While Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and A Ghost Is Born established Wilco's
reputation as one of America's most interesting and imaginative rock
bands, both albums were the product of a band in flux, and this was
particularly evident to those who saw the group on-stage after the
release of YHF. Yankee Hotel Foxtrot may have blazed new sonic trails for Wilco, but the departure of Jay Bennett
in the latter stages of its production left the band with an audible
hole when they played the new material on-stage, and while
multi-instrumentalist Leroy Bach
may have been a technically skilled player, he looked and sounded like a
cold fish in concert, unwittingly emphasizing the cooler surfaces of Wilco's new music and negating much of the passion of Jeff Tweedy's songs. However, by the time Wilco hit the road following the release of A Ghost Is Born,
the group's latest round of personnel shakeups had the unexpected but
welcome effect of spawning one of the group's best lineups to date;
after Bach amicably left Wilco, the addition of keyboard and guitar man Pat Sansone and especially visionary guitarist Nels Cline
gave the band players whose energy and passion matched their technical
skill, and suddenly the band was playing its challenging new material
with the same sweaty force Tweedy and company conjured up in the band's earlier days. Thankfully, Tweedy had the good sense to document the prowess of Wilco's latest incarnation on-stage, and Kicking Television: Live in Chicago,
recorded during four shows at the Windy City's Vic Theater, offers a
welcome second perspective on the band's more recent work. With the
exception of two numbers from Wilco's collaborative albums with Billy Bragg (in which they set Woody Guthrie's poems to music), Kicking Television
focuses exclusively on their "post-alt-country" work, but while many of
the songs featured here sounded cool and mannered in the studio, here
they gain new muscle and force, not to mention a great deal of
enthusiasm, and while tunes like "Ashes of American Flags" and
"Handshake Drugs" are never going to be crowd-pleasers in the manner of
"Casino Queen," the élan of this band in full flight shows that the fun
has been put back in Wilco, albeit in a different and more angular form. Nels Cline's
guitar is especially bracing in this context, and his marriage of
melodic weight and joyous dissonance fits these songs while expanding on
their strengths at the same time. And the title cut thankfully proves
that Wilco still can (and still does) rock on out. Kicking Television
is the best sort of live album -- a recording that doesn't merely
retread a band's back catalog, but puts their songs in a new
perspective, and in this case these performances reveal that one great
band has actually been getting better.
aCá
Monday, February 24, 2014
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