Track Listing 1. I Must Be High 2. Casino Queen 3. Box Full of Letters 4. Shouldn't Be Ashamed 5. Pick up the Change 6. I Thought I Held You 7. That's Not the Issue 8. It's Just That Simple 9. Should've Been in Love 10. Passenger Side 11. Dash 7 12. Blue Eyed Soul 13. Too Far Apart
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | Brian Henneman | | Producer: | Brian Paulson, Wilco | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Live | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Wilco: Jeff Tweedy (vocals, acoustic & electric guitars, bass); John Stirratt (vocals, acoustic guitar, piano, organ, bass); Max Johnston (vocals, banjo, dobro, mandolin, fiddle); Ken Coomer (vocals, drums). Additional personnel: Brian Henneman (vocals, guitar); Daniel Corrigan (vocals); Lloyd Maines (pedal steel guitar). Recorded at Easley Recording, Memphis, Tennessee. When Uncle Tupelo, the band that defined '90s alt-country, split into two camps, Jay Farrar's Son Volt took the relatively arty road while Jeff Tweedy upped the rock & roll grit quotient with Wilco. On Wilco's debut album, the band sounds righteously ragged, charging along behind Tweedy in a manner suggestive of the rootsier moments of the Stones and/or the Replacements. The occasional appearance of acoustic guitar, banjo or a 2/4 beat serves to remind us of Tweedy's roots. Still, A.M. has the sound of a band already well on their way to the gloriously chaotic rock & roll nirvana they would reach on the follow-up BEING THERE.
Editorial Reviews Ranked #34 in Village Voice's 1995 Pazz & Jop Critics' Poll. Village Voice (02/20/1996)
3.5 Stars - Very Good - ...Wilco have made one hell of a country-guts debut....Just as classic country tells of...real life in everyday language...so does Tweedy's small-town worldview have an Everyman honesty... Rolling Stone (04/06/1995)
...Though [Wilco has] a '90s bleakness far removed from the sunny romanticism of the Byrds and Poco, [they] are following the same urge as those earlier acts: the need to sink roots into something more nourishing than mere rock & roll flash without losing their edge... - Rating: B+ Entertainment Weekly (04/07/1995)
...The vocals are laidback and sometimes even strained, but the delivery only adds to the friendly familiarity of the album....Herein lies evidence that A.M. is as sound lyrically as it is musically... Option (07/01/1995)
Included in Q's Best Alt.Country Albums Of All Time - ...A soundtrack for Midwestern teenagers out doing no good. Q (09/01/2000)
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