixer, World Wide Suicide, and Let the Records Play.
darth_vedder wrote:Chris_H_2 wrote:And I still think they tried too hard to pigeonhole Matt Cameron into a Pearl Jam "sound." And because of that, the songs themselves continue to suffer.
God I hate songs like The Fixer, World Wide Suicide, and Let the Records Play.
Malloy wrote:making this place inhospitable to posting is really the only move left.
i really like you never know...i can take or leave walken...and hate it here is my least favorite wilco songChris_H_2 wrote:And I still think they tried too hard to pigeonhole Nels Cline into a Wilco "sound." And because of that, the songs themselves continue to suffer.
God I hate songs like Hate It Here, Walkin, and You Never Know.
i do the dishes, i mow the lawn, i eat a ten-pack of hot dogs on valentine's day, cuz i know you ain't comin homelennytheweedwhacker wrote:i really like you never know...i can take or leave walken...and hate it here is my least favorite wilco songChris_H_2 wrote:And I still think they tried too hard to pigeonhole Nels Cline into a Wilco "sound." And because of that, the songs themselves continue to suffer.
God I hate songs like Hate It Here, Walkin, and You Never Know.
Malloy wrote:making this place inhospitable to posting is really the only move left.
I think that's a reasonable analogy overall, except that when I hear songs like "Happiness is a Warm Gun" and "Yer Blues" and "Rocky Raccoon" and "Sexy Sadie" and "Everybody's Got Something to Hide..." and the list goes on, I legitimately do hear songs that are stylistically and structurally different, employ different kinds of chords and harmonies (in some cases, riffs in lieu of chords), and evidence an entirely different approach to lyric-writing in comparison to earlier Beatles material. I think there's a much narrower compositional range between "Outta Mind (Outta Site)" and "Can't Stand It" and "I'm the Man Who Loves You" and "Hate It Here" and "You Never Know" (or between "Someone Else's Song" and "Muzzle of Bees" and "Solitaire") (or between "Student Loan Stereo" and "I'm a Wheel" and "Kicking Television" and "Sonny Feeling") than there are between most songs on "Help" and the white album. Basically, I struggle to identify a set of compositional tools that was available to Tweedy circa "YHF"/"Ghost" that has since been lost; the kinds of songs he writes now are the same kinds of songs he's always written. As will happen, what each type of song entails has evolved over time and with the artist, but overall I think the differences amount to aesthetics and ideologies more than anything.Alex wrote:only in the sense that the beatles were writing fundamentally different songs in help! compared to the white album, except reverse the chronologies
Yes yes yes. And Ken Coomer's loose playing was so right.Mike wrote:Oh man, I love Summerteeth so much. Jay Bennett should have stayed.
I'm guilty of this. There are other bands/musicians that do straightforward arrangements much, much better than Wilco.zeb wrote:Maybe you guys don't like straightforward arrangements on Wilco records?