Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

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Yankee Hotel Foxtrot album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 51:45

eMusic Review 0

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Peter Blackstock

eMusic Contributor

09.23.11
Turning away from pop convention and toward art-rock experimentation
2002 | Label: Nonesuch/WBR

The Wilco catalogue breaks down fairly cleanly into before-and-after Yankee Hotel Foxtrot segments. Such is the landmark nature of this album, which attained mythical status after it was initially rejected by the band’s label; when it finally saw the light of day a year later, it vaulted to the upper reaches of the charts. The entire process was detailed in the documentary film I Am Trying To Break Your Heart, which is also the title of the album’s first track, a seven-minute testament to Wilco’s decisive turn away from pop convention and toward art-rock experimentation. The making of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot was marked by turmoil — in addition to the label hassles, leader Jeff Tweedy and key bandmate Jay Bennett had a professional meltdown during the sessions (documented in the film), and longtime drummer Ken Coomer was replaced by Glenn Kotche, coveted by Tweedy for his unconventional approach to percussion. The result was an album with a lot more open space than its predecessor, the densely-arranged Summerteeth; the emphasis is less on melody and more on mood. The first few songs suggest a soundscape for a sci-fi film about a bleak futureworld; from that detritus blooms the delicate fiddle solo… read more »

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Give it a year and you'll be hooked

unseenatnoonday

I'm a Radiohead fan who appreciates rootsier music, too, but I simply did not "get" this album at first. I'm glad I listened to my record-store owner of a friend and keep coming back to it, because now it is one of my all-time favorite albums. I had to reenter Wilco through Summerteeth; then I was able to joyously digest this American masterpiece.

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whatever.....

kwerk

will so codepe le pioughui pooh la la

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Sorry, it's a Classic

nathanjr

A lot has been written about this album, too much most likely. All I can say is that someday I hope one of my kids discovers the three album arc of Summerteeth, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, and a Ghost is Born and it blows their f'ing mind. I doubt they will care about Reprise or worry that the acoustic guitar on Pot Kettle Black makes it sound too Adult Contemporary.

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really good not great

getspaidtodropshit

there are great songs here. "I am trying to break your heart", "Jesus, Etc," "War on War", but it is not on the same level as "A Ghost is Born", though all the pieces are there. I was introduced to Wilco after this came out, so I listened to it only after I had "Ghost...", "Sky Blue Sky and "the Album", So I came to this backwards.

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They Say All Music Guide

Few bands can call themselves contemporaries of both the heartbreakingly earnest self-destruction of Whiskeytown and the alienating experimentation of Radiohead’s post-millennial releases, but on the painstaking Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, Wilco seem to have done just that. In early 2001, the Chicago-area band focused on recording their fourth album, which ultimately led to the departure of guitarist Jay Bennett and tensions with their record label. Unwilling to change the album to make it more commercially viable, the band bought the finished studio tapes from Warner/Reprise for 50,000 dollars and left the label altogether. The turmoil surrounding the recording and distribution of the album in no way diminishes the sheer quality of the genre-spanning pop songs written by frontman Jeff Tweedy and his bandmates. After throwing off the limiting shackles of the alt-country tag that they had been saddled with through their 1996 double album Being There, Wilco experimented heavily with the elaborate constructs surrounding their simple melodies on Summerteeth. The long-anticipated Yankee Hotel Foxtrot continues their genre-jumping and worthwhile experimentation. The sprawling, nonsensical “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart” is as charmingly bleak as anything Tweedy has written to date, while the positively joyous “Heavy Metal Drummer” jangles through bright choruses and summery reminiscences. Similarly, “Kamera” dispels the opening track’s gray with a warm acoustic guitar and mixer/multi-instrumentalist/”fifth Beatle” Jim O’Rourke’s unusual production. The true high points of the album are when the songwriting is at its most introspective, as it is during the heartwrenching “Ashes of American Flags,” which takes on an eerie poignancy in the wake of the attacks at the World Trade Center. “All my lies are always wishes,” Tweedy sings, “I know I would die if I could come back new.” As is the case with many great artists, the evolution of the band can push the music into places that many listeners (and record companies for that matter) may not be comfortable with, but, in the case of Wilco, their growth has steadily led them into more progressive territory. While their songs still maintain the loose intimacy that was apparent on their debut A.M., the music has matured to reveal a complexity that is rare in pop music, yet showcased perfectly on Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. – Zac Johnson

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