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Adult Head
 
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Adult Head [Paperback]

Jeff Tweedy
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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"Adult Head" is the first book of poetry by Jeff Tweedy, the songwriting genius behind the band Wilco. In turns surreal and concrete, playful and serious, urgent and whimsical, "Adult Head" rewards readers with a unique prosody and deep wisdom. Culled from the same mind responsible for some of the best lyrics and music made in the past decade, this volume displays Tweedy's prodigious talent for poetry on the page. Jeff Tweedy has devoted the last twenty years of his life to songwriting and music making. As a member of the band Wilco and formerly of the band Uncle Tupelo, Tweedy and his band mates have garnered respect and praise from "Rolling Stone", "Spin", the "New Yorker", the "New York Times", and the "Chicago Tribune". Tweedy lives in Chicago with his wife and two sons.

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4 Reviews
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3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Jeff Tweedy is a Writer, May 22 2004
This review is from: Adult Head (Paperback)
It's about time Jeff Tweedy who has written engaging rock songs for the past twenty years for Uncle Tupelo and Wilco put out a book of poems. Lyrics from such songs as She's a Jar prove themselves to qualify as poetry. Most rock lyrics on a white page without the embellishment of a crooning voice or a pounding four-piece band can be as painful as waking up next to someone you met in a strobe light club. Somehow the daylight against the white sheets shows unforgiving truths. This has never been the case for Jeff Tweedy.

His first book of poems Adult Head holds up as a masterful book of poetry. One of the most rewarding aspects about Adult Head is that these poems are not obvious and explicit. Reading these poems feels like being immersed into the subconscious or tapping into those nebulous dreams we remember for a short while after waking up. They are cerebral poems that lend themselves to contemplation with such lines as "let's wear momentum/how honor pulverizes this now/like nothing else/it's happening/so loosen your body/to me."

Jeff Tweedy holds his ground in the realm of contemporary poets. He synthesizes influences from the imagery Williams Carlos Williams to the surrealism of Burgess to avant-garde rock lyrics of Thurston Moore.

Even though this collection isn't a masterpiece, there is something hindering in each crafted poem, they give the anticipation of one to come.

Fans of Tweedy's music and lyrics may be pleased to find that his sardonic humor continues. "For you to kiss my black eye even though I caught it from you," recalls the domestic turmoil in the Summerteeth album. Also some complete poems will be put to music in Wilco's upcoming album a Ghost is Born.

Jeff Tweedy gave a reading at the AWP conference in the Palmer House Chicago just a few weeks before he checked himself into a rehab center. Shielded underneath a grungy army coat, a sock hat, and dark horn rimmed glasses he adjusted his mike for a ten-minute reading. With his raspy singer's voice he spoke, "this is my first time reading in front of a group. And let me tell you how thrilled I am to do it in a roomful of writers." His self-deprecation was unfounded after he got through such gems like "Another Great Thing", "Damen Avenue," and "Hell". Adult Head introduces a new career for Jeff Tweedy as a poet.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful yet difficult., April 14 2006
This review is from: Adult Head (Paperback)
Jeff Tweedy is a remarkable artist. In one moment he plays with Wilco, the next with Billy Bragg or Loose Fur, and then with great ease he transfers his lyrical abilities into publish a collection of poems/songs. Many of the poems look to be starting points, or ending points, to many of Tweedy's musical compositions. While reading don't be surprised to hear a Wilco tune running through your head, or if you hear one of Tweedy's side-projects, again, don't be surprised if you make connections to alot of the poetry.

Many of the works are painfully personal. The poems are Tweedy bearing all: relationships with his family, personal feelings towards himself, there is nothing that he hides from you. The poems are wonderful yet difficult because they are so personal, understanding these prose sometimes takes many readings to get to the real heart of the idea; however, when that heart reveals itself it is like a wonderful light switch that turns on in an empty basement.

If you are a Wilco fan read this book. If you are not a fan of Wilco but like poetry read this book. If you are trying to learn to write poetry yourself read this book and use it as a beautiful study. But, if you don't like reading, listening to music, laughing, crying, kissing, telephone calls from friends, or trying new things, well, don't read this book.

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1.0 out of 5 stars The Map Is Not the Territory, Jun 26 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Adult Head (Paperback)
Oh, dear. Why, oh why must these great musicians write terrible poetry? I will forgive Dave Alvin, and David Berman's Actual Air is actual, viable, vital work. But this puerile foray into the gentler genre is bad news for Wilco boys everywhere. Better than Ally Sheedy's book; however, I'd rather read some real poets and listen to Master Tweedy whine prettily over a soundtrack...
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