For over a decade now,
Widespread Panic have been hosting wild Halloween gigs in Georgia. Always a treasured part of these shows is the band's choice of cover material.
Jackassolantern is a collection of covers from the various Halloween performances over the years. Over half the material here features the late
Michael Houser on guitar and vocals; the rest stars
George McConnell in the same capacity. The set kicks off with a raucous, woolly read of the
Black Sabbath behemoth "Sweet Leaf." While this version lacks the sheer dark thud of the original, it's nonetheless a more than credible garage take on the track. Likewise, "Sympathy for the Devil" comes off more as an homage than an attempt to interpret the
Jagger/
Richards original. It smokes. Other standouts include a rollicking blues-funk workout of
the Doors' "Peace Frog/Blue Sunday." And a deeply textured, sprawling spooky garage read of
War's "Slipping into Darkness" takes over three minutes to get rolling, but once it does, it just takes off. Spreadheads will be familiar with the cover of
Jimi Hendrix's "Wind Cries Mary" that's here, and to be honest, it's a generic take.
The Temptations' classic "Ball of Confusion" is the hinge of the disc. Almost 17 minutes long, it features guest appearances by saxophonist
Randall Bramblett and the entire
Dirty Dozen Brass Band strutting deep into psychedelic funk. The album closes with a bucked-up, raw cover of
Blue Öyster Cult's "Godzilla." Although audience tapes might be the best souvenirs of the band's shows for true
Panic fans, Spreadheads might have to have
Jackassolantern as a recorded document of what they've heard live.
–
Thom Jurek, Rovi