
“If I was to pass anything on to other bands,
it would be find people you like and trust them” says
John Bell (JB). If you’re gonna listen
to anyone, it might as well be JB. As lead vocalist
and rhythm guitarist for Widespread Panic he knows
what it takes to make a band work. What started
as a few friends picking guitars at the University
of Georgia has evolved into one of the most successful
rock bands in the world. In their 22 years together
they’ve sold over 3 million albums and are consistently
one of Pollstar’s Top 50 grossing live acts. No
relationship that lasts this long is easy, but the
path Widespread Panic has traversed has been marked
with challenges; none more difficult than the 2002
loss of co-founder and lead guitarist Michael Houser
to pancreatic cancer. Great bands overcome tragedy
by bonding together and using it to grow. And
that's just what Widespread Panic has done.
Although the years following Houser’s death
were trying, the arrival of guitarist Jimmy Herring
in late 2006 signaled the dawn of a new era. It
wouldn’t happen overnight, with hundreds of songs
in rotation and a completely different show every evening
it couldn’t, but as we enter 2008 Herring has
mastered the band’s vast repertoire and is pushing
Panic to new creative heights. While Herring’s
unique vocabulary allows the band to explore fresh
possibilities, the euphoric feeling of adventure he
has instilled reminds bassist Dave Schools of what
has always made Panic so special. “It’s
like a stagecoach with a pair of horses that are crazy
out of control running down a mountainside,” says
Schools, “and somehow, the wheels don’t
fall off.”
Part of what keeps the wheels glued on is the team
Widespread Panic has amassed. Beyond the six
men on stage, the band’s crew, dubbed "The
Home Team," allows Panic’s rabid fans to
experience a unique, world-class concert every night.
From famed lighting designer Candace Brightman (who
worked with the Grateful Dead for 20 years) to sound
engineer Chris Rabold to the folks back in the office,
this is a well-oiled machine, each piece working towards
the goal of a transcendent performance. “We’re
about 25 people on the road, and then another 10 people
in the office,” says JB. “So right now,
we’re sitting here with 35 people in the unit
and everybody is cooking. And even when we have a new
intern, if they’re bringing a spark to the thing,
it translates all the way out there to the music.”
The band’s uncanny ability to adapt and evolve
can be seen not only in personnel and sound, but also
in the recording process and channels of distribution. Many
of Widespread Panic’s fans have never purchased
vinyl, some of them have never even seen it, yet the
band’s first release, Coconut was pressed
as a 45 rpm single. Today we live in a world
where Panic’s tenth full-length album, Free
Somehow (available February 12, 2008 with a vinyl
edition in March), will be downloaded over the Internet. And
as formats have changed so has their music. The
influence of Herring and the union with producer Terry
Manning (Led Zeppelin, Al Green, ZZ Top) has allowed
Widespread Panic to craft one of their most sonically
adventurous albums to date. “I think it
was sort of building on a lot of the work that John
Keane had done on Medicine Takes [1999], particularly
with horns and background singers,” says Schools. “We
really love those kinds of embellishments that have
been done on this record. I’m excited. It’s
gonna catch a lot of people off guard, but this is
what the studio is for.”
Not only does Free Somehow build off the
foundation laid by John Keane, it brings the band back
to the Bahamas to work with Manning at Compass Point
Studios, as they did on 2006’s Earth To America. That
album was their first project with Manning, a first
date of sorts. With Free Somehow, the
relationship has advanced along with their trust in
Manning, and it shows in the results. “There’s
a big difference here because Terry and Widespread
Panic knew each other a little better,” says
JB. “We were ready to fall off the cliff
a little more for each other.” Manning
used this trust to add layers of orchestral strings,
woodwinds, horns and lush backing vocals, all working
to realize a bold vision in the studio for Widespread
Panic.
This is also Jimmy Herring's first opportunity to
write and record with the band. “People
should withhold their judgment of Jimmy until they
hear this record, because he never had a fair shot
to create material,” explains Schools. “He’s
got songs that he brought from his idea pool that are
part of this record that we all collaborated on.”
Another shift we find on Free Somehow is
a new approach to writing lyrics. “Some
of the songs are more straightforward and less metaphorically
cloaked,” says JB. “Although there’s
still plenty of that going on.” A prime
example of this is “Walk On The Flood.” Perhaps
the most direct song the band has written, it deals
with current-day issues in a way they’ve rarely
approached. In the wake of the Virginia Tech
shootings, JB was overcome with emotion and the song
poured out in a single day. “There’s
so much stuff coming up right now that it didn’t
feel wrong to address it somewhat directly,” reflects
JB. “You’re talking about folks that
are going through a real thing, right now. Why
not cut to the chase and have some lyrics come out
of you that are just more matter of fact than they’ve
been in the past? So we let that happen.” While
the spark for “Walk On The Flood” came
from the massacre at Virginia Tech, the imagery stretches
to New Orleans. "With Hurricane Katrina
and the way the environment has been kind of Indian
wrestling us, we need to realize that we’re messing
with it, too,” says JB. A new world with
new conflicts calls for new types of songs, and Widespread
Panic adapts.
This is a band that stands behind their principles. Not
only are they addressing social concerns on an artistic
level, they are committed to affecting change in a
tangible manner. In response to the devastation
caused by Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Panic has
joined forces with the Make It Right Project to help
rebuild the Lower 9th Ward, donating an entire house
as well as offering an advanced MP3 of “Walk
On The Flood” through LiveWidespreadPanic.com
with proceeds going to Make It Right. Widespread
Panic is also dedicated to rebuilding our nation’s
dwindling music education. Through their annual
Tunes For Tots charity they have raised over $300,000
for the purchase of middle school and high school instruments.
In many ways Free Somehow is a new chapter
for Widespread Panic. It’s their studio
debut with Herring. They’ve cemented their
relationship with producer Terry Manning, entered new
areas of songwriting and gained a fresh sense of inspiration
on stage. “What I’m witnessing now
is a really nice feeling of harmony within the group,” says
JB. "When you feel that everybody plays
a little harder.” They’ve broken
free of their past, free of their own expectations,
free of themselves. The pieces have fallen into
place and Widespread Panic is free somehow.
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