Re: aotd Jeff Tweedy?

1999-04-22 Thread cwilson

 er, no comment except to say that the phrase "with Beck, Joe Henry and 
 Wilco doing what they're doing..." begs the Sesame Street response: 
 which of these things is not like the others? I would actually choose 
 Beck as one of the artists who's not been too "chickenshit" (to quote 
 myself) to pick up the Make Singles challenge raised by Nirvana, as 
 well as, at different times and places, the lines in the sand drawn by 
 Prince and the various hip-hop contenders including Dre and the 
 Beasties, not to mention by Uncle Tupelo, Steve Earle (whom I believe 
 was an AOTD nomination in our previous go-round), Elliott Smith (an 
 important up-from-underground phenom) and, in a roundabout way, Mr. 
 Number-Two-But-Trying-Harder Brooks.
 
 I still think he's in Cobain's long shadow, by the by, and my personal 
 feeling is that he's just not quite the burst of light he'd need to be 
 to qualify, but Odelay, Transmutations - and I'd bet the upcoming 
 "official" Odelay followup - make a good case.
 
 carl w



Re: aotd Jeff Tweedy?

1999-04-22 Thread Ndubb

In a message dated 4/22/99 7:40:09 PM EST, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

  I still think he's in Cobain's long shadow, by the by, and my 
personal 
  feeling is that he's just not quite the burst of light he'd need to be 
  to qualify, but Odelay, Transmutations - and I'd bet the upcoming 
  "official" Odelay followup - make a good case. 

And let's not forget "Loser," the single that originally put him on the map 
and became a minor pop-cultural phenomenon. I'll rank that song as one of the 
most emblematic rock moments of the '90s. Top two maybe, second to "Teen 
Spirit," I reckon. 

Notice I said rock moments. I'm sick of trying to compete with the country 
thinkers. They look at the world funny. 

Neal Weiss