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Jeff Tweedy - Sunken Treasure - Live in the Pacific Northwest

Jeff Tweedy - Sunken Treasure - Live in the Pacific Northwest

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Jeff Tweedy - Sunken Treasure - Live in the Pacific Northwest

 
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075597990225

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Sunken Treasure compiles solo acoustic performances from Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy recorded live over five nights in February '06, as Tweedy travelled by bus from Seattle to San Francisco stopping in theaters, ballrooms, and college auditoriums along the way in Porland, Eugene, and Humbolt State University.

 
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Product Details
Actors:Jeff Tweedy
Format:Color, DVD, NTSC
Language:English
Subtitle:German, English, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese
Number of Discs:1
Studio:Nonesuch
Run Time:90 minutes
DVD Release Date:October 24, 2006
Average Customer Rating: based on 35 reviews

Features
  • Sunken Treasure compiles solo acoustic performances from Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy recorded live over five nights in February '06, as Tweedy travelled by bus from Seattle to San Francisco stopping in theaters, ballrooms, and college auditoriums along the way in Porland, Eugene, and Humbolt State University. It's essential viewing for Wilco fans. Track Listings: 1. Intro [Seattle] 2.


Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.5 ( 35 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

22 of 23 found the following review helpful:


5Captures Jeff's Music & Relationship w/ His Audience Accurately  Oct 26, 2006 By Ponch
I am a big Wilco and Jeff Tweedy fan. Those who are familiar with Jeff know he's been doing brief acoustic tours throughout his career with Wilco. It offers him an opportunity to revisit old Wilco and Uncle Tupelo tunes that the current Wilco line-up doesn't perform, or offer up different musical versions of Wilco songs (i.e., Sunken Treasure acoustically is more of a folk finger picking ditty with harmonica included).

The song selection is pretty standard for a Jeff Tweedy acoustic show. Having said that, I wish the songlist was more expansive. Often, at a Tweedy solo acoustic show, you will hear older songs that are played only once or twice even on an acoustic tour (Say You Miss Me, Box Full of Letters), and sometimes you'll hear a cover song or two (Moot the Hoople's Henry & the H-Bombs, Neil Young's Walk On). I wish that was captured as part of the DVD.

As for the DVD itself, it tries to capture the environment and mood of a acoustic tour on the West Coast - i.e., lots of rain, somber feel, etc. The DVD covers several stops on the West Coast and depicts Jeff and the audience/fans attempting to connect in such an intimate setting. At times you can see that Jeff draws some fans/audience members that just aren't suited for a solo acoustic show. Many of these fans are better suited for a loud, rockin' Wilco show versus just Jeff and a guitar where everyone can hear it when an audience member talks over Jeff performing.

If you have seen the Wilco documentary I Am Trying To Break Your Heart, you may already know that Jeff can at times appear to come across as grumpy or as a pill (I've met him once, and he was anything but). I think more than anything, it captures the unpredictable results when Jeff opens his mouth and talks with the audience. He tends to let the music speak for itself (Wilco shows included), and when often he has to remind himself to speak to the audience at Wilco shows. When he does try to talk and build rapport with his audience, he'll either include an amusing story or somehow insult (unintentional perhaps) an audience member. But the sincerity of his singing and performances are never in question. It's that contrast (Jeff's sincerity while singing versus the audience's disrespect and/or ambivelance to his singing) that makes this DVD more than just a concert document. Jeff and Wilco are not megastars, but they are successful musicians (both critically and commercially), and with that comes new fans and/or audience members that come because it's the hip or in thing to do versus wanting to genuinely listen to him perform his songs in a stripped down version.

As for the music, Theologians to me is one of the highlights. It works great as a solo acoustic number versus the equally stunning piano-led rockin' version. In A Future Age is a summerteeth cut that is brilliant when reduced to Jeff's soft vocals and his eastern-influenced pickin'. Airline to Heaven is a solo acoustic favorite of Jeff's fans, here accompanied by Nels Cline on a dobro or lap-steel (I may be mistaken on the instrument). He also accompanies Jeff on War on War along with Glen Kotche on drums.

Bonus - for those that purchase the DVD, there is a link provided that offer audio downloads of the all the songs included on the DVD, along with two bonus songs not included in the DVD, Please Tell My Brother and She's A Jar. Please Tell My Brother is all the more poignant considering Jeff's mother recently passed away and she is the crescendo of the song's lyrics. She's A Jar is simply stunning, and for those who have only come to Wilco's music through Summerteeth, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, and A Ghost Is Born may be surprised by how well these songs hold up (or in some ways exceed) to the more musically complex, layered, and sonically textured album versions or the renditions found on Wilco's Kicking Television (their recent live CD, also worth a purchase).

You don't want to miss out on this.

16 of 16 found the following review helpful:


4Worth the (rainy) trip  Nov 19, 2006 By J. B. Poersch
The bar is probably high for a Tweedy DVD; after all, "I am trying to break your heart" is one of the best Rock films of all times. "Sunken Treasure" is a moody, cranky journey thru the Pacific Northwest that while lacking momentum, tweeks at just what makes Jeff Tweedy so darned compelling in the first place.

At times, Tweedy is either endearing or annoying when before his audiences. (The same can be said for the audiences themselves. One fool cries out "Black Eye Sucks" clearly throwing Tweedy into a downward spin.)

He tells one woman in the crowd that she would be "miserable" in a relationship with him. You don't really doubt him.

But the solo shows generously picks from what is becoming a prodigius back catalouge of material. The highlight here is "Laminated Cat". But, "The Thanks I Get", "ELT", "Acuff-Rose" and yes, "Black Eye" rankle at the edges of soulfulness. Credit some of the in-concert cimeatography. Tweedy doesn't bother dressing up rock star style, but some of the dark, intimate shooting frames a rock mythos.

Jeff Tweedy will never reach the same level of fame that Neil Young has. but, he may be just as mecurial, just as talented and just as important for this generation.

ps: Some of the best songs are uncredited and feature Tweedy just playing and making the time go by.

7 of 7 found the following review helpful:


5Hey Wilco/Tweedy Fan - You must own this!  Nov 04, 2006 By Daniel B. Weir
I felt like I was watching the concert I saw again. The fact they offer the MP3s thru a secret download if you own the dvd is also making this a worthwhile purchase. My roommates and I replayed this dvd for 3 days straight.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:


5More Than Just "Live In Concert"  Jan 03, 2007 By John Michael Cassetta
I've watched any number of Live In Concert DVD's over the years, however, this is one of the first videos I've seen that truly captures the feel of the kind of solo show that Tweedy puts on. The cameras (which provide some great angles; above and beyond the standard pit-level rock cams, by the way) keep rolling through witty dialouge that Tweedy mixes into his act, including, but not limited to his own forgetfulness. I for one, can say that when I go to a concert, I expect to feel like the musician(s) aren't just sitting on stage playing music, and this movie seems to capture what it is that I look for in a concert. So if Jeff Tweedy isn't coming to town anytime soon, I would highly suggest purchasing this DVD. Fans will be excited to find that the set-lists draw from any number of different projects he has done over the years, from Wilco to The Minus Five to Loose Fur. A very nice and well produced movie.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:


5Are the voices real?  Oct 25, 2006 By M Lupo
If you need further proof that Jeff Tweedy is one of today's great songwriters, here it is. All of the songs included on these performances translate very well into a bare bones acoustic setting, making this DVD a must for Wilco/Tweedy fans. And great music aside, the other thing that is striking about the solo shows captured in this set is Jeff's rapport with his audience. He seems to hear everything that is said, both during and between songs, and makes some really funny observations. Even when he's trying to quiet down some "talkers" he comes across as likeable and charismatic. Great stuff - highly recommended!

See all 35 customer reviews on Amazon.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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