Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Wednesday Wilco Song Spotlight: “Evicted”

This entry of the Wednesday Wilco Song Spotlight shines on a track from Jeff Tweedy, and company’s latest album, Cousin. It is the first song to be covered from Wilco’s 13th studio release in this series, so this serves as a preview of its future entry in an updated edition of my book, Wilcopedia.

“Evicted” (Jeff Tweedy)


Shortly after “Evicted,” the first single off of Cousin dropped online on August 1, fans and critics noted the tune’s similarity to Prince’s 1985 hit “Raspberry Beret.” Kitty Empire of the Guardian even wrote that song is “a pretty heartbreak ballad that boasts shades of Prince’s Raspberry Beret’ as played by Teenage Fanclub.”

 

Tweedy addressed the issue on his Substack newsletter, Starship Casual (click to subscribe), in a Chit Chat Check-in audio segment available to subscribers called “Raspberry Evicted Beret.” In what he also called a “Prince TED Talk,” Tweedy explained that he “doesn’t hear” the songs sounding alike, and said that he learned “Raspberry Beret” so that he could play the songs side-by-side.



After playing a bit of Prince’s tune, and discussing that it “things that were out of my skill set to sing, and some things that I don’t relate to in terms of romantic conquests,” he went on to play a chunk of “Evicted,” and remark, “I don’t think Prince would say he deserved that” (referring to the song’s repeated refrain “I deserve it”).

 

It’s understandable that Tweedy would want to underline the differences in the lyrical stance (as he says it’s important for him to do so), but while the choruses are very different as he displays, it’s the phrasing in the verses that have the vibe of the verses in Prince’s mid ‘80s A-side, and LP album track from his psychedelic pop album, Around the World in a Day.

 

Otherwise “Evicted” is an infectious, folky take on the old standard lover’s lament which combines George Harrison-style guitar licks, with a groovy beat, and a catchy chorus sealing the deal: “I’m evicted from your heart.”

 

In a press release for the song and the album (released on September 29) Tweedy wrote, “I guess I was trying to write from the point of view of someone struggling to make an argument for themself in the face of overwhelming evidence that they deserve to be locked out of someone’s heart. Self-inflicted wounds still hurt and in my experience they’re almost impossible to fully recover from.”

 

Tweedy debuted “Evicted” at a solo show at Largo at the Coronet in Los Angeles on January 6 of this year. The second performance of the song at the same venue appeared on Episode 218 of The Tweedy Show. The song was played by Tweedy at six solo shows before Wilco took it on at their show on August 22 in France at Ramonville St Agne (Le Bikini).

 

Wilco has performed “Evicted” at every show since then, and went on Jimmy Kimmel Live! to play it the other night (Oct. 9), which you can see at the top of this post. I’ll conclude with another version of the song from The Tweedy Show (Episode 221, August 2, 2023):



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Monday, July 24, 2023

10 Years Ago Today, Dylan Nailed “The Weight” With MMJ's Jim James And Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy


I
n the summer of 2013, Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy took part in one of the most epic renditions of The Band’s roots rock classic “The Weight,” to date. The occasion was the Americanarama Festival of Music tour, in which Wilco, and My Morning Jacket opened for the legendary headliner, Bob Dylan. While the tour began with each act doing their own sets, a few collaborations cropped up with MMJ’s Jim James, and Tweedy joining Dylan for covers of the Reverend Gary Davis’ “Twelve Gates to the City,” and Blind Willie Johnson’s “Let Your Light Shine on Me.”

But those obscure one-offs were followed by the much more recognizable likes of Robbie Robertson’s “The Weight,” which premiered at Farm Bureau Live at Virginia Beach on July 24, 2013. The twangy opening chords, that has become a rock standard since its 1968 release on The Bands Music From the Big Pink, instantly made the audience erupt (on the YouTube clip of the song above, someone yelling “Holy shit!” can be heard), and Dylan’s croaky handling of the first verse continued the rapt reception. 

After James’ soulful singing of the second verse, Tweedy, who had played “Bob Dylan’s 49th Beard” in Wilco’s set earlier that evening, wonderfully sang the third verse. Dylan masterfully regained the song for verse #4, and they all provided their ragged harmonies to the song’s concluding lines.


I was at this show, and was among those whose jaws dropped when this song was played. I rank it among the greatest moments I’ve ever seen live as it was a definitive performance through and through.

 

Despite his history with The Band, and the fact that he owned the song’s copyright (Robertson wrote it while being paid a salary by Dylan), this was only the second time that Dylan had performed “The Weight” live. On their Dylan and the Band’s much heralded 1974 tour, he would often leave the stage during The Band’s sets, and there’s no evidence that he ever joined in on the song, but at Levon Helm’s gig at Lone Star Café in New York on May 29, 1988, Dylan provided his hearty vocals and guitar to the crowd pleaser

 

Dylan, James, and Tweedy went on to play “The Weight” three more times on the Americanarama tour in 2013 picking up some guests stars along the way to help out. The J. Geils Band’s Peter Wolf helped out at Pier A Park in Hoboken, New Jersey on July 26, Ryan Bingham guested at the USANA Amphitheatre, West Valley City, Utah on August 1, and at the tour’s last performance of the classic at the Verizon Wireless Ampitheatre in Irvine, California on August 3.



Tweedy wouldn’t return to the song for nearly a decade until Wilco broke it out for their Sky Blue Sky 2022 festival at the Hard Rock Hotel in Riviera Maya, Mexico. Mavis Staples, after belting out The Staples Singers’ signature song, “I’ll Take You There,” with Tweedy and Co. again put in a passionate performance of “The Weight.” Wilco, and Staples were also joined by 
Sima Cunningham, Liam Kazar, Kurt Vile, Nubya Garcia, and Spencer Tweedy for the song that served as the shows finale.

In his upcoming book, World Within a Song, Tweedy wrote about the much-loved tune, particularly the live version from Martin Scorsese’s 1978 concert classic film “The Last Waltz,” and Staples’ performance (from an excerpt posted on Tweedy’s Substack newsletter Starship Casual):

“As great as the original studio recording of this song is, it doesn’t have Mavis Staples. I’ve watched it a thousand times and I still can’t understand the full ramifications of what it tells us about Mavis’s singular talent. Pure commitment, entirely free of pretense, a range of emotions on display in one line that surpasses what most other singers could summon up in an entire career…and above all else, the thing I think it’s impossible to find more of in any other footage of any other artist, joy.”

So let’s end with that performance as it may be the most definitive version of “The Weight” there is:



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...