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Wilco Tickets

Jeff Tweedy and the rest of his alternative-country rock band Wilco have taken fans and critics by storm with their popular albums! The eclectic band is known for putting on spectacular shows! Don't miss your chance to see Wilco perform LIVE! Buy your Wilco tickets now!
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laleucher park lowell ma
By jb from keene nh on 7/18/2009
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

best show of the summer ,rocked the house far out

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Wilco rocks!
By cbfr59 from New York, NY on 8/15/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Great Encores, Great Sound, Perfect Set List
Best For:
Everyone

Wilco's show at the McCarren Park Pool was the best concert I've seen this summer. The band was so tight, and played a terrific, varied set list that built towards two long encores that tore the place apart. In all they played pretty much non-stop for 2 1/2 hours. It was creative, surprising, perfectly played music; but then, it was Wilco. Wilco at their best.

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Good Show
By Sarah from St. Louis, MO on 5/19/2008
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It
Best For:
Everyone

I guess not being a "die hard" fan I didn't realize people get tickets for every night they play. That translates to them not wanting to do too many repeat songs, which means the first & second night probably were the better days to go. Although Saturday was enjoyable, I heard they played a lot more songs I was hoping to hear the other nights. All in all though, I really enjoyed the show, these guys are fabulous.

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[0 of 1 customers found this review helpful]

Bittersweet
By Megan S. from Lakewood, OH on 2/26/2008
Pros:
Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound, My date loved it, Seats were perfect
Cons:
Crowd was too laid back, My date broke up with me, No alcohol
Best For:
Everyone

[...]-- kind of expensive, but the quality of the seats and show was well worth the price. Can't say i was thrilled that my date broke up with me after the concert -- he pretty much used me -- still what the heck, i had a great time seeing Wilco.

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Wilco Biography

Wilco rose from the ashes of the seminal roots rock band Uncle Tupelo, which disbanded in 1994. While Jay Farrar, one of the group's two singer/songwriters, went on to form Son Volt, his ex-partner Jeff Tweedy established Wilco along with the remaining members of Tupelo's final incarnation, which included drummer Ken Coomer as well as part-time bandmates John Stirratt (bass) and Max Johnston (mandolin, banjo, fiddle, and lap steel). Guitarist Jay Bennett rounded out the group, which in 1995 issued its debut album, A.M., a collection of spry country-rock tunes that followed the course established in Tweedy's earlier work.

Wilco's sophomore effort, 1996's two-disc set Being There, marked a radical transformation in the group's sound while remaining steeped in the style that earned Tweedy his reputation, the songs took unexpected detours into psychedelia, power pop, and soul, complete with orchestral touches and R&B horn flourishes. Shortly after the release of Being There, which most critics judged to be among the year's best releases, Johnston left the group to play with his sister, singer Michelle Shocked, and was replaced by guitarist Bob Egan of the band Freakwater. At the same time, while remaining full-time members of Wilco, Stirratt, Bennett, and Coomer also began performing together in the pop side project Courtesy Move. In 1998, Wilco collaborated with singer/songwriter Billy Bragg on Mermaid Avenue, a collection of performances based on unreleased material originally written by Woody Guthrie.

Their stunningly lush third album, Summerteeth, followed in 1999 and met with critical acclaim but only average sales, initiating tensions with their label, Warner Bros. Mermaid Avenue, Vol. 2, which featured more selections from the band's collaborations with Bragg on Woody Guthrie's unfinished songs, was issued in 2000. Following this release, longtime drummer Ken Coomer decided to amicably leave the band and was replaced by the Chicago-based Glenn Kotche. Wilco then focused on recording their fourth album, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, which ultimately led to the departure of guitarist Jay Bennett and further tensions with their label. Unwilling to change the album to make it more commercially viable, Wilco bought the finished studio tapes from Warner/Reprise for a reported 50,000 and left the label altogether.

Leaked tracks from the album surfaced on the Internet in late 2001, and the stripped-down lineup of Tweedy, Kotche, Stirratt, and multi-instrumentalist Leroy Bach embarked on a small tour to support -- or drum up support for -- the unreleased record. Nonesuch Records picked up the album and officially released it in early 2002 to widespread critical acclaim. Meanwhile, an independent film documenting the drama surrounding the album (I Am Trying to Break Your Heart) followed in the fall of 2002. During the down time after the album was recorded, Tweedy composed and recorded the film score to the Ethan Hawke film Chelsea Walls, which ended up being released around the same time as Yankee Hotel Foxtrot.

Wilco toured extensively following the release of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, and in 2003 began work on their next album, A Ghost Is Born. While sessions went smoothly compared to Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, after the album was finished Leroy Bach left the band in a split that was described as mutual and amicable guitarist Nels Cline, keyboardist Mike Jorgensen, and multi-instrumentalist Pat Sansone joined Wilco for their subsequent tour. Shortly before the album's release, Tweedy surprised many fans by announcing he had entered a drug rehabilitation facility to treat a dependency on painkillers, prescribed to treat a long history of migraine headaches aggravated by panic disorder. Tweedy discussed his health problems in depth, along with the often tangled history of Wilco and Uncle Tupelo, in Wilco: Learning How to Die, a biography of the group written by rock journalist Greg Kot, published to coincide with A Ghost Is Born's release in the spring of 2004.

The following year, the group released Kicking Television: Live in Chicago, a 23-track collection recorded in the Windy City's ~Vic Theater, an album that was later deemed one of the Top 20 best live albums by ~Q Magazine. In 2007 Wilco's sixth studio album, Sky Blue Sky, hit shelves. Less experimental than its predecessors, Sky Blue Sky peaked at number five on the U.S. album charts and made a strong showing internationally. Wilco's seventh album, the breezy and laid-back Wilco (The Album), was released on June 30, 2009, one month after the death of former bandmember Jay Bennett, who passed away in his home in Urbana, Illinois after accidentally overdosing on the prescription painkiller fentanyl. At the end of touring that album, the band took a break for much of 2010 (their longest break since formation) and resurfaced in 2011 with their own label, dBpm Records, and the release of The Whole Love. ~ Jason Ankeny & Zac Johnson, Rovi