

The breakup so ugly they had to film it for posterity.
The great alt-country band Uncle Tupelo played its last concert on May 1, 1994, at Mississippi Nights in St. Louis, Missouri. By the time of this show, Jeff Tweedy and Jay Farrar were already not getting along well. Soon after the performance, they would both go on to create other bands, with Farrar founding Son Volt and Tweedy forming Wilco, but on that night in May 1994, there was one last grasp at combined harmony and greatness. In the video below, Tweedy and Farrar trade off on the lead vocals, with drummer Mike Heidorn joining the band on the final song of the set, “Looking for a Way Out,” and also singing on the encore with Brian Henneman and the Bottle Rockets on Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Gimme Three Steps.”
Acting
Farrar and Tweedy's barely-contained hostility masquerading as professionalism.
Sound
The raw, unpolished alt-country that birthed two legendary bands.
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
This was almost lost to history—no official recording exists, only audience bootlegs and this rough video capture.
Within months, 'alt-country' split into two camps: Farrar's purist Son Volt vs. Tweedy's experimental Wilco, defining the genre's future.
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