Wednesday, June 22, 2022

Wednesday Wilco Song Spotlight: “At Least That’s What You Said”


As today is the 18th Anniversary of A Ghost is Born (Nonesuch Records, June 22, 2004), the Wednesday Wilco Song Spotlight shines on the opening track of that much acclaimed studio release:

“At Least That’s What You Said” (Jeff Tweey)

Jeff Tweedy: vocals, electric guitar 

John Stirratt: bass 

Glenn Kotche: drums 

Leroy Bach: piano 

Mikael Jorgensen: synthesizer 

Jim O’Rourke: end piano 

When Wilco first played “At Least That’s What You Said” at the now defunct Otto’s Rock Club & Bar in DeKalb, Illinois, back in the spring of 2003, it unfolded into a nearly eight-minute, headbanging, guitar-driven epic that wowed the audience. The studio version, released over a year later in summer 2004, is, at five minutes and thirty-three seconds, much tighter, but it still gives plenty of room for Jeff Tweedy—now the band’s lead guitarist, following the dismissal of Jay Bennett - to stretch out on his instrument.


Jeff Tweedy’s 2004 book Adult Head contains several poems that include lines or full verses that would later end up in the songs on A Ghost Is Born. The first three verses of the poem “Muzzle” would be used in “Muzzle of Bees,” but the poem’s last two verses are very close in wording to the first two verses of “At Least That’s What You Said.” 

This sprawling, sectional song was influenced by Richard Lloyd of the seminal New York art-punk band Television. Tweedy’s wife, Sue Miller, had given him a guitar lesson from Lloyd for his thirty-fourth birthday; the lesson inspired Tweedy, and he “filled up a notebook with new possibilities” that led to Wilco working out a “ferocious coda to the tender ‘At Least That’s What You Said’ that plays like a tribute to his mentor [Lloyd].”

In The Wilco Book, Tweedy reveals that he can’t listen to the song, “when the music comes in, when the drums come in, without crying. It sounds like a panic attack to me. It’s representational, you know. The second half of the solo when the guitar becomes more frantic is unsettling to me in a really beautiful way. It says more than anything I’ve ever written lyrically and it just happened.”

Lyrically, the song is one of Tweedy’s simplest. It seemingly takes place in the aftermath of an argument between lovers, with stinging lines like “I thought it was cute for you to kiss my purple black eye / Even though I caught it from you” recalling the darkness of Summerteeth tracks like “Via Chicago” and “She’s A Jar.” This is conveyed over lilting, lightly strummed guitar lines and sad piano tinkling. That is until the aforementioned drums come in and take us into more extreme sonic territory. 

For a fascinating contrast, fans should seek out Tweedy’s solo acoustic version of “At Least That’s What You Said.” Bootleg recordings of the song’s debut at the Vic Theatre in Chicago on January 9, 2003, illustrate its bare- bones chord structure, but with no loss of its power—and at only two minutes, thirty-six seconds, too. 

Wilco have gone on to perform the song more than 440 times, in versions that vary in length from five to ten minutes. The two-disc edition of A Ghost Is Born contains a live version that hovers at six minutes in length, recorded at the Orpheum Theater in Madison, Wisconsin, on October 25, 2004, and gives the band’s then-new lead guitarist, Nels Cline, a chance to put his mark on the song. 


But as another superlative live performance of the song, caught on film at their show at Tipitina’s in New Orleans, Louisiana, on March 4, 2008, makes clear, the song is Tweedy’s to shred. In this version, Cline adds minimal accompaniment while Tweedy tears into his tortured, strangulated solo, seemingly aware that “At Least That’s What You Said” is one of those times when you’ve got to let your leader lead. 

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

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Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Due To COVID-19, Wilco Plays First Show Without Lead Guitarist Nels Cline In 18 Years


Last night, at Teatro Kursaal in San Sebastian, Spain, Wilco performed their first show in 18 years without lead guitarist, Nels Cline. Earlier that day, Cline had tested positive for COVID-19, but insisted that the band go on without him. Jeff Tweedy noted Cline’s absence, and expressed hope that there wouldn’t many shows missed by the master axeman. Cline’s coronavirus episode has occurred just six shows into Wilco’s tour for their recently released 12th studio album, Cruel Country.

 

Cline in recovery posted this on social media (twitter, Instagram, Facebook):



And now, the setlist for the first Nels Cline-less Wilco show since he joined the band, with multi-instrumentalist, Pat Sansone, onstage at Otto’s in Dekalb, Illinois, on May 19, 2004. (Of course, there’s no “Impossible Germany):


Teatro Kursaal, San Sebastian, Spain 6/20/22


“I Am My Mother” / “Cruel Country” / “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart” / “Kamera” / “Story to Tell” / “Ambulance” (Jeff solo) / “Sunken Treasure” / “Hummingbird” / “Poor Places” / “War on War” / “At Least That’s What You Said” / “Passenger Side” / “The Universe” / “How to Fight Loneliness” / “Hearts Hard to Find” / “Box Full of Letters” / “Jesus, Etc.” / “Forget the Flowers” / “California Stars” / “A Lifetime to Find” / “Heavy Metal Drummer” / “I’m the Man Who Loves You”

 

Encore: “Red-Eyed and Blue” / “I Got You (At the End of the Century)” / “Monday” / “Outtasite (Outta Mind)”


To get a taste of a Cline-less Wilco, here's a clip from last night's show of “Sunken Treasure”:


For information (tickets, schedule, etc.) on Wilco’s current Cruel Country tour please visit their official website, wilcoworld.net.


Wilcopedia (The Blog) wishes Cline a full, and speedy recovery. Here’s hoping he won’t miss the entire Spain leg (seven shows) of the tour.


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Monday, June 20, 2022

Cruel Country Hits CD, A Few Wilco-Themed Podcasts, & A Bunch of Setlists


Wilco’s 12 studio album, Cruel Country, made its digital disc debut on Saturday, June 18, as part of the Record Store Day Drops deal that went down at your local independent music retailer. With its minimal packaging, the double disc is labeled a pre-release limited edition, and only 8,000 copies were produced. No word yet on when a regular CD release will be, nor when Cruel Country will be available on vinyl, but I’ll keep you posted.


Also for the occasion, Jeff Tweedy and company appeared on The Record Store Day Podcast with Paul Myers (Episode #70) to promote the release, and it’s well worth a listen.



Also last week, my appearance on Alpha Bravo Charlie, the Alphabetical Wilco Podcast, dropped on June 13th: Episode 195: “Wishful Thinking.”


I had a lot of fun discussing the excellent track from A Ghost is Born (2004), with Jason (IG - @hessisbest), and Kevin (IG - @KevinVinyl), and hope listeners will too. Please check it out. 


And now, a bunch of setlists from Wilco’s current European tour. Yeah, theyre pretty similar, but still a few interesting variations, and it's notable that “Many Worlds” is only being represented by its jam-style outro, which would follow “Via Chicago.” 


Lets get to what Wilco played after a gaze at the official show poster for this leg by Falk Schwalbe:



Loaded 2022 - Kontraskjæret, Oslo, Norway 6/11/22

 

“I Am My Mother” / “Cruel Country” / “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart” / “War on War” / “If I Ever Was a Child” / “All Across the World” / “Via Chicago” / “Many Worlds” (Only instrumental part played) / “Everyone Hides” / “Story to Tell” / “Bird Without a Tail / Base of My Skull” / “Tired of Taking It Out on You” / “At Least That’s What You Said” / “Impossible Germany” / “Jesus, Etc.” / “Heavy Metal Drummer” / “A Lifetime to Find” / “Box Full of Letters” / “The Late Greats” / “Falling Apart (Right Now)”

 

Amager Bio, Copenhagen, Denmark 6/13/22

 

“I Am My Mother” / “Cruel Country” / “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart” / “Hints” / “Handshake Drugs” / “War on War” / “If I Ever Was a Child” / “All Across the World” / “Via Chicago” / “Many Worlds” (Only instrumental part played) / “Everyone Hides” / “Story to Tell” / “Bird Without a Tail / Base of My Skull” / “Tired of Taking It Out on You” / “At Least That’s What You Said” / “Country Song Upside-Down” / “Impossible Germany” / “Jesus, Etc.” / “Heavy Metal Drummer” / “A Lifetime to Find” / “Box Full of Letters” / “The Late Greats” / “Falling Apart (Right Now)”

 

Encore: “Red-Eyed and Blue” / “I Got You (At the End of the Century” / “Outtasite (Outta Mind)”

 

E-Werk, Cologne, Germany 6/14/22

 

“I Am My Mother” / “Cruel Country” / “Company in My Back” / “Hints” / “Handshake Drugs” / “War on War” / “Muzzle of Bees” / “If I Ever Was a Child” / “Via Chicago” > “Many Worlds” outro / “All Across the World” / “Everyone Hides” / “Story to Tell” / “Bird Without a Tail / Base of My Skull” / “Hearts Hard to Find” / “At Least That’s What You Said” / “Country Song Upside-Down” / “Impossible Germany” / “Jesus, Etc.” / “Box Full of Letters” / “A Lifetime to Find” / “The Late Greats” / “Falling Apart (Right Now)”

 

Encore: “Red-Eyed and Blue” / “I Got You (At the End of the Century” / “Outtasite (Outta Mind)”

 

Alte Oper, Frankfurt, Germany 6/16/22

 

“A Shot in the Arm” / “Story to Tell” / “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart” / “I Am My Mother” / “Cruel Country” / “Hints” / “Handshake Drugs” / “Hummingbird” / “If I Ever Was A Child” / “All Across the World” / “Love is Everywhere (Beware)” / “War On War” / “Bird Without a Tail / Base of My Skull” / “Tired of Taking it Out On You” / “Impossible Germany” / “Mystery Binds” / “At Least That’s What You Said” / “Via Chicago” / “Many Worlds” / “Jesus, Etc.” / “A Lifetime to Find” / “Falling Apart (Right Now)” / “California Stars” / “The Late Greats”

 

Live is Live, Zeebrugge, Belgium 6/17/22

 

“A Shot in the Arm” / “Story to Tell” / “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart” / “I Am My Mother” / “Cruel Country” / “Handshake Drugs” / “Hummingbird” / “All Across the World” / “Love is Everywhere (Beware)” / “War on War” / “Bird Without a Tail / Base of My Skull” / “Impossible Germany” / “At Least That’s What You Said” / “Via Chicago” / “Many Worlds” / “Jesus, Etc.” / “A Lifetime to Find” / “California Stars” / “Falling Apart (Right Now)” / “Red-Eyed and Blue” / “I Got You (At the End of the Century)” / “Outtasite (Outta Mind)” / “I’m A Wheel”

 

Black Deer Festival, Eridge Park, Kent, UK 6/18/22


“A Shot in the Arm” / “Story to Tell” / “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart” / “I Am My Mother” / “Cruel Country” / “Handshake Drugs” / “Hummingbird” / “Ambulance” / “Love is Everywhere (Beware)” / “War on War”/ “Bird Without a Tail / Base of My Skull” / “Impossible Germany” / “At Least That’s What You Said” / “Via Chicago” / “Many Worlds” / “Jesus, Etc.”/ “A Lifetime to Find” / “California Stars” / “Falling Apart (Right Now)”


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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...