Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Wednesday Wilco Song Spotlight: “Pecan Pie”

As its almost Thanksgiving, this weeks Spotlight shines on a song that celebrates one of the holidays most classic desserts:

“Pecan Pie” (Jeff Tweedy)

After performing this song at the Vic Theatre in Chicago for the Annual Benefit for Education on April 6, 2007, Jeff Tweedy remarked that it was “Definitely the best song I’ve ever written.”

Tweedy has made that claim often since the song’s release on Golden Smog’s Down by the Old Mainstream, but as he jokes around so much, it’s difficult to know whether or not he’s kidding. Don’t get me wrong - I find “Pecan Pie” to be a pure charmer, a sprightly, finger-picked song about a guy craving this traditional Southern dessert, and his love.

Tweedy premiered “Pecan Pie” during his first tour as a member of Golden Smog in 1994, and Wilco first played the song at their second ever show at 7th Street Entry in Minneapolis in late November 1994, and they performed it throughout their 94-95 tour. They returned to it in 97, 99, and 00, but after that it has left the band’s orbit (their last performance of it was at one of the Lounge Ax’s last shows). It now resides in the realm of Tweedy’s solo gigs, and shows with his self-named side project.

The song has been a fan favorite, oft requested at Tweedy’s Education Benefits and he has repeated his claim as to it being the best song he’s ever written a few times in recent years, but not everyone agrees with him.  Allmusic.com’s Stephen Thomas Erlewine, in an otherwise rave review of Golden Smog’s Down by the Old Mainstream, wrote that it it’s a “bit too cute to be effective.”

Tim Grierson offered his critique in his 2012 band bio Wilco: Sunken Treasure that Tweedy’s “‘Pecan Pie’ has some of the same folk charm as some of A.M. but, like so much of his material at the time, felt lightweight to the point of being almost jokey.”

It’s possible that the whimsical jokiness of “Pecan Pie” is what Tweedy likes so much about it. The song’s appearance at his solo shows is usually surrounded by humor – sure a lot of the tunes are likewise kidded about, but Tweedy’s song about yearning for some honeypie seems to get special attention.

Performed as a request at the Annual Benefit for Education at the Vic Theatre in Chicago, on March 30, 2012, Tweedy said, “Whoever requested this song also gave me a key lime pie, which, if you listen to the lyrics, I don’t like them. Not to be an ingrate or anything, the whole song is about how I hate key lime pies. But I know it’s hard to get a pecan pie in a pinch.”

After the performance, Tweedy said, “Thank you for your help, and I do like key lime pies, that was a bunch of…I was totally kidding.” A few years later, at the Ryman Auditorium Nashville, Tennessee June 24th, 2014, he introduced “Pecan Pie” as “the only song that my wife knows the name of.”

Tweedy has played the song several times over the run of his family’s Instragram show, The Tweedy Show. Here’s the first time from Episode 7 (3/6/20):


In its nearly 50 solo performances by Tweedy, “Pecan Pie” has long been a fan favorite, but its status as the finest song that the man has ever written is arguably debatable.

What I’m going to guess is that the song is a jokey ditty, that Tweedy likes to joke
about being his best. Whatever the case, it sure makes me want a piece of my own.

Endnote: For some reason, this song doesn’t appear in my book, Wilcopedia. It should have because although it’s a Golden Smog song it was performed over 20 times by Wilco during their early tours which means it certainly falls under the band’s banner. Perhaps future editions can right this wrong.

More later...

Wednesday, November 4, 2020

Wednesday Wilco Song Spotlight: “Summer Teeth”

As the Deluxe Edition of Wilcos third studio album, Summerteeth, releases this week, the Spotlight shines on one of that records most infectious tunes:

“Summer Teeth” (Jeff Tweedy, Jay Bennett)

Jeff Tweedy: vocals, acoustic guitar
Jay Bennett: electric guitar, lap steel, piano, keyboards, bells, backing vocals
John Stirratt: bass, backing vocals
Ken Coomer: drums

“I’ve got summer teeth - some are, some aren’t”

This title track of sorts is a McCartney-esque piece of pure pop pleasure featuring 60s-style oohs and ahhs by Bennett and Stirratt. After some nature sound effects, including a babbling brook and bird noises, the song’s rich guitar flourishes cascade into a mix of Bennett and Tweedy on electric and acoustic guitars, jingle-jangling into the song’s easygoing rhythm. Key line: It’s just a dream he keeps having but it doesn’t seem to mean anything.

Matthew Greenwald of allmusic.com heard another strong influence in the track. “After all of the Velvet Underground–influenced songs on the Summerteeth album, the title song is definitely a direct homage, being more than reminiscent of ‘Who Loves The Sun,’” he wrote. “The sunny atmosphere and feel are a combination of influences that range from pop cliché and quotes as well as original pop vision. Utterly charming and positive.”

This makes sense in the knowledge that Wilco would go on to cover Who Loves The Sun at their all-covers concert at Solid Sound Festival in 2013, and on one further occasion that year.

Tweedy performs a solo acoustic version of “Summer Teeth” at Calvin Theatre in Northampton, MA in 2005:

Over half of the tracks on Summerteeth have been played live a hundred or more times, but ‘Summer Teeth’ the song has only had around seventy-five airings. Tweedy has played solo acoustic renditions of it a further fifty times, from his live debut of the song at the Lounge Ax in Chicago on the eve of the album’s release in 1999 to a performance at Solid Sound in 2015.

This is an edited excerpt from Wilcopedia by Daniel Cook Johnson, published by Jawbone Press (www.jawbonepress.com). Order your copy here.

You can order the lavish Summerteeth: Deluxe Edition boxset at wilcoworld.net.

More later...

Wednesday Wilco Song Spotlight: “Evicted”

T his entry of the Wednesday Wilco Song Spotlight shines on a track from Jeff Tweedy, and company’s latest album, Cousin . It is the first s...