Saw Wilco tonight. I didn't exactly like the location, but I won't go into that because my issues are strictly personal. Let us just say that Stubbs' outdoor venu is, objectively, a worthwhile venue with great sound. Anyway; opener was Retribution Gospel Choir, really awful name and at best mediocre lyrics, although they sure sounded fun and were an appropriate mood-setter for Wilco. Wilco played, roughly, an hour and a half set with a 20?-minute "encore" (no break really, just a minute for the band to grab drinks and get back on stage; I basically forget where the set ended and the encore began) followed by a 30-minute finisher. It was an odd crowd compared to what I expected, really; lots of older guys and couples in their thirties or forties, and consequently the set consisted mostly of older stuff. The main set pulled strongly from Summerteeth and Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, with even a couple tracks off A.M. Crowd favorites during the set and the first encore included opener "Via Chicago," "Hummingbird," "Shot in the Arm," "Passenger Side" (a real surprise for me), "Theologians." The first encore ended perfectly--as always--with "Spiders." This left the crowd fully energized, which made the second encore very interesting. They started by invited the members of Retribution Gospel to come out and play "California Stars" with them, then pulled out a few more crowd favorites--"Heavy Metal Drummer," "Hate It Here"--and eventually wound up just playing through pieces of Being There: "Kingpin," "Red-Eyed and Blue," "I Got You," "Monday." They were all very different from the studio versions, transformed into spectacular live jams for the current band over the years, and even Jeff seemed to be in his best form for them even after playing them all so many times. In fact, they only played five songs off Sky Blue Sky, which seemed low for a tour being touted as support for the album. I wasn't complaining, though; at the end I was, like everyone else, sad to see them go. In fact, I probably would have paid for another ticket entirely if they'd only come back to do all the songs off Yankee Hotel Foxtrot that they didn't (namely "Radio Cure" and "I Am Trying to Break Your Heart," but there were others).