Home   >   Music   >   Wilco - Summerteeth
Wilco - Summerteeth
Click photo to enlarge

Wilco - Summerteeth

Facts

Summerteeth
Music Price: $11.98 $10.99
You save 8%!
As of Aug 24 20:37 EDT (details)

Buy from Amazon.co.ukBuy from Amazon.co.uk
Artist(s)Wilco
StudioReprise / Wea
Release DateMarch 9, 1999
UPC Code093624728221
Buy this item$10.99 at Amazon.com
As of Aug 24 20:37 EDT (details)
1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours,
 

About Wilco - Summerteeth

Wilco's de facto frontman, Jeff Tweedy, sports a colorful past, one where he wrote paint-peelers dedicated to late Minutemen founder D. Boon as a member of the feted (and maybe fated) Uncle Tupelo and where he dolefully crooned Woody Guthrie lyrics on 1998's Mermaid Avenue. But Wilco's Summer Teeth shows hardly a tatter of Tweedy's herky-jerky postpunk intensity or the agrarian rootsiness that so often came in the past from him. Instead this layered album spreads its digits far into guitar-heavy Britpop, with full-group backing vocals carrying bouncy choruses and synths whistling over the melodies. The tunes sound like a crosshatch of orchestral plans and an execution drawing on Alex Chilton and Big Star, the Kinks, and, only distantly, Wilco's debut, A.M. "We're Just Friends" and "Via Chicago" stand as harmonized twists on ballad formulas, the latter recalling Mermaid Avenue's "California Stars" with the opening line, "I dreamed about killing you again last night / And it felt all right to me." So it's not always uplifting or cheery, but it's got dozens of surprises in a mere 15 songs. --Andrew Bartlett Amazon.com

Tracks

  1. Can't Stand it
  2. She's A Jar
  3. A Shot In The Arm
  4. We're Just Friends
  5. I'm Always In Love
  6. Nothing'severgonnastandinmyway (Agian)
  7. Pieholden Suite
  8. How To Fight Loneliness
  9. Via Chicago
  10. ELT
  11. My Darling
  12. When You Wake Up Feeling Old
  13. Summer Teeth
  14. In A Future Age
  15. Bonus Track
  16. Bonus Track
  17. Bonus Track

Similar CDs

Being ThereYankee Hotel FoxtrotA.M.Sky Blue SkyA Ghost Is Born
Being ThereYankee Hotel FoxtrotA.M.Sky Blue SkyA Ghost Is Born

 

User Reviews

Average user review: 4.5 (195 reviews)

rating: 5 QuoteExcellent album from an excellent band.Quote
Rarely do you own an album where you like every track. Maybe those days are gone. But this album certainly fits that description for me. This is an amazing album. March 25, 2008

rating: 2 QuoteWhere's Wilco?Quote
There were maybe 2 or 3 tracks on this CD that were even close to "good". The remainder was like Herman's Hermits meets the Beatles meets Moody Blues and ran the gambit from bubble-gum to downright sappy. A true multi-layered, overproduced effort with none of the small studio-jam feel of, say, "AM" or "Being There". Bring Back Wilco! February 1, 2008

rating: 3 QuoteIt's a bit... Meh.Quote
In my opinion Summerteeth is overrated. In it, Wilco's music has changed from something unique and beautiful into average pop music. I prefer Yankee Hotel Foxtrot far better than this. Many of the songs are the type that have a melody which is hardly memorable.

Also, the sound quality isn't that good. While it is better than other popular albums, it sounds too trebly and the levels are a bit too high.

Yankee Hotel Foxtrot beats this in every single way in my opinion. January 2, 2008

rating: 5 Quote4.5 Stars: My Favorite Wilco AlbumQuote
It might not be Wilco's best album (many would argue Yankee Hotel is), but Summer Teeth is my favorite by the band. As far as the musical arrangements go, it's their most keyboard-heavy release. It has piano, organ, harpsichord, and Magical Mystery Tour-like synthesizers. It also has banjo, strings, horns, harmonica, and bells. No whistles, though. Unlike the band's last two albums, "A Ghost is Born" and "Sky Blue Sky," it has no extended guitar solos. And throughout, there's very little dissonance. Here, Wilco is more influences by the Beatles and solo Lennon material than--as they would be on Yankee Hotel--Radiohead.

The songwriting is among the band's best. Highlight's include "She's a Jar" "Shot in the Arm" (containing the great line, "The ashtray says, you've been up all night") and "Via Chicago." Wilco strikes an interesting balance here between warm musical arrangements and sometimes disturbing lyrics such as "She begs me not to hit her" ("She's a Jar") and "Dreamed about killing you again last night and it felt alright to me." ("Via Chicago"). A well-paced album that stands up to repeat listening.
December 18, 2007

rating: 3 QuoteRidiculously OverratedQuote
I got this when it was originally released and just listened to it again recently. It isn't particularly good or bad - and certainly not in the league of "Being There". This was the point just as Tweedy was gaining the reputation that even his flatulence was regarded as "genius". August 13, 2007

More reviews at Amazon.com ...