Tracklist
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1
Misunderstood (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
6:08 min
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2
Company In My Back (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
3:44 min
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3
The Late Greats (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
2:40 min
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4
Hell Is Chrome (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
4:56 min
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5
Handshake Drugs (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
6:23 min
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6
I Am Trying to Break Your Heart (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
6:03 min
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7
Shot In the Arm (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
4:51 min
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8
At Least That's What You Said (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
5:18 min
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9
Wishful Thinking (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
4:26 min
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10
Jesus, Etc. (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
4:00 min
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11
I'm the Man Who Loves You (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
3:58 min
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12
Kicking Television (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
3:03 min
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13
Via Chicago (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
5:14 min
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14
Hummingbird (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
3:19 min
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15
Muzzle of Bees (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
4:49 min
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16
One By One (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
3:25 min
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17
Airline to Heaven (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
4:41 min
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18
Radio Cure (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
4:42 min
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19
Ashes of American Flags (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
6:03 min
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20
Heavy Metal Drummer (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
3:21 min
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21
Poor Places (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
5:31 min
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22
Spiders (Kidsmoke) [Live In Chicago, May 2005]
11:17 min
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23
Comment (If All Men Are Truly Brothers) [Live In Chicago, May 2005]
6:13 min
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24
Monday (Live In Chicago, May 2005)
4:11 min
About Kicking Television: Live In Chicago
Each studio album sent Jeff Tweedy and Wilco's musical experiments further in unexpected directions, turning pop, psychedelic, and post-punk without ever losing the emotional ties found in the simplest of heartland rock. Line-up shuffles made Wilco primarily Jeff Tweedy’s band by the time of Kicking Television, but the ghosts of his former collaborators — Jay Bennett, R.I.P. — remains a strong undercurrent. “Misunderstood” from Being There begins things with a foreboding sense of the smoldering turmoil that would drive Wilco’s later sound. “The Late Greats” and “Company In My Back” from 2004’s A Ghost Is Born saddle up with a stronger country lope than ever, while tunes from their landmark Yankee Hotel Foxtrot (“Heavy Metal Drummer,” “Radio Cure,” “Poor Places”) sound ever more ambitious and free. In the end, the feedback and Tweedy’s tortured guitar solos fire up the masses (“Spiders (Kidsmoke)”) with touches of punk rock abandon, but it’s the sweet swell of electric guitar and the sad, lost vocal moans present in “Hell Is Chrome” and “Ashes of American Flags” that nail home the band’s stunning beauty.