Jeffrey Scot Tweedy (born
August 25, 1967 in Belleville, Illinois
, United States) is an American songwriter, musician and leader of the band Wilco. Tweedy joined
rockabilly band The Plebes with high school
friend
Jay Farrar in the early 1980s, but
Tweedy's musical interests caused one of Farrar's brothers to quit.
The Plebes changed their name to The Primitives in 1984, and
subsequently to
Uncle Tupelo. Uncle
Tupelo garnered enough support to earn a record deal and to tour
nationally. After releasing four albums, conflicts between Tweedy
and Farrar caused the band to break up in 1994.
In 1994, Tweedy formed
Wilco with
John Stirratt,
Max
Johnston, and
Ken Coomer. Wilco has
released seven albums and found commercial success with their
albums
Yankee Hotel
Foxtrot,
A Ghost Is
Born, and
Sky Blue
Sky. The band also released two collaboration albums with
Billy Bragg and one with
The Minus 5. Jeff Tweedy has been the recipient
of two
Grammy Awards, including Best
Alternative Album for
A Ghost Is Born. Tweedy has also
participated in a number of side groups including
Golden Smog and
Loose
Fur, has released a book of poems, and has released a DVD of
solo performances. He was originally influenced by punk and country
music, but has recently reflected more experimental themes in his
music.
Tweedy has been afflicted with
migraine
headaches since childhood. Treatment for the migraines led to a
dependency on
painkillers, for which he
underwent successful rehab in 2004. Tweedy also has been open about
the fact that he suffers from
clinical depression and
panic attacks.
Early life

Childhood picture of Jeff
Tweedy.
Jeff
Tweedy was born in Belleville
, Illinois
on August
25, 1967 as the fourth child of Bob and Jo Ann Tweedy.
Bob Tweedy
worked at Alton &
Southern Railroad in East St. Louis
while Jo Ann was a kitchen
designer. Jo Ann bought Tweedy his first guitar at age six,
although he did not begin to play it seriously until he was eight.
In 1981, when Tweedy was fourteen years old, he befriended
Jay Farrar in an English class at Belleville
Township High School West. All of the members of Farrar's family
enjoyed playing music, causing Farrar to already have knowledge of
the musical elements of rock and roll. By this time, Tweedy was a
fan of
The Ramones and
country music while Farrar enjoyed
The Sex Pistols.
Farrar was in a band called The Plebes with his brothers Wade and
Dade, which Tweedy joined in order to qualify for a battle of the
bands competition. Tweedy pushed The Plebes away from the
rockabilly music that they had been playing,
which caused Dade Farrar to leave the band. The band renamed
themselves The Primitives in 1984, taking their name from a song by
garage rock band
The Groupies. Wade Farrar sang lead vocals and
played harmonica, Jay Farrar played guitar, Tweedy played bass
guitar, and
Mike Heidorn played drums.
In late 1986, the band decided to change their name to Uncle
Tupelo, because a more popular British band was also using the name
"
The Primitives". The Primitives went
on hiatus in 1986 after Wade Farrar left the band to finish his
engineering degree at Southern Illinois University. While waiting
for Wade to return from campus, Jay, Tweedy, and Heidorn formed
Uncle Tupelo.
Uncle Tupelo (1987-1994)
At his parents' request, Jeff Tweedy enrolled at several
universities, but dropped out of them so that he could concentrate
on Uncle Tupelo. While
moonlighting as
a record store clerk at Euclid Records in St. Louis, Tweedy met
Tony Margherita. After Margherita saw the band perform at an
acoustic concert in 1988, he decided to become the band's manager.
The band
began playing regular shows at Cicero's club near Washington
University
with other bands playing in a similar style.
Uncle Tupelo recorded a ten-track demo tape entitled
Not
Forever, Just For Now in 1989, attracting the attention of
Giant/Rockville Records.
The independent label signed the band, and Uncle Tupelo's first
album,
No Depression,
was released the next year. The
title song, originally performed by
the
Carter Family, became strongly
associated with the
alternative
country scene, and became the name of an influential
alternative country
periodical.
During times when Uncle Tupelo was not touring, Tweedy and Farrar
played as Coffee Creek, a short-lived cover band with
The Bottle Rockets'
Brian Henneman and Mark Ortmann. Around this
time, Tweedy began developing problems with alcohol abuse, leading
to tensions between Tweedy and Farrar. While he never refused to
play a gig, Tweedy was forced to sit out in place of Henneman at
some performances. Tweedy quit drinking entirely after meeting
future wife Sue Miller, although he replaced this habit with
smoking
marijuana. After releasing
Still Feel Gone, the band
formed a friendship with
Peter Buck of
R.E.M., who produced their third album
March 16-20, 1992 for
free. Uncle Tupelo left the Rockville label in favor of
Sire Records (
Warner) later in 1992 because Rockville
refused to pay the band any royalties for their albums. After the
signing,
Max Johnston and
John Stirratt joined the band as Mike Heidorn
was replaced by Bill Belzer who was later replaced by
Ken Coomer. The five-piece band recorded
Anodyne, which sold over
150,000 copies and debuted at number 18 on the
Billboard Heatseekers chart, but was the last album
Uncle Tupelo released.
Breakup
In January 1994, Farrar called Tony Margherita to tell him that the
band was breaking up, saying that he was not having any fun in the
band anymore and was not getting along with Tweedy. Tweedy was
enraged that Farrar decided to break up the band without notifying
him, and this led to a series of harsh verbal exchanges. Farrar and
Tweedy agreed to a final Uncle Tupelo tour, but the concerts were
marred by the two not participating in each other's songs. The band
decided to play Tweedy's "The Long Cut" on
Late Night with Conan
O'Brien, which further distanced Farrar and Tweedy. Farrar
began to assemble a new band named
Son Volt
with Mike Heidorn,
Joe Henry, bassist Jim
Boquist, and his brother Dave Boquist. At the same time, Jeff
Tweedy formed
Wilco with Stirratt, Johnston,
and Coomer.
Wilco (1995-present)
Wilco was signed to
Reprise Records
(Warner) and began recording
A.M. almost as soon as the band was
formed. After recording, Tweedy was introduced to
Jay Bennett, who then joined the band. Also
during this time, Tweedy quit smoking marijuana after a
particularly bad experience with some
cannabis brownies.
A.M. did not
fare as well commercially in comparison to Son Volt's first album,
only reaching number 27 on the Heatseekers chart while Son Volt's
debut
Trace hit the
Billboard 200.
Dan Murphy of
Soul
Asylum invited Tweedy to join him in a supergroup named
Golden Smog with
Gary Louris and Marc Perlman of the
Jayhawks, Kraig Johnson of Run Westy Run,
and Noah Levy of
The Honeydogs. Under
the
pseudonym Scott Summit, Tweedy
released
Down by the Old
Mainstream with Golden Smog in 1996.
Tweedy and Wilco began to explore new styles and broke from the
style of previous recordings on the seminal sprawling double album
Being There in 1996.
Tweedy did not write music for many of the songs ahead of time, and
welcomed unexpected sounds into the recording. Wilco recorded
nineteen songs for the double-CD album, and wanted the label to
release it with a retail price comparable to a single-CD release.
Being There was a commercial success, selling 300,000
copies and peaking in the top half of the
Billboard 200.
Reprise records invested $100,000 in the single "Outta Mind
(Outtasite)", but received little radio exposure. While on tour,
Tweedy began to spend time reading books by
William H. Gass,
Henry
Miller, and
John Fante. As he read
their books, Tweedy decided to place more of an emphasis on
writing. Representatives in the A&R department of Reprise
wanted a radio single from
Summerteeth, and Wilco
reluctantly agreed to a re-working of "
Can't Stand It". The single was a top five
hit on
adult album
alternative radio stations, but failed to cross over to a
larger audience.
Before the release of
Summerteeth, the daughter of the
late folk legend Woody Guthrie contacted
folk
rock singer
Billy Bragg, who in turn
contacted Tweedy about recording an album of unreleased
Woody Guthrie songs. Tweedy was indifferent to
the idea of working with Bragg, but Jay Bennett's enthusiasm about
the idea convinced Tweedy to get the band involved in the project.
As a result of Tweedy's feelings on the political nature of some of
the lyrics, Bragg recorded mostly political songs while Wilco
recorded more neutral songs. Almost all of the songs that appeared
on
Mermaid Avenue and
Mermaid Avenue Vol.
II were recorded
over a six day period in December 1997. The first
Mermaid
Avenue album and a second Golden Smog album (
Weird Tales) were released in 1998,
Summerteeth was released in early 1999, and
Mermaid
Avenue Vol. II was released in 2000. Tweedy received
his first Grammy nomination when
Mermaid Avenue was
nominated for
Grammy Award for
Best Contemporary Folk Album in 1999.
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
Cover of the album
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot.
Reprise Records dropped Wilco from their label after receiving
the album.
It was released a year later on Nonesuch Records.
Jeff Tweedy was invited to play at Chicago's Noise Pop festival,
and was told that he could collaborate with a musician of his
choosing. Tweedy chose
Jim
O'Rourke based on his fascination with O'Rourke's
Bad Timing album.
O'Rourke offered to bring drummer
Glenn
Kotche to the festival, and the trio formed a side project
named
Loose Fur. The other band members of
Wilco had written a number of songs for
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, but Tweedy
was unsatisfied with them because he believed that the songs did
not sound like the ones he played with Loose Fur. Tweedy became
such a fan of Kotche's playing style that he decided to dismiss Ken
Coomer from the band in favor of Kotche. Tweedy had strong feelings
about how songs should be sequenced, which clashed with Jay
Bennett's focus on the songs themselves. Because Bennett was mixing
the album, this led to a series of arguments about how the album
should sound between songs. Tweedy asked O'Rourke to remix several
songs on the album that had been mixed by Bennett, which caused
tensions within the band to escalate. The album was completed in
June 2001, and Tweedy was insistent that it was in its final form.
Tweedy also fired Jay Bennett around this time, believing
(according to Jay Bennett) that Wilco should only have one core
member. The band maintains that the firing of Jay Bennett was a
collective decision.
Reprise Record's parent company
Time
Warner merged with
America Online
in 2001, and the recording company was asked to cut costs.
Howie Klein, the CEO of Reprise Records,
considered Wilco to be one of the label's core bands, but was
offered a lucrative buy-out by AOL Time Warner. A&R
representative Mio Vukovic was placed in charge of Wilco, and he
believed that the album was not commercially viable. Vukovic called
manager Tony Margherita and told him that Reprise was not
interested in releasing the album, a point of view shared by the
head of the A&R department, David Kahne. Kahne agreed to
release Wilco from Reprise records under the condition that Wilco
got to keep all legal entitlements to the
Yankee Hotel
Foxtrot album. After an article in the
Chicago Tribune publicly described
these managerial practices, CEO Gary Briggs quit. Shortly after
leaving the label, Briggs remarked:
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot was originally scheduled to be
released on Reprise on September 11, 2001 prior to the band's
departure from Reprise. Seven days later, Tweedy decided that he
would stream the entirety of
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot on
Wilco's official website. Over thirty record labels offered to
release
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot after the departure from
Reprise was official. One of the thirty was Warner Brothers
affiliate
Nonesuch Records, who
signed Wilco in November 2001. AOL Time Warner paid Wilco to make
the album on Reprise, gave them the record for free, and then
bought it back on the Nonesuch label. The album was released on
April 23, 2002 to significant critical acclaim, including being
named the best album of the year by
The Village Voice. The album became
the biggest hit of Jeff Tweedy's career and was certified gold by
the
Recording
Industry Association of America for selling over 500,000
copies.
A Ghost Is Born and side projects
Scott McCaughey contacted Tweedy
about recording an album together for a
The
Minus 5 release. They scheduled a meeting for September 11,
2001, but were reluctant to enter the recording studio after the
terrorist attacks. At
night, McCaughey and Tweedy decided to begin recording songs as a
way to calm down. A few more tracks were later added to the album
with the rest of Wilco, and it was released with the name
Down with Wilco in
2003.
In November 2003, Wilco began recording a fifth studio album.
Unlike their previous albums, all of the songs were originally
performed in the studio and then later adapted for playing at
concerts. Wilco released
A Ghost Is
Born on June 22, 2004, and it attained a top ten peak on
the
Billboard 200. The album
was awarded with Grammy Awards for
Best Alternative Music Album
and
Best Recording Package in
2005. A few weeks before the album's release, Tweedy released a
book of forty-three poems entitled
Adult Head on Zoo
Press.
The
following year, the band released their first live album, a
two-disc set entitled Kicking Television: Live in
Chicago, recorded at the The Vic Theater
. Wilco recorded twelve tracks for a sixth
studio album entitled
Sky Blue
Sky, which was released on May 15, 2007.
Sky Blue
Sky debuted at number four on the
Billboard 200, the
band's highest debut yet. It sold over 87,000 copies in its first
week of release.
Jeff Tweedy has performed several solo tours, on which he typically
plays acoustic music. He also does The Song Simple Twist of Fate on
the Soundtrack to I'm Not There. On October 24, 2006 Nonesuch
Records released
Sunken Treasure:
Live in the Pacific Northwest, a live DVD by Tweedy.
The disc
includes performances and conversations gathered over five nights
on Tweedy’s February 2006 solo acoustic tour, with footage from
concerts at Seattle’s Moore Theater, Portland’s Crystal
Ballroom
, Eugene’s McDonald Theatre, Arcata’s Humboldt State
University, and The
Fillmore
in San
Francisco. The DVD was directed by Christoph Green and
Fugazi’s Brendan Canty, the creators of the
documentary series
Burn to
Shine.
Musical style
Jeff Tweedy's musical style has varied over his music career.
Tweedy's vocal style is considered nasal, emotional, and scratchy,
and has been compared to that of
Neil
Young. His first exposure to music was through
gramophone records that his siblings left
behind when they attended college, and he particularly liked
The Beatles'
White Album. Tweedy would frequently
read issues of magazines such as
Rolling Stone, and began to purchase
punk rock albums such as
The Clash's
London
Calling and
X's
Wild Gift. Belleville crowds did not respond
well to punk music, so while Tweedy was a member of The Primitives
they played covers of
country songs at
much faster tempos. When Uncle Tupelo formed, the band began
composing its own songs influenced by
Jason & the Scorchers and
The Minutemen. Wilco's first
album shared many musical similarities with the four previous Uncle
Tupelo albums, but on
Being There, Tweedy began
introducing more experimental themes into his music. He claims that
he wanted to rebel against the belief spread by the
No
Depression magazine that Wilco was primarily a country band.
One of the most influential albums for Tweedy was
Bad Timing by Jim
O'Rourke, which helped to inspire
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and
A Ghost Is Born. Tweedy uses a 1957 Gibson J-45, as well
as Fender Jazzmasters, Telecasters and Gibson SGs. He also has been
known to use a Breedlove 000.
Personal life
Tweedy has been prone to chronic
migraines
throughout his entire life, forcing him to miss forty days of
elementary school in one year. These chronic migraines caused
Tweedy to become dependent on painkillers. While he attempted to
regulate his use of painkillers, he was never able to stop their
use for more than five weeks. Tweedy attributes this to comorbidity
with
major depressive
disorder and severe
panic attacks.
In 2004, he entered a
dual diagnosis
rehabilitation clinic in order to receive treatment for an
addiction to prescription
painkillers.
Tweedy quit
smoking the next year;
John Stirratt claimed afterward that this significantly improved
the focus of the band.
Tweedy is married to former talent booking agent Sue Miller. Tweedy
first met Miller when he was trying to get Uncle Tupelo booked at
Cubby Bear, where Miller worked.
Miller
opened a club in Chicago named Lounge Ax
in 1989, and booked Uncle Tupelo for sixteen shows
over four years. Miller and Tweedy began dating in 1991 and
they were married on August 9, 1995. The Tweedys have two children:
Spencer Tweedy (born December 16, 1995) and Sam Tweedy (born
December 22, 1999). Spencer has been the drummer for pre-teen rock
band
The Blisters, not to be confused
with Chicago powerpop band
The
Blissters, since December 2003. Spencer has also recently
formed a new band called
Tully
Monster with friends Hayden Holbert and Henry Mosher. They go
to a Montessori School in Chicago,IL.
The band has played
major events such as Lollapalooza,
which Jeff and Wilco headlined, and also at the opening of Millennium Park
in Chicago. On December 16, 2008 Spencer
Tweedy joined Wilco on stage at Madison Square Garden to play drums
on their song "The Late Greats," while opening for Neil Young.
Before the song, the entire crowd sang Happy Birthday to Spencer
Tweedy, as it was his 13th birthday.
In early May 2009, former Wilco member
Jay
Bennett sued Tweedy for breach of contract. Bennett died later
that month of an apparent accidental overdose of the painkiller
fentanyl.
Selected discography
Uncle Tupelo
Wilco
Notes and references
- The band was also known as The Primatives due to a misprint on
their business cards
- Mike Heidorn's liner notes for No
Depression, which were included in the 2003 re-issue of
the album. An online transcription can be found here.
- Last accessed December 18, 2006.
- Last accessed December 29, 2006.
- Last accessed December 29, 2006.
- Last accessed December 29, 2006.
- Jones, Sam. I Am Trying to Break Your Heart: A Film About
Wilco (DVD), Plexifilm, 2002.
- Last accessed December 21, 2006.
- Last accessed December 26, 2006.
- Last accessed December 26, 2006.
- Kicking Television: Live in Chicago liner notes
- Sunken Treasure: Live in the Pacific Northwest liner
notes.
References
External links