Sky Blue Sky Wilco

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Vinyl LP

  • Release Date: 05/15/2007
  • Sales Rank: 39,937
  • Label: NONESUCH
  • UPC: 075597998689

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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Sky Blue Sky

1LISTENEither Way 3:07
2LISTENYou Are My Face 4:38
3LISTENImpossible Germany 5:58
4LISTENSky Blue Sky 3:23
5LISTENSide with the Seeds 4:16
6LISTENShake It Off 5:42
7LISTENPlease Be Patient with Me 3:19
8LISTENHate It Here 4:33
9LISTENLeave Me (Like You Found Me) 4:10
10LISTENWalken 4:27
11LISTENWhat Light 3:35
12LISTENOn and on and On 6:33
13[CD-Rom Track]

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

In 1999, Wilco willingly abdicated their position as one of the leading acts in the alt-country movement to dive head-first into the challenging waters of experimental pop with their album Summerteeth, and moved even further away from their rootsy origins with Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and A Ghost Is Born, winning the group a new and enthusiastic audience along the way. So it might amuse a number of the band's earlier fans that in many respects Wilco's sixth studio album, Sky Blue Sky, sounds like the long-awaited follow-up to 1996's Being There -- while it lacks the ramshackle shape-shifting and broad twang of that earlier album, Sky Blue Sky represents a shift back to an organic sound and approach that suggests the influence of Neil Young's Harvest and the more polished avenues of '70s soft rock. Sky Blue Sky also marks Wilco's first studio recordings since Nels Cline and Pat Sansone joined the group, and they certainly make their presence felt -- with Cline, Wilco has its strongest guitarist to date, and while his interplay with Sansone on numbers like "Impossible Germany" and "Walken" lacks the skronky muscle of his more avant-garde work of the past, it's never less than inspired and he works real wonders with Jeff Tweedy's lovely melodies. Sansone's keyboard work also shines, adding soulful accents to "Side with the Seeds" and Mellotron on "Leave Me (Like You Found Me)," as does Mikael Jorgensen's piano and organ, and overall this is Wilco's strongest album as an ensemble to date. Tweedy's vocals boast a clarity and nuance that reveals he's grown in confidence and skill as a singer, and the songs recall Summerteeth's beautiful but unsettling mix of lovely tunes and lyrics that focus on troubled souls and crumbling relationships. Between the pensive "Be Patient with Me," the lovelorn "Hate It Here," and "On and On and On"'s pledge that "we'll stay together" squared off against the resignation of "Please don't cry/We're designed to die," Sky Blue Sky isn't afraid to go to the dark places, but Tweedy and his bandmates also find plenty of beauty, inspiration, and real joy along the way, and the album's open, natural sound is an ideal match for the material. Sky Blue Sky may find Wilco dipping their toes into roots rock again, but this doesn't feel like a step back so much as another fresh path for one of America's most consistently interesting bands. Mark Deming, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

Sky Blue Sky Reviewby AndyMac

Reader Rating:
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April 20, 2009: If you were to try and compare Wilco's Sky Blue Sky with their previous album; A Ghost is Born, you would need an apple and an orange. Wilco ditches the experimental effects and goes for a more performance based effort on this album. I truly love this album. The strongest songs are some of the finest and most enjoyable music in their entire catalogue: Impossible Germany, Sky Blue Sky, Hate It Here, Walken. However, a few songs tend to be a little dull for my taste: see Side With the Seeds. But don't let that sway you from listening to one of Wilco's strongest albums! Pick it up, and keep supporting one of the most interesting and creative bands of this generation.

This review was written about the CD Enhanced edition.

Perfecting the craftby Anonymous

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March 07, 2008: 70's rock never sounded so genuine from a band not of the 70's. For those folks expecting Yankee Hotel Foxtrot II, that's a really small way of thinking and misses the whole point of Wilco -- which is not to be an alt-country Radiohead.

This review was written about the CD Enhanced edition.


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