
"Jeff Tweedy is best known as the front man of Wilco, the rock band he formed in Chicago in 1994. In recent years, he's been working more often as a solo artist, putting out records under his own name as well as a memoir and essays on songwriting. Amanda Petrusich sat down with the singer-songwriter to talk about "Twilight Override," which comes out later this month."
"Recorded with Tweedy's two sons and a number of his fellow Chicago-based musicians, "Twilight Override" is a triple album of songs centered on themes of time, aging, fear, and "making peace with something ending." "If we're looking at the word 'override,' what am I overriding?" Tweedy says. "I mean, twilight's beautiful . . . but you need to override your fear of it.""
Jeff Tweedy formed Wilco in Chicago in 1994 and has increasingly released solo records, a memoir, and essays on songwriting. Twilight Override, coming later this month, was recorded with his two sons and several Chicago-based musicians. The triple album centers on time, aging, fear, and making peace with something ending. Tweedy frames the title as confronting fear: 'If we're looking at the word "override," what am I overriding?' He performed acoustic versions of 'Love Is for Love,' 'Lou Reed Was My Babysitter,' and 'Forever Never Ends.' New episodes of the New Yorker Radio Hour drop weekly.
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