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Widespread Panic - Bombs and Butterflies | Album Review

Widespread Panic - Bombs and Butterflies | Album Review

FromDig Me Out: 90s Rock


Widespread Panic - Bombs and Butterflies | Album Review

FromDig Me Out: 90s Rock

ratings:
Length:
74 minutes
Released:
Jul 20, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

The moniker "jam bands" had been around for decades before their 90s counterparts in Phish, Rusted Root, and String Cheese Incident brought their own takes out on the road. Athens, Georgia based Widespread Panic draw on the southern sounds of The Allman Brothers Band as well as other guitar heroes like Eric Clapton and J. J. Cale to craft their guitar and keyboard driven sounds. The trick with jam bands, regardless of decade, has always been converting the energy and improvisation of the live performance into a crafted studio product. On 1997's Bombs and Butterflies, Widespread Panic smartly avoids overly long passages for trimmed down and concise songwriting.
 
Songs in this Episode:
Intro - Radio Child
17:18 - Aunt Avis
19:06 - You Got Yours
41:18 - Glory
52:32 - Hope In A Hopeless World
Outro - Gradle
 
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Listen to the episode archive at DigMeOutPodcast.com.
Released:
Jul 20, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Weekly album reviews, interviews and roundtable discussions digging up the 90s