The Whole Love
The Whole Love is the eighth studio album by the American rock band Wilco, self-produced and released independently on September 27, 2011, through the band's own dBpm Records label.[1][2] Recorded entirely at Wilco's practice space, The Loft in Chicago, the album marks a return to the band's experimental roots following the more straightforward Sky Blue Sky (2007) and the self-titled Wilco (The Album) (2009).[1][3] It features a 12-track lineup blending psychedelic rock, folk influences, and intricate arrangements, with standout songs including the atmospheric opener "Art of Almost," the sprawling 12-minute closer "One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley's Boyfriend)," and the guitar-driven "Born Alone."[1][2] The album's release represented a significant milestone for Wilco, as it was their first self-released project after parting ways with Nonesuch Records, allowing full creative control over production and distribution.[1] Critically, it received generally positive reviews for recapturing the band's unpredictable energy, though some noted its uneven pacing; Pitchfork awarded it a 6.9 out of 10, praising its instrumental interplay while critiquing occasional indulgences.[1] Commercially, The Whole Love debuted at number five on the Billboard 200, selling 82,000 copies in its first week, and has since been expanded in reissues, including bonus tracks and live recordings from The Loft.[4][5]Background and recording
Development
Following the release of Wilco (The Album) in 2009, Jeff Tweedy entered a prolific songwriting phase during a late-2010 touring hiatus, amassing material that the band initially considered dividing into two separate records.[6] Ultimately, Tweedy and his collaborators opted against this approach, merging the songs into a single, cohesive 12-track album to maintain artistic unity and momentum.[6] This decision reflected the band's desire to evolve without fragmentation, building directly on the introspective warmth of Sky Blue Sky (2007) and the straightforward energy of Wilco (The Album), while striving to balance experimental impulses with broader accessibility.[7] In early 2011, Wilco established their independent label, dBpm Records, to self-release The Whole Love, marking the group's first such venture and granting them complete creative and financial autonomy free from major-label constraints.[6] This shift was motivated by a pursuit of streamlined decision-making and deeper fan engagement, allowing the band to retain profits and artistic direction that had been diluted in prior deals.[7][8] Tweedy spearheaded pre-production by initiating informal sessions at The Loft, the band's Chicago rehearsal and recording space, starting in fall 2010 and extending into 2011, where early demos and arrangements took shape collaboratively.[6][9] These gatherings emphasized patience in refining ideas, leveraging the core lineup's stability—intact since 2004 with members including John Stirratt, Glenn Kotche, Nels Cline, Patrick Sansone, and Mikael Jorgensen—to foster a mature, unified creative environment.[6]Recording process
The recording of The Whole Love took place primarily at The Loft, Wilco's private studio in Chicago, spanning late 2010 to early 2011 in an on-and-off schedule over approximately a year.[10][11] The sessions emphasized a collaborative environment where the band could experiment freely, with the album self-released through their dBpm label.[12] The production team consisted of Jeff Tweedy, Pat Sansone, and Tom Schick, with Schick also serving as the primary engineer.[13][14] Schick's approach prioritized capturing the live band energy by setting up all instruments simultaneously in the open space of The Loft, allowing spontaneous contributions without frequent changeovers.[13] This setup used minimal microphones to preserve a natural sound—such as five mics on drums (including a D12 on kick and Coles 4038 overheads)—while accommodating the band's interplay of guitars, keyboards, and percussion.[13] Initially, the team planned to record on 24-track analog tape for added warmth, but high costs led to a switch to Pro Tools for the bulk of tracking and mixing.[13] Overdubs were layered organically, with a particular emphasis on guitars (miked with Royer 121s) and keyboards to enhance texture, as band members rotated roles to build arrangements in real time.[13] The abundance of material generated during these sessions nearly resulted in splitting the album into two releases, though the final tracklist was curated to 12 songs.[15] Mastering was handled by Bob Ludwig at Gateway Mastering Studios, where the mixes were run through a Studer 827 tape machine to impart analog warmth and final tweaks were made to optimize dynamics and soundstage.[13][16] Ludwig described the process as the "final creative step," focusing on balancing the album's sonic range for both digital and vinyl formats.[16]Music and lyrics
Musical style
The Whole Love exemplifies Wilco's eclectic rock approach, blending alternative rock, psychedelia, folk, and experimental noise into a "veritable sonic stew" that balances art sensibilities with traditional American music and classic guitar-driven pop rock.[17][1] The album's sonic palette draws from the band's folk-rock foundation while incorporating unpredictable experimental elements, creating a dynamic range across its tracks.[1] The opener, "Art of Almost," sets a bold tone with abrasive guitar loops, a glitchy motorik groove, irregular rhythms, swarming strings, and creeping keyboards, evoking a sense of digital thunder and cut-and-paste intensity.[1][18] This experimental noise contrasts sharply with the high-energy rockers that follow, such as "I Might" and "Dawned on Me," which channel power pop through bouncy rhythms, moddish organ layers, jangly uptempo hooks, and offhand whistling choruses reminiscent of the band's early Podunk style.[1][19][20] The album then shifts to more introspective acoustic folk, exemplified by the gently unfurling intimate ballad "One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley's Boyfriend)," built around finger-picked acoustic guitar, piano, glockenspiel, vibraphone, and subtle wavetable scrubbing for a sparse, emotive texture.[1][21] Instrumentation plays a pivotal role in the album's textural depth, with Nels Cline delivering avant-garde guitar solos—such as the searing kosmische capper and screaming interludes on tracks like "Born Alone"—that add noisy, abstract flourishes.[1][22] Glenn Kotche's complex drumming provides rhythmic propulsion through clockwork precision, ominous fills, and technique-rich exchanges, while Mikael Jorgensen and Pat Sansone contribute layered keyboards, synthesizers, Mellotron, and programming to create gurgling undercurrents and moddish swells.[1][17][22] Multiple guitars, percussion, and occasional strings further enhance the multifaceted sound.[17] Self-produced at The Loft in Chicago, the album's overall production yields a relaxed yet reinvigorated aesthetic, submerging seventies-style melodies in dark, abstract clouds while bridging the noisy experimentation of Wilco's past—such as Yankee Hotel Foxtrot—with greater pop accessibility and easeful unpredictability.[1][19] This results in "uncomfortable comfort music" that feels both voluminous and nuanced, reflecting the band's mature, far-reaching prowess.[19][17]Themes and songwriting
The album The Whole Love delves into the complexities of love, portraying it as a force of redemption and devotion amid personal chaos and relational strains. The title track, "The Whole Love," exemplifies this through its exploration of unwavering commitment, with lyrics reflecting on enduring affection despite emotional turmoil and external disruptions, such as "I recall when you get mad / I still love you to death."[23][24] This theme extends across the record, intertwining introspection with the redemptive power of human connection, often drawn from Jeff Tweedy's own experiences with recovery from prescription drug dependency and the demands of family life.[25][26] Introspection and isolation emerge prominently in songs like "Born Alone," where Tweedy confronts solitude and mortality with lines such as "I was born to die alone," adapting phrases from 19th-century American poetry, including Emily Dickinson, to convey self-reliance forged through personal reflection.[27][23] The track critiques the fear of ultimate aloneness while asserting a defiant independence, aligning with broader motifs of inner turmoil and emotional resilience. Similarly, "Capitol City" addresses urban alienation, depicting the disorientation of separation from loved ones in a sprawling, impersonal metropolis, where the protagonist navigates confusion and longing in a "capitol city" far from home.[26][28] The album's closer, "One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley's Boyfriend)," offers solace amid personal loss, inspired by a dinner-party conversation Tweedy had with the boyfriend of novelist Jane Smiley, touching on familial estrangement and biblical undertones of hypocrisy and reconciliation, as in "My father said what I had become / No one should be."[23][29] Road life permeates these narratives, evoking the transient hardships of touring and the search for stability, with redemption framed as a quiet, ongoing pursuit through intimate bonds.[26][25] Tweedy's songwriting on The Whole Love emphasizes open-ended observations of human connections, blending impressionistic abstraction with plainspoken candor to capture ambiguity in relationships and self-perception.[7][25] His approach favors evocative, non-literal lyrics that invite interpretation, often rooted in personal anecdotes and literary nods, allowing for a loose, expressive delivery that underscores the album's emotional depth without rigid resolution.[23][27]Release and promotion
Singles and marketing
The lead single from The Whole Love, "I Might", debuted during Wilco's performance at the band's second annual Solid Sound Festival, held from June 24 to 26, 2011, at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art in North Adams, Massachusetts.[30][31][32] Attendees at the festival could purchase the track as a limited-edition 7-inch vinyl single, backed with the B-side "I Love My Label".[12][33] Prior to the album's official release on September 27, 2011, The Whole Love was made available for exclusive streaming in its entirety on Wilco's official website, wilcoworld.net, for a 24-hour period from September 3 to 4, 2011.[34] Additionally, the full album streamed on NPR Music's First Listen series starting September 19, 2011, allowing listeners early access to the complete tracklist.[35][36] The album's marketing emphasized direct-to-fan engagement through Wilco's independent label, dBpm Records, which handled distribution without a traditional major label promotional campaign.[37] Strategies included tie-ins with the Solid Sound Festival for the single's rollout, pre-order bundles via the band's website, and the announcement of a fall North American tour to coincide with the release.[12][38] The supporting tour for The Whole Love commenced on October 1, 2011, at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee, and continued through December, with singer-songwriter Nick Lowe as the opening act on select dates.[39][37] Setlists typically blended new material from the album, such as "Whole Love" and "One Sunday Morning", with established classics like "I'm the Man Who Loves You".[40][41]Artwork and packaging
The cover art for The Whole Love consists of abstract oil paintings by New York-based artist Joanne Greenbaum, featuring intricate line work that draws from her signature style of layered, geometric forms.[42][43] Greenbaum's contributions extend to the album's interior packaging, including illustrations that complement the overall visual theme.[44] The standard CD edition is housed in a gatefold sleeve designed to mimic the aesthetic of a vinyl record, complete with a cardboard wrap and a 20-page booklet containing lyrics, credits, and additional Greenbaum illustrations alongside band photos taken at MASS MoCA.[45][46] This packaging emphasizes a collectible, tactile experience, aligning with the album's independent release on Wilco's dBpm Records.[47] The vinyl edition is pressed as a 180-gram double LP across four sides, also featuring the gatefold sleeve and a tip-on jacket for durability, with the CD included in a custom wallet insert.[48] The deluxe CD edition expands on the standard format with a bonus disc of four additional tracks, packaged in a cardboard slipsleeve and accompanied by a 52-page booklet of expanded artwork and notes.[49] Digital versions, including the iTunes edition, offer exclusive bonuses such as alternate mixes from iTunes Sessions (e.g., "Whole Love" and "Black Moon") and other outtakes, underscoring the album's emphasis on varied, immersive formats for fans.[50] In 2024, an expanded edition was released on vinyl as part of Record Store Day (April 20), followed by CD and digital versions on May 2, 2025. This reissue compiles the original album with all related singles, EPs, bonus tracks, and selections of live in-studio recordings from The Loft, enhancing the album's archival presentation.[51][50]Critical reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in September 2011, The Whole Love received widespread critical acclaim, earning a Metacritic score of 83 out of 100 based on 40 reviews, signifying "universal acclaim."[52] AllMusic awarded the album 4.5 out of 5 stars, praising its eclecticism and energetic execution as Wilco's most fully realized work in the post-Yankee Hotel Foxtrot era.[3] Rolling Stone gave it 4 out of 5 stars, highlighting the album's "stormy electric-guitar crescendos" alongside its relaxed vibe, and later ranked it #8 on its list of the 50 best albums of 2011.[19][53] Pitchfork rated it 6.9 out of 10, commending the band's adventurous self-production—particularly on tracks like "Art of Almost"—while critiquing its unevenness as Wilco's least consistent effort in years.[1] The Guardian assigned 4 out of 5 stars, describing it as a "nuanced and feel-good" record that blended the band's experimental and pop elements effectively.[54] Critics commonly lauded Wilco's maturity and genre-blending prowess, viewing the album as a confident return to form after more subdued releases, though some noted minor shortcomings in overall innovation.[55]Accolades and legacy
The Whole Love received a nomination for Best Rock Album at the 54th Annual Grammy Awards, announced on November 30, 2011, but lost to Foo Fighters' Wasting Light.[56][57] The album appeared on several prominent year-end lists, including #15 on Uncut's Top 50 Albums of 2011 and #29 on Mojo's Top 50 Albums of 2011, affirming its status as a critical favorite of the year.[58] As Wilco's first full-length self-release on their independent label dBpm Records, The Whole Love solidified the band's autonomous status in the music industry, exemplifying the growing trend of artists bypassing traditional labels for direct control over distribution and promotion.[47][59] In 2024, the album was reissued in an expanded edition exclusively for Record Store Day, featuring bonus tracks, alternate mixes, demos, and live in-studio sessions recorded at The Loft, Wilco's Chicago rehearsal space.[60][61] Retrospectively, The Whole Love has been viewed as a pivotal bridge in Wilco's discography, blending the band's experimental inclinations with more accessible songcraft following the relatively straightforward Sky Blue Sky (2007) and Wilco (The Album (2009), while its lyrical introspection continues to resonate with fans for its emotional depth.[1]Commercial performance
Chart positions
Upon its release in September 2011, The Whole Love debuted at number 5 on the US Billboard 200 chart, selling 82,000 copies in its first week and marking Wilco's fourth top 10 entry on the chart.[4] The album also topped the Billboard Independent Albums chart.[62] (Note: This site aggregates Billboard data; direct Billboard archive confirms via historical charts.) Internationally, it reached number 30 on the UK Albums Chart, debuting on October 8, 2011, and spending two weeks in the top 100.[63] In Australia, the album peaked at number 23 on the ARIA Albums Chart upon its entry on October 9, 2011.[64]| Chart (2011) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 5 |
| US Independent Albums (Billboard) | 1 |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 30 |
| Australian Albums (ARIA) | 23 |
Sales and certifications
In the United States, The Whole Love sold more than 200,000 copies within its first few months of release, according to Nielsen SoundScan estimates reported in early 2012.[65] The album debuted with 82,000 units in its first week, marking Wilco's strongest opening since 2007. Released independently through the band's own dBpm Records imprint under Anti-, it achieved robust sales without earning any RIAA certifications. In Europe, it received a gold certification from the Independent Music Companies Association (IMPALA) in 2012, denoting sales of at least 75,000 copies.[17] Globally, the album's performance was supported by Wilco's extensive touring schedule and media exposure, including promotion on NPR's All Songs Considered, which helped maintain momentum into 2012.[66] Streaming availability and festival appearances further boosted its reach among independent music audiences, contributing to sustained interest despite the shift away from major-label distribution.Track listings
Standard edition
The standard edition of The Whole Love, released on CD and digital formats, comprises 12 tracks with a total runtime of 56:23.[67] This configuration represents the core album as initially issued by dBpm Records (distributed by Anti-) on September 27, 2011, emphasizing Wilco's blend of experimental rock and melodic songcraft.[42] The track listing is as follows:| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Art of Almost" | 7:16 |
| 2. | "I Might" | 4:01 |
| 3. | "Sunloathe" | 3:19 |
| 4. | "Dawned on Me" | 3:43 |
| 5. | "Black Moon" | 3:56 |
| 6. | "Born Alone" | 3:55 |
| 7. | "Open Mind" | 3:40 |
| 8. | "Capitol City" | 3:29 |
| 9. | "Standing O" | 3:09 |
| 10. | "Rising Red Lung" | 3:49 |
| 11. | "Whole Love" | 4:03 |
| 12. | "One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley's Boyfriend)" | 12:03 |
Vinyl edition
The vinyl edition of The Whole Love was released as a double LP pressed on 180-gram vinyl, providing a high-quality analog listening experience that highlights the album's dynamic range and sonic depth.[69] This format spans four sides and includes a gatefold sleeve with tip-on design, mirroring the packaging of the compact disc version while accommodating the expanded tracklist.[43] The sequencing across the sides rearranges the standard album tracks to optimize playback on vinyl, ensuring balanced run times and groove spacing. Side A features "Art of Almost," "I Might," and "Sunloathe." Side B continues with "Dawned on Me," "Black Moon," "Born Alone," and "Open Mind." Side C includes "Capitol City," "Standing O," "Rising Red Lung," and "Whole Love." Side D concludes with "One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley's Boyfriend)" and the exclusive bonus track "Sometimes It Happens," a 4:23 acoustic closer not available on the standard CD edition.[43][70] This vinyl configuration emphasizes the album's analog warmth through its heavy pressing and careful side divisions, allowing listeners to appreciate the full fidelity of Wilco's production at The Loft in Chicago.[43] The inclusion of the bonus track adds a reflective coda, enhancing the LP's appeal for collectors seeking the complete analog presentation.[69]Expanded edition (2025)
The expanded edition of The Whole Love was released on May 2, 2025, via dBpm Records and Legacy Recordings, compiling the original album with related singles, EPs, bonus tracks, live in-studio performances from The Loft, and previously unreleased demos. Available on 2CD, digital download, and 3LP vinyl, it totals 26 tracks with a runtime of approximately 1:55:34.[5] The track listing for the expanded edition includes: Disc 1 / LP 1-2 (Original Album):- "Art of Almost" – 7:16
- "I Might" – 4:01
- "Sunloathe" – 3:19
- "Dawned on Me" – 3:43
- "Black Moon" – 3:56
- "Born Alone" – 3:55
- "Open Mind" – 3:40
- "Capitol City" – 3:29
- "Standing O" – 3:09
- "Rising Red Lung" – 3:49
- "Whole Love" – 4:03
- "One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley's Boyfriend)" – 12:03
Personnel
Wilco members
The lineup of Wilco responsible for The Whole Love was the same stable configuration that had been in place since 2004, providing the foundational sound and collaborative dynamic for the album.[6] This sextet marked the third consecutive release with these members, following Sky Blue Sky (2007) and Wilco (the album) (2009).[6] The core members and their primary roles were:- Jeff Tweedy – lead vocals, acoustic and electric guitars[43]
- John Stirratt – bass, backing vocals[43]
- Nels Cline – electric guitar, loops, slide guitar[43]
- Mikael Jorgensen – keyboards, synthesizers[43]
- Glenn Kotche – drums, percussion[43]
- Pat Sansone – keyboards (including piano and mellotron), guitar, backing vocals[43]