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Wilco - A.M. (1995) {Nonesuch 180g) 24-bit/96kHz Vinyl Rip & CD-compatible

Posted By : Dr. Robert | Date : 28 Sep 2011 06:29:31 | Comments : 15 |
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Wilco - A.M.
Vinyl rip in 24-bit/96kHz | FLAC (5% Recovery) | m3u, no cue or log (vinyl) | Full LP Artwork
980 MB (24/96) + 300 MB redbook | FSc + FF + WU + HF | Alternative Country | 1995
Nonesuch Records ~ 518084-1 (2009) ~ 180g Vinyl pressed by Pallas in Germany

A.M. is the debut album of Chicago-based alternative rock band Wilco, released on March 28, 1995. The album was released only months after the breakup of Uncle Tupelo, an alternative country band that was the predecessor of Wilco. Prior to the release of the album, there was debate about whether the album would be better than the debut album of Son Volt, the new band of former Uncle Tupelo lead singer Jay Farrar.

Although A.M. was released before Son Volt's Trace, critical reviews were modest and initial sales were low. The album was later regarded as a "failure" by band members, as Trace became a greater commercial success. It was the band's last album to be recorded in an alternative country style, and is the only Wilco album to feature Brian Henneman as a lead guitarist.

Context and recording
Uncle Tupelo's last album, Anodyne, featured a new lineup for the band — a five-piece outfit with drummer Ken Coomer, bassist John Stirratt, and multi-instrumentalist Max Johnston. Tensions mounted between singers Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy, and Uncle Tupelo played its last concert on May 1, 1994 at Mississippi Nights in St. Louis, Missouri. The concert included the two singers providing lead vocals on an equal amount of songs.

Only days after the breakup, Tweedy decided to form a new group. He was able to retain the lineup of Uncle Tupelo sans Farrar, and rechristened the band Wilco. In mid-May, the band began to rehearse songs in the office of band manager Tony Margherita, and hired producer Brian Paulson, who produced Anodyne. Wilco first recorded demo tracks for the album at Easley studio in Memphis, Tennessee in June. Stirratt recommended the studio based on previous experience as a member of The Hilltops, and Tweedy had heard of the studio through a Jon Spencer Blues Explosion recording. Reprise Records, a subsidiary of Warner Brothers, signed Jeff Tweedy after hearing the tapes, and recording for the album continued through August.

Jeff Tweedy was preoccupied with trying to establish Wilco as a viable band on the Reprise label and decided to add another guitarist to the band. Brian Henneman, the lead singer for The Bottle Rockets, was brought into the recording sessions as a lead guitarist. Steel guitarist Lloyd Maines and bassist Daniel Corrigan also contributed to the album. Corrigan also photographed the band for the liner booklet. Howie Weinberg mastered the album, while Barbara Longo provided graphic design. Brian Henneman had to leave the band shortly after recording the album, and was replaced by former Titanic Love Affair guitarist Jay Bennett. Tweedy also attempted to create a more collaborative environment than Uncle Tupelo, requesting songwriting contributions from other members. John Stirratt submitted three songs, hoping to become a secondary songwriter for Wilco. However, although the songs were recorded as demos, only one ("It's Just That Simple") was selected to appear on the album, and was the only Stirratt song to appear on any Wilco album.

The album's title is intended to reference Top 40 radio stations, and the tracks reflect a straightforward country-rock sound. The band members felt that they needed to establish themselves outside of the Tupelo fanbase. However, Tweedy later stated that in actuality, they were "trying to tread some water with a perceived audience." Tweedy wrote a song about the Uncle Tupelo breakup, but decided that he didn't want any material on that subject matter to appear on the album. (It can be argued, however, that first single "Box Full of Letters", as well as "Too Far Apart" allude to the dissolution of Farrar and Tweedy's friendship and working relationship.) Critic and author Greg Kot wrote in Wilco: Learning How to Die that "Tweedy's voice and personality are as modest as the arrangements; there's little sense of drama, and virtually no hint of risk. Tweedy attributes some of the straightforwardness of the album to his abuse of marijuana at the time. Shortly after the album, Tweedy stopped smoking pot, to which he credits the introspectiveness of further albums.

While Wilco was recording tracks, Jay Farrar formed a band of his own, Son Volt. Son Volt signed to Warner Bros. Records and began recording their first album (also produced by Paulson), Trace, in November 1994. The fact that both Wilco and Son Volt began working on album almost immediately after the Uncle Tupelo breakup caused debate among critics, fans, and Warner Brothers about which would be the better band. Joe McEwen, who originally signed Uncle Tupelo to a Warner subsidiary, felt that Wilco was taking a step backwards from the material on Anodyne. McEwen urged Richard Dodd, who had recently mixed Tom Petty's Wildflowers, to remix the album. Dodd emphasized Tweedy's vocals to increase the chances of success on radio.

Wilco began touring before the album was released. Their live debut was on November 27, 1994 at Cicero's Basement Bar in St. Louis, a venue where Uncle Tupelo had first received significant media attention. The band was billed for that concert as Black Shampoo, a reference to a 1970s B-movie, and the show sold out. Wilco continued to tour for two hundred shows, culminating in show at the South by Southwest Music Conference in Austin, Texas in March 1995. A.M. was released on Reprise Records on March 28, 1995.

Commercial and critical reception
A.M. received modest reviews from critics. Holly George-Warren of Rolling Stone called the album "one hell of a country-guts debut", praising the influence of Gram Parsons and Neil Young on the music. However, the album still received a moderate three-and-a-half star rating. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic enjoyed "I Must Be High", noting that Wilco can "subvert the [alternative country] genre without losing its accessibility", but felt that the following songs were disappointing. However, fellow Allmusic critic Matthew Greenwald found the album to be "brilliant and underrated." Robert Christgau of The Village Voice gave the album a three-star honorable mention, but called it "realist defiance grinding sadly down into realist bathos."

The Village Voice placed the album at position thirty-four on the 1995 Pazz & Jop critics poll. The band was disappointed by the critical reception, since Trace was met with better reviews. According to Henneman: “The first Son Volt record was pretty fucking good. It was like watching a prize fight at that point. Wow! He slammed him there! Ouch! What a counterpunch! It was exciting being on the sidelines watching these guys. It's like Jay had something to prove with that first album, an urgency to it that none of his albums since have had. I felt he had a chip on his shoulder, and it shows up in the music. It was stunning. It was humbling. I think that kicked Jeff in the ass.”

A.M. only hit number twenty-seven on Billboard's Heatseekers chart, whereas Trace peaked at number 116 on the Billboard 200; by 1997, Trace had outsold A.M. two-to-one. Wilco released "Box Full of Letters" as a single, but it received little airplay. For the only time in Wilco's career, ticket sales failed to meet expectations. As of 2003, the album had sold about 150,000 copies.


Track listing
All songs written by Jeff Tweedy unless otherwise noted.

Side One
1. "I Must Be High" – 2:59
2. "Casino Queen" – 2:45
3. "Box Full of Letters" – 3:05
4. "Shouldn't Be Ashamed" – 3:28
5. "Pick Up the Change" – 2:56
6. "I Thought I Held You" – 3:49
7. "That's Not the Issue" – 3:19

Side Two
8. "It's Just That Simple" (John Stirratt) – 3:45
9. "Should've Been in Love" – 3:36
10. "Passenger Side" – 3:33
11. "Dash 7" – 3:29
12. "Blue Eyed Soul" – 4:05
13. "Too Far Apart" – 3:44


Released: March 28, 1995
Recorded: June–Fall 1994
Genre: Alternative country, alternative rock
Length: 44:33
Label: Sire/Reprise
Producer: Brian Paulson, Wilco

Professional ratings
Allmusic 3/5 stars
Rolling Stone 3.5/5 stars

Credits

Personnel

Jeff Tweedy – acoustic guitar, guitar, composer, vocals
John Stirratt – organ, acoustic guitar, bass, piano, bass guitar, vocals
Ken Coomer – drums, vocals
Max Johnston – banjo, dobro, fiddle, mandolin, vocals
Brian Henneman – guitar, vocals
Daniel Corrigan – bass, vocals, background vocals
Lloyd Maines – pedal steel, steel guitar

Production

Daniel Corrigan – photography
Richard Dodd – mixing
Barbara Longo – design
Brian Paulson – producer, engineer, mixing
Howie Weinberg – mastering
Wilco – producer, engineer
Bob Andrews – Production Coordinator


Vinyl Ripping Notes

Wilco - A.M.
Nonesuch 518084-1 (2009)
180g High-Performance Vinyl pressed by Pallas, Germany
24-bit / 96kHz Vinyl Rip by Dr. Robert
September 2011

Vinyl condition: New Sealed, First class Pallas pressing

Deadwax info
Side 1: 1-518084-A -18729-
Side 2: 1-518084-B -18729-

Nitty Gritty RCM 1.5
Technics SL-1210 MK2 DD Turntable
Origin Live OL1 fully modified tone arm (Rega RB250)
Audio-Technica AT33EV MC Cartridge
Pro-ject Tube Box SE II Preamp
Tascam US-144 external USB 2.0 Audiointerface
Mogami Gold TS/RCA interconnects
Mac Pro Dual Zeon 2.66 GHz
Bias Peak Pro 6.2 recording software
Click Repair 3.4.1 for de-click (manual mode only)
iZotope RX Advanced 2.0 for Redbook conversion
xACT Version 2.13 (4791) for Redbook SBE correction, MD5 checksum and Redbook FLAC
XLD Version 20110703 (135.1) for 24/96 FLAC conversion
Mustek ScanExpress A3 USB 1200 Pro Scanner

RCM > TT > AT33EV > TubeBox preamp > ADC > Mac Pro > Peak Pro @ 24/96 >
analyze (no clipping, DC Bias offset correction, each side gain adjusted to -0.3 dB) > split into individual tracks >
Click Repair 3.4.1 used in manual mode, 20~30 Rev, Pitch Protection, X2 >
FLAC encoded Level 8 with XLD

No DeNoise was used on this rip.
All de-clicking software used in full manual mode to preserve musical transients.
No music was harmed in the making of this vinyl rip.
No silence been removed, please burn gapless to match original track layout.

You are free to share this along with credit
"Rip by Dr. Robert"


Dynamic Range Report

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Analyzed folder: Wilco - A.M. (1995) [VINYL] {16-44} {Nonesuch 180g LP}
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DR . . . . Peak . . . . RMS . . . . Filename
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DR10 . . -1.40 dB . . -12.71 dB . . 01 - I Must Be High.aiff
DR12 . . -0.85 dB . . -13.45 dB . . 02 - Casino Queen.aiff
DR10 . . -2.60 dB . . -13.91 dB . . 03 - Box Full of Letters.aiff
DR11 . . -2.34 dB . . -15.38 dB . . 04 - Shouldn't Be Ashamed.aiff
DR11 . . -1.24 dB . . -13.30 dB . . 05 - Pick Up the Change.aiff
DR12 . . -0.93 dB . . -14.43 dB . . 06 - I Thought I Held You.aiff
DR10 . . -2.38 dB . . -14.24 dB . . 07 - That's Not the Issue.aiff
DR11 . . -1.66 dB . . -15.02 dB . . 08 - It's Just That Simple.aiff
DR10 . . -3.16 dB . . -15.09 dB . . 09 - Should've Been in Love.aiff
DR10 . . -2.58 dB . . -13.83 dB . . 10 - Passenger Side.aiff
DR11 . . -3.85 dB . . -17.09 dB . . 11 - Dash 7.aiff
DR12 . . -0.24 dB . . -14.72 dB . . 12 - Blue Eyed Soul.aiff
DR12 . . -1.58 dB . . -15.30 dB . . 13 - Too Far Apart.aiff
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Number of files: 13
Official DR value: DR11

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Posted By: HHR18 Date: 28 Sep 2011 09:26:57
Thanks Doc, any chance on A Ghost Is Born on vinyl? :)
Posted By: Barry Vaughan Date: 28 Sep 2011 10:14:06
Ha! You beat me to it. Thanks for this Doc, and for all the Wilco rips. A Ghost Is Born is the one I'm holding out for too.
Posted By: spikee Date: 28 Sep 2011 11:23:44
Thanks a lot Doc!!!
Posted By: kurioso Date: 28 Sep 2011 11:58:46
Thanks for this Wilco!
Posted By: Dr. Robert Date: 28 Sep 2011 12:23:48
@ Barry Vaughan

I already have "A Ghost Is Born" on vinyl. So I will try to get a rip up soon. I will have to buy a copy of Being There.
Posted By: tubert Date: 28 Sep 2011 12:30:36
Thanks Doc. My favorite Wilco lp.
Posted By: 86ed Date: 28 Sep 2011 13:46:17
Wow, THANKS Doc! For me this and Son Volt's Trace were both stellar first releases after the breakup of Uncle Tupelo. But I would have to say that "Being There" is a better Wilco record than A.M. for me, but still hold A.M. in very high regard and am really happy to see your transfer here!

Nothing that either band did after Uncle Tupelo has ever matched Son Volt's debut "Trace" in my opinion. Anyone own it? Usually over $100 if you can find it! I have a few other Son Volt LPs in the to-do pile, but not "Trace". Anyone own any of the 'original' (not the Anodyne reissue) UT vinyl to rip or loan?

Thanks again for all your great work Doc!
Posted By: son volt Date: 28 Sep 2011 15:31:07
A huge treat again! Wilco is in abundance nowadays really (but never too much).

Hey ya dear Doc. Great to know you've been busy doing more Wilco for us to enjoy.

I love this album no matter what they say and I thank you for the opportunity to enrich my collection with this compelling transfer. Just thanks a lot!

And as I see there are plenty more of Uncle Tupelo / Son Volt / Wilco rips to come, God bless!
Posted By: asterisk8 Date: 28 Sep 2011 19:45:25
YES!!!! I've been waiting for this, as you probably know from me bugging you about it since January! Sincere thanks, Doc. Your rips will be in my collection for a long time to come.
Posted By: metadon Date: 28 Sep 2011 21:59:29
Thank you for all Wilco rips! :)
btw: Do you know The Antlers? It's great band, but their CD's are to loud. I think you might like them. Of course it's only suggestion :)
Posted By: Bernie1 Date: 28 Sep 2011 23:25:31
Awesome, Doc - you are REALLY on a roll!!
Posted By: 86ed Date: 29 Sep 2011 01:59:40
He's on a roll, and he still takes time to offer help and guidance to some of us, a rare ripper indeed! Something "right" about this guy, eh?
Posted By: Bernie1 Date: 01 Oct 2011 12:46:59
I concur with the previous post. He is not like that "other" ripper.
Posted By: Dokter123 Date: 01 Oct 2011 20:13:29
Great uploads Doc
Posted By: Ratskin Date: 16 Oct 2011 16:34:29
Hey Doc, I have the original pressing of 'Being There' by Wilco if interested. Reprise Records 1996 46236-1
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