Wilco

Wilco (The Album)

Full of radiance and subtleties, Wilco (The Album) is an
ambitious yet confident record from a band at its peak, an eleven-song
odyssey that trades skillfully between tension and elation. The
preposterous album cover (a camel wearing a party hat) and sly title
represent the fun side, but the album also holds shadow-cloaked songs,
soaked with images of death, blood, and thrashing desperation. The most
stable lineup in Wilco’s sometimes tumultuous fifteen years surges
ahead without a hint of complacency, allowing the tremendous talents of
six musicians to mix in myriad combinations.

A comforting love letter to fans, “Wilco (The Song)” kick-starts the
album with the exhilarated urgency of a payday Friday. However, the
disc’s longest — and most challenging — song is “Bull Black
Nova,” a veiled and disjointed murder ballad that’s harsh, rigid, and
relentlessly repetitive at times, spinning and twisting into a fitful
paranoia as it builds to a mesmerizing guitar freak-out. Next up is
Feist joining Jeff Tweedy for a duet on “You and I,” a sorrowful yet
sweet ballad. “One Wing” is a showcase for guitarist Nels Cline that
sadly stops short of the transcendence of his solo on “Impossible
Germany,” 2007’s Sky Blue Sky triumph, while the first single,
“You Never Know,” is a jaunty piano rocker that’ll drive the “dad rock”
naysayers up a wall.

Even the album’s slowest tunes — “Country Disappeared,”
“Solitaire,” and closer “Everlasting Everything” — open up as
soulful and gorgeous gems on repeated listens. (Nonesuch) 

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