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Wilco (The Album)

EMAILPRINTby Wilco

Wilco reviews
76
8.1 User Score:

Generally favorable reviews

Based on 34 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?

Based on 38 votes
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Album Info

Label: Nonesuch

Release Date: 30 June 2009

Discs: 1 disc

Genre(s): Rock, Alternative, Country

Summary

The seventh album for the rock group was produced with Jim Scott.

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

91

MSN Consumer Guide (Robert Christgau)

"Come on children, you're acting like children/Every generation thinks it's the end of the world," begins the candidly catchy centerpiece of these lost-and-found tradsters' best album.

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84

Filter

Wilco (The Album) adds yet another chapter to the story, and if this band's relevance is to continue going forward, then let the resilent closer 'Everlasting Everything ' score our impending sunrise. [Summer 2009, p.90]

80

Alternative Press

Wilco continues to reign in their experiemntal fuzz, focusing more on pretty melodies, upbeat toe-tappers and sweet acoustic numbers for their seventh full-length. [Aug 2009, p.115]

80

Mojo

Wilco (The Album) is as consummate as anything its author has yet delivered. [Aug 2009, p.97]

80

Q Magazine

Everything here delivers the predominant warmth "Sky Blue Sky" lacked and betrays a sharp ear for melody that has often been obscured by sonic theatrics. [Aug 2009, p.1000]

80

New Musical Express (NME)

The band have covered all bases this time; pushing themselves to experiment while still celebrating what makes their music so catchy and compelling.

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80

All Music Guide

If Wilco (The Album) as a whole is considerably less ambitious than its predecessors, it compensates with its easy confidence and craft: it's the work of a band that knows their strengths and knows what they're all about, and it's ready to settle into an agreeably comfortable groove.

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80

Uncut

Wilco (the album) picks up more or less where 2007’s mellow and soulful "Sky Blue Sky" left off, but subtly expands that record’s parameters.

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80

NOW Magazine

It’s middle-of-the-road, but only by Wilco standards. A worthwhile listen.

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80

Observer Music Monthly

Chicago's veteran alt-rockers haven't sounded this much fun in ages, their seventh album balancing their easy-going and experimental sides.

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80

Spin

Wilco (the album), the band's seventh studio effort, treats verse-chorus-verse basics like holy truths. The result is the rare rock album about acceptance. And it's fantastic.

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80

Boston Globe

Like with many good rock records, bits of whimsy, melancholy, confusion, and joy swirl around the songs of Wilco (the album). So while it may not feel as groundbreaking as previous releases, it’s just as human.

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80

Rolling Stone

Wilco's seventh studio album is a triumph of determined simplicity by a band that has been running from the obvious for most of this decade.

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80

Hot Press

Surprisingly laidback new dispatch from uptight country rockers.

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80

Delusions of Adequacy

Wilco (The Album) is just another wonderful and special reason to know that Wilco, as a band, are an astounding band for all to love-or at least as much as they say they love us.

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78

Austin Chronicle

What it lacks in identity, perhaps a statement of purpose locked down by a title, the tightly produced, musically pointed Wilco compensates for in near-total coalescence. Its hope, vulnerability, and fears converse as one Tweedy.

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75

The Onion (A.V. Club)

The band is still good enough to put across (The Album)’s later songs, thanks to a buzzy ’70s sound that nods to George Harrison here, John Lennon there, and Tom Petty all over the place. But the “reaching for something indescribable” feeling of songs like 'Deeper Down' and 'One Wing' is sorely lacking amid the pat familiarity of 'I’ll Fight' and 'Everlasting Everything.'

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75

The Phoenix

Wilco (The Album) finds the band looser and more assertive than they were on their two previous efforts.

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75

Entertainment Weekly

Tweedy's ability to craft great hooks does make this worth a listen, and maybe the band simply needs a pause to catch its creative breath. Let's just hope the next one isn't called Wilco (another album).

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74

Paste Magazine

The album is full of thoughtful, artfully crafted lyrics wrapped in memorable hooks that should stand the test of time. What’s missing is the experimentation that was Wilco’s hallmark until "Sky Blue Sky."

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73

Pitchfork

This is not the music of men trying to be cool; it is the work of veterans unafraid to express mature emotions with an appropriate level of musical depth and nuance.

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72

Billboard.com

The band's current six-member lineup, together five years and responsible for 2007's stunning "Sky Blue Sky," is its strongest to date--and Wilco (The Album) is as well-rounded an effort as the group has released.

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70

Under The Radar

The album rumbles out of the gate with a scruffy exuberance reminiscent of the early tracks of "Summerteeth," before finding its way back to the high-end country art rock the band has specialized in since we first found out Tweedy gets bad headaches. [Summer 2009, p.69]

70

Hartford Courant

No one ought to begrudge Tweedy his hard-won peace of mind, but there's less of the emotional, or musical, turbulence here that made for such compelling listening on previous Wilco records.

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70

Drowned In Sound

While (the album) tips far more convincingly on the successful end of the scales, there remains the sense of a band playing safer than needs be; a sextet pushing against their limits but never straining outright at them.

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60

Slant Magazine

It doesn't help that Wilco is such a complacent album, so easily redolent of sounds and textures the band has called up in the past.

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60

PopMatters

While Wilco (The Album) has its strong moments, it does not have many innovative ones.

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60

The Guardian

It's well written, nicely produced and tastefully retro, with a few vaguely experimental bits.

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60

No Ripcord

The major problem is that this doesn’t sound like a band that’s pushing itself any more, or at least not making the same sort of pushes that lead to the brilliant sucker-punch of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and the vastly underrated A Ghost Is Born.

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60

Dot Music

Like a slightly under-serving best of, though, we get glimpses of what they've done before, but nothing substantial enough to set a new high-water mark.

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54

Lost At Sea

To simply not want to skip tracks isn't exactly saying anything, and certainly not that Wilco has made any kind of return to relevance. But Jeff the person is doing just fine, and instead of chastising this release, let's be happy that the guy who gave us more serious, occasionally harrowing masterpieces such as Summerteeth and Yankee Hotel Foxtrot finally seems to be having some fun. Next time it'd be nice if he let us in on it.

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50

Tiny Mix Tapes

Wilco (The Album) isn’t a failure--not by any means--but when a band has become so attached to the notion of change and then stagnates, it casts a heavy shadow that’s hard to escape.

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50

cokemachineglow

Clearly, this record is boring. Whether or not that’s a good thing remains up to your discretion.

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40

Dusted Magazine

Wilco is a Great Band, if you like stuff that’s boring. And a lot of people seemingly do.

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What Our Users Said

The average user rating for this album is 8.1 (out of 10) based on 38 User Votes

Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Jeff T gave it a9:
Another wonderful piece of Wilco. Their most fun album, that reminds me to Summerteath. Maybe, it's not their best album, but it's really hard with masterpieces like "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot" or "Sky blue Sky" on your back. Wilco never disappoint! Wilco love you, baby!

Drew P gave it an8:
Wow, even though this album got pretty good reviews, I think it's still underrated. Jeff Tweedy & Wilco are just so good at crafting songs that, one way or another, are interesting. Favorites include Wilco (the song), One Wing and Bull Black Nova. Nels Cline on the guitar never disappoints. If you listen closely, there is also some nice production going on. Nothing to the level of YHF-level experimentation, but nice nonetheless. The one line just says it all: "Wilco will love you baby."

Dan C gave it an8:
It took a few listens (as usual), but now it's on heavy rotation on my stereo. The tunes grow into the recesses of your mind and find a comfortable, pleasing spot to sit in. Si, me gusto, me gusto mucho.

Manny F gave it a9:
Well said Paul K, you nailed it. Everyone read his review... it's a great assesment of this record compared to more the highly praised ones (i.e. yankee hotel foxtrot) Couldn't of said it better myself.

Mike K gave it a9:
Ha! My first "top 10 of 2009" This is a beautiful album. Long time Wilco listener/critic here. This is my favorite since Being There. The critics with the "80's" across the board are WAY off base. Not sure what's going on there. MK, San Geronimo.

Walton T gave it an8:
The top 5 or 6 tracks would have made a superb EP.

glen gave it a2:
Wow wilco don't bore me to death or anything. not a single memorable song.

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