Despite having visited the Tiny Desk three times, and traveling to the tunnels beneath Fort Adams State Park, Jeff Tweedy has brought only a fraction of his many musical permutations to NPR Music during our first 10 years.

Thankfully for us and the audience at our 10th anniversary concert on Dec. 2 at the 9:30 Club, Tweedy's set managed to run the gamut of that celebrated career. From his beginnings as a slack, alt-country rocker (playing Uncle Tupelo's "We've Been Had") and A.M.-era Wilco (with "Passenger Side") to his recent turn as Mavis Staples' producer and songwriter (on "Jesus Wept") and later, Nels Cline-era Wilco ("Locator").

The constant in all this experimenting is Tweedy's voice as a singer and songwriter — one that invites a deep trust, even when it courts darkness. Performing solo with an acoustic guitar, his voice was once again at the center of it all.

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Naturally, Tweedy surprised, opening with an unreleased song that looks forward and back — a theme of the evening. "I leave behind a trail of songs / from the darkest gloom to the brightest sun," he sang. "I've lost my way, but it's hard to say / what I've been through should matter to you." It may hard to say why, but it's clear that it does.

SET LIST

  • "Bombs Above"
  • "We've Been Had"
  • "Locator"
  • "Jesus Wept"
  • "Passenger Side"
  • "I'm The Man Who Loves You"

CREDITS

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