A review of last night's show - with a tip o' the Hee-Haw straw hat to 
     David Cantwell for the illumination of the ELO emulations on Summer 
     Teeth.
     
     Carl W.
     
     * * *
     
     
     WILCO WITH VIC CHESNUTT
     at The Guvernment on Saturday
     
     by CARL WILSON
     The Globe and Mail, Toronto
     
     I n a certain light, Jeff Tweedy's career - ever since his teenage 
     group the Primitives in Belleville, Ill., metamorphosed into the 
     legendary late-eighties band Uncle Tupelo - has been a struggle to 
     address the question of what to do if it's not possible to play punk 
     rock anymore.
     
      Uncle Tupelo's answer, famously, was to mine the distant past: With 
     partner Jay Farrar (now of Son Volt), Tweedy combed old-time country 
     music for sounds that could resonate in the postindustrial Rust Belt. 
     But when Tweedy formed Wilco, he changed tactics. Wilco's alternative 
     to "alternative" is pop music, the 1970s top-40 sound of Tweedy's 
     childhood, from Cheap Trick to - prominently on Wilco's just-released 
     third album, Summer Teeth - the power-pop period of the Electric Light 
     Orchestra.
     
      It's a nervy strategy, and its potential and its failings were 
     evident in equal measure at Wilco's early-evening, sold-out show on 
     Saturday at The Guvernment. In a long set that included 
     double-keyboard sugar shocks, a veritable army of guitars, more than 
     enough rock-outs and a passel of "ooh-aah" vocal fillips, waves of 
     pure elation were followed by bland washouts.
     
      Tweedy, the man with the most earnest eyebrows in rock 'n' roll, was 
     consistently watchable, remarkably engaged with every line of every 
     song considering the group's punishing tour schedule. The best tunes 
     from Summer Teeth, including Can't Stand It, Via Chicago and A Shot in 
     the Arm, seemed  so fresh that you could imagine a new generation of 
     11-year-olds pumping up the radio volume and posturing to them in 
     front of their bedroom mirrors.
     
      Yet in a few songs from 1998's Mermaid Avenue - a collaboration with 
     Billy Bragg in setting lyrics from Woody Guthrie's notebooks - Tweedy 
     discovered much wider thematic territory than he manages to cover in 
     his own writing. The results are musical pearls such as Hesitating 
     Beauty and California Stars, which was received like the 
     time-burnished classic it deserves to be during the 
     otherwise-excessive double encore.
     
      Much of the time, however, the samey songs seemed undeserving of the 
     band's prodigious energies, and the hard-core fans' hunger for more 
     thick-necked rock-show gestures left one wondering whether Tweedy 
     would ever fully liberate himself from one or another form of 
     nostalgia. None of those 11-year-olds will ever find out how cool he 
     is if he keeps pandering to the pushing-40 punters.
     
      By contrast, Vic Chesnutt, in his opening set - sitting alone in his 
     wheelchair, wrist braces limiting his electric-guitar work, his 
     poignant voice nearly lost in an inadequate sound mix in the cavernous 
     club - served no earthly master, not even himself.
     
      The Virginia songwriter specializes in acidic wordplay (he writes 
     like a maudlin-drunk Dr. Seuss), and the barely-there accompaniment 
     let the few people who had the courtesy to listen luxuriate in such 
     lyrical loopdiloops as, "We blew past the army motorcade/ And its 
     abnormal load haulage/ The gravity of the situation/ Came on us like a 
     bit of new knowledge."
     
      The shocker here was the reputed misanthrope's easygoing generosity: 
     After a few pieces from his new album The Salesman and Bernadette, 
     Chesnutt bantered with the crowd to determine what songs he'd play 
     next.
     
     And frequently, almost casually, with his Valley-of-Demerol 
     death-croak on Supernatural or his teetering, lonesome croon on Where 
     Were You?, Chesnutt hit emotional depths that Tweedy, so far, is just 
     a touch too calculating ever to find.

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