As the years roll by, Widespread Panic refine their artistry impervious to trend or fashion. On their seventh album, the veteran ensemble settles into a groove within the first few seconds and never lets up through 12 tracks that burn with roots rock, Latin, jazz fusion, grunge, melodic folk, and soul. Displaying more polish than previous releases, each musician shines on this collection that gives fans what they come to expect from one of the best jam bands to emerge after the demise of the Grateful Dead and the decline of the Allman Brothers Band. Up in the mix from start to finish, Dave Schools' irresistibly funky bass anchors "Big Wooly Mammoth" and "Imitation Leather Shoes" with staccato figures and crispy riffs. John Herman and Michael Houser solo with the delicate urgency of Bill Evans and Carlos Santana, respectively, especially on the opening cut, "Little Lilly." Domingo Ortiz and Todd Nance propel the tunes with polyrhythms and multiple percussive textures that subtly embellish each melody and chord change. Vocalist John Bell croons, growls, and raps while waxing poetic about personal relationships and astute observations of the world around him. The hooks on "Sometimes" recall the tunefulness of 1970s AM radio, while the country-blues of "Old Joe," the title track, and "Down" slip on like a comfortable pair of old cowboy boots. The members of Widespread Panic are pros and they reap the benefits of longevity with a jewel of an album. ~ Tom Semioli, All Music Guide
Mulepanic, you are 100% correct. I appreciate McConnell for filling in with Panic during the '02 run with Mikey and then when he had to put it down after that masterful show (7-02-02)! Panic fans are in debt to McConnell forever. Like him or not, he filled in during the roughest time in the bands history. That said; Jimmy Herring is the man. I look forward to the future with Jimmy and the boys melting faces hopefully for many more years to come! RIP MIKEY!
Sorry opedogcancer, "McConnell is good, but he's no Herring!" Herring is a much better axe man suited perfectly for WP. He rips!! 95% of WP fans will tell you the same. Also, WP would have never picked McConnel if Herring hadn't been in contract with Phil. Now that that's over Herring is and will be WP's axe man.
The odd thing here is that Tom Semioli gives this album a positive rating, which of course it deserves, while Thom Jurek's review of Spread's House of Blues album is completely negative. Panic is one of those bands that you either love unconditionally or hate. To get a fair review, the critic MUST be a Spreadhead. If you don't dig Panic, then don't effin' review their material. End of story. I wouldn't critique a String Cheese album, would I? Hell no.
One of my all-time favorite WP albums. In fact, they just keep getting better with time. Each album is generally better than their last (with maybe one or two exceptions), though live is still the best Panic experience. Notwithstanding, studio wise, 'Till the Medicine Takes, Don't Tell the Band, and Earth to America are absolute masterpieces.