It has been clear from the start that
Wilco was first and foremost
Jeff Tweedy's vehicle, one where he's given his collaborators plenty of space to show off their talents but ultimately in the service of his songs and his musical vision. Since
Wilco is at heart whatever
Jeff wants it to be, it's interesting that he's belatedly taken on a solo career, perhaps to create a separate musical identity for some of his work, or perhaps to lessen the appearance that he's
Wilco's benevolent tyrant (as opposed to the strategy that led
Mark E. Smith to famously say, "If it's me and your granny on bongos, it's
the Fall"). In 2018,
Jeff Tweedy brought out his first solo album of original material,
Warm, 11 songs of comfort and compassion in the midst of difficult times, with its sibling companion piece,
Warmer, arriving in 2019. 2020's
Love Is the King feels like a blend of the themes and approach of
Warm and
Warmer with the more experimental bent of
Sukierae, the 2014 album
Jeff made with his son Spencer Tweedy on drums under the group name
Tweedy.
Love Is the King is the unofficial second
Tweedy album, as
Jeff and Spencer take on all the instrumental duties, while Spencer's brother Sammy contributes the occasional harmony vocal.
Sukierae was built on songs about coping with tragedy, and
Warm and
Warmer were about looking for solace in the midst of a chaotic world;
Love Is the King embraces all of that, in hope as well as fear. Created in part because
Jeff and his sons were stranded at home by the COVID-19 pandemic with little to do and much to think about,
Love Is the King sounds like the product of a lot of thinking while lying awake at 2 a.m., sometimes in search of soothing emotions and sometimes with the passing shadows seeming more than a bit scary. The album also invests the exploratory sound of
Jeff's more adventurous compositions (suggesting a more homespun version of
Big Star's third album) with flashes of
Warm's homey twang, giving familiar themes a personality that comes from the head as well as the heart. It would be easy to look at
Love Is the King as a holding action while waiting for fate to allow
Wilco to get back to work; in some respects, that's exactly what it is, but it's also heartfelt, honest, and brave in
Jeff's willingness to open up about what's good and what's frightening about life in 2020, without writing songs guaranteed to outlive their usefulness when the year is out. Like much of
Jeff Tweedy's music (especially since
Wilco's brief hiatus in late 2017),
Love Is the King is his very personal reaction to an increasingly difficult time in America's history. He doesn't pretend to have answers, yet this music is his own kind of therapy, recognizing his emotions and working through them before they devour him, and he makes both the process and the challenges well worth hearing. ~ Mark Deming