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{{Infobox album<!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Albums -->
| Name = A.M.
| Type = studio
| Artist = [[Wilco]]
| Cover = Wilco.gif
| Alt = An old fashioned A.M. radio on a red background. The artist name and album title appear above it.
| Released = {{Start date|1995|3|28}}
| Recorded = June–Fall 1994
| Genre = {{hlist|[[Alternative country]]|[[alternative rock]]}}
| Length = 44:33
| Label = {{hlist|[[Sire Records|Sire]]|[[Reprise Records|Reprise]]}}
| Producer = {{hlist|[[Brian Paulson]]|Wilco}}
| This album = '''''A.M.''''' <br />(1995)
| Next album = ''[[Being There (Wilco album)|Being There]]''<br />(1996)
}}
 
'''''A.M.''''' is the debut [[studio album]] by the American [[alternative rock]] band [[Wilco]], released on March 28, 1995 by [[Sire Records]] and [[Reprise Records]]. The album was released only months after the breakup of [[Uncle Tupelo]], an [[alternative country]] band that was the predecessor of Wilco. Prior to its release, there was debate about whether the album would be better than the debut album of [[Son Volt]], the new band of former Uncle Tupelo lead singer [[Jay Farrar]].
 
Although ''A.M.'' was released before Son Volt's ''[[Trace (album)|Trace]]'', critical reviews were modest and initial sales were low. The album was later regarded as a "failure" by band members, as ''Trace'' was a greater success. It was the band's last album to be recorded in a purely alternative country style, as following the record the band began to expand their sound across multiple genres. It is also the only Wilco album to feature [[Brian Henneman]] of [[The Bottle Rockets]] as a lead guitarist.
 
==Background and recording==
[[Uncle Tupelo]]'s final album, ''[[Anodyne (album)|Anodyne]]'', featured a new lineup for the band — a five-piece outfit with [[drummer]] [[Ken Coomer]], [[bassist]] [[John Stirratt]], and [[multi-instrumentalist]] [[Max Johnston]].<ref>Kot 2004. p. 73-75</ref> Tensions mounted between singers [[Jay Farrar]] and [[Jeff Tweedy]], and Uncle Tupelo played its last concert on May 1, 1994 at Mississippi Nights in St. Louis, Missouri.<ref>{{cite web|last=Llewellyn|first=Kati|url=http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/page/news/2005/09/08|title=Jay Farrar Speaks Extensively About Uncle Tupelo's Breakup|publisher=[[Pitchfork Media]]|date=September 8, 2005}} Last accessed June 8, 2007.</ref><ref>Kot 2004. p. 77</ref>
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''A.M.'' only hit number 27 on ''[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]'''s [[Top Heatseekers|Heatseekers]] chart, whereas ''Trace'' peaked at number 116 on the [[Billboard 200|''Billboard'' 200]]; by 1997, ''Trace'' had outsold ''A.M.'' two-to-one.<ref name="RS"/><ref>{{cite news|title=Heatseekers|publisher=''Billboard''|date=1995-04-15}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=The ''Billboard'' 200|publisher=''Billboard''|date=October 7, 1995}}</ref> Wilco released "Box Full of Letters" as a [[single (music)|single]], but it received little airplay. For the only time in Wilco's career, ticket sales failed to meet expectations.<ref name="four"/> As of 2003, the album had sold about 150,000 copies.<ref>Kot 2004. p. 125</ref>
 
==Track listing==
All songs written by [[Jeff Tweedy]] unless otherwise noted.
 
#"I Must Be High"&nbsp;– 2:59
#"Casino Queen"&nbsp;– 2:45
#"Box Full of Letters"&nbsp;– 3:05
#"Shouldn't Be Ashamed"&nbsp;– 3:28
#"Pick Up the Change"&nbsp;– 2:56
#"I Thought I Held You"&nbsp;– 3:49
#"That's Not the Issue"&nbsp;– 3:19
#"It's Just That Simple" ([[John Stirratt]])&nbsp;– 3:45
#"Should've Been in Love"&nbsp;– 3:36
#"Passenger Side"&nbsp;– 3:33
#"Dash 7"&nbsp;– 3:29
#"Blue Eyed Soul"&nbsp;– 4:05
#"Too Far Apart"&nbsp;– 3:44
 
==Personnel==
*[[Jeff Tweedy]] – lead vocals (1-7, 9-13), rhythm guitar (1, 3, 13), acoustic guitar (2, 4-7, 9-12), bass guitar (8)
*[[John Stirratt]] – bass guitar (1-7, 9, 10, 12, 13), piano (6), organ (13), backing vocals (2, 3, 6), lead vocals/acoustic guitar (8)
*Ken Coomer – drums (1-6, 8-10, 12, 13), backing vocals/cowbell (2), a snare drum played with a brush (7)
*Max Johnston – dobro (1, 3, 9, 13), fiddle (2, 10), mandolin (4, 8, 10, 12), banjo (5-7), backing vocals (2)
*Brian Henneman – lead guitar (1-9, 12, 13), small stoned guitar (10), backing vocals (2)
*Daniel Corrigan - backing vocals (2)
*Lloyd Maines - pedal steel guitar (1, 6, 8, 11, 12)
*Wilco, Brian Henneman and Daniel Corrigan - handclaps, crowd noise, glass cheers (2)
 
===Production===
*Daniel Corrigan&nbsp;– photography
*Richard Dodd&nbsp;– [[audio mixing (recorded music)|mixing]]
*Barbara Longo&nbsp;– design
*[[Brian Paulson]]&nbsp;– producer, engineer, mixing
*Howie Weinberg&nbsp;– [[audio mastering|mastering]]
*Wilco&nbsp;– producer, engineer
*Bob Andrews&nbsp;– Production Coordinator
 
==Referencias==
;Notas al pie
{{listaref|2}}
 
;Bibliografía
*{{Cita libro|last=Kot|first=Greg|author-link=Greg Kot|year=2004|title=[[Wilco: Learning How to Die]]|edition=1st|place=[[Nueva York]]|publisher=Broadway Books|isbn=0-7679-1558-5|idioma=inglés}}
 
<nowiki>[[Category:1995 debut albums]]
[[Category:Wilco albums]]
[[Category:Albums produced by Brian Paulson]]
[[Category:Reprise Records albums]]
[[Category:Sire Records albums]]
[[Category:English-language albums]]
[[Category:Albums produced by Jeff Tweedy]]</nowiki>