Widespread Panic (album)

Widespread Panic
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 30, 1991
GenreRock, southern rock, jam rock
Length72:57
LabelCapricorn/Warner Bros.
ProducerJohnny Sandlin
Widespread Panic chronology
Space Wrangler
(1988)
Widespread Panic
(1991)
Everyday
(1993)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Widespread Panic is the second studio album by the Athens, Georgia-based band Widespread Panic. It was released by Capricorn Records and Warner Bros. Records on July 30, 1991. It was re-released in 2001 by Zomba Music Group. The album was issued on vinyl for the first time ever on July 29, 2014.[2] The vinyl-only reissue will be distributed via ThinkIndie distribution and sold only at participating independent record stores.

The band had originally recorded material in September 1990 at producer/collaborator/friend John Keane's studio in Athens, Georgia. This session, called Mom's Kitchen, featured the majority of the songs that would eventually be recorded for Widespread Panic, along with other tracks like "A of D", "Impossible", "Machine", "Liza's Apartment (L.A.)", "Conrad", "Contentment Blues", and "Holden Oversoul", of which the latter two were included on the reissues of Space Wrangler (1988). Mom's Kitchen, however, was never released because the band signed a six-album deal with Capricorn Records in January 1991.

Recording of the album proper took place at Emerald Sound Studios (Nashville, Tennessee), Kiva Studios (Memphis, Tennessee), and Duck Tape Music Studio (Decatur, Alabama). The album features T Lavitz on keyboards and was produced by Johnny Sandlin.

For many years after the album’s release, rumors swirled that Track 7, C. Brown, was included on the album as a tribute to Camden, Alabama native Cliff Brown Jr., former singer for Tuscaloosa’s The Ecchoing Green. These rumors were thought to have been put to rest when Brown, along with Green bass player Keith Ferguson, described their adventure during a 2004 interview with The Tuscaloosa News. However, the rumors have not completely died and are still currently debated.

The band played the album in its entirety at the Charter One Pavilion in Chicago on September 2, 2009.

  1. ^ McDonald, Steven. Widespread Panic at AllMusic. Retrieved June 10, 2012.
  2. ^ "WidespreadPanic.com: Back Catalog Vinyl Reissues". WidespreadPanic.com.