Jeff Tweedy
once blazed the trail for the American rock underground's embrace of
its country and folk roots, but as the decade drew to a close he also
began spearheading the return of classic pop; simply put, what once were
fiddles on Wilco
records became violins -- the same instrument, to be sure, but viewed
with a radical shift in perception and meaning. While lacking the sheer
breadth and ambition of the previous Being There, Summer Teeth is the most focused Wilco
effort yet, honing the lessons of the last record to forge a majestic
pop sound almost completely devoid of alt-country elements. The lush
string arrangements and gorgeous harmonies of tracks like "She's a Jar"
and "Pieholden Suite" suggest nothing less than a landlocked Brian Wilson,
while more straightforward rockers like the opening "I Can't Stand It"
bear the influence of everything from R&B to psychedelia. Still, for
all of the superficial warmth and beauty of the record's arrangements,
Tweedy's songs are perhaps his darkest and most haunting to date, bleak
domestic dramas informed by recurring themes of alienation, adultery,
and abuse -- even the sunniest melodies mask moments of devastating
power. If Summer Teeth has a precedent, it's peak-era Band; the album not only possesses a similar pastoral sensibility, but like Robbie Robertson and company before them, Wilco
seems directly connected to a kind of American musical consciousness,
not only rejuvenating our collective creative mythology, but adding new
chapters to the legend with each successive record.
acá
Monday, February 24, 2014
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