Col. Bruce Hampton & the Aquarium Rescue Unit | |
Type: | live |
Artist: | Col. Bruce Hampton and the Aquarium Rescue Unit |
Cover: | Col_Bruce_Hampton_&_the_Aquarium_Rescue_Unit.jpg |
Released: | 1992 |
Venue: | Georgia Theatre, Athens, Georgia |
Genre: | Southern rock |
Length: | 58:31 |
Label: | Capricorn Records 9 42000-2 |
Producer: | Johnny Sandlin |
Chronology: | Aquarium Rescue Unit |
Next Title: | Mirrors of Embarrassment |
Next Year: | 1993 |
Col. Bruce Hampton & the Aquarium Rescue Unit is a live album by the band of the same name. It was recorded at the Georgia Theatre in Athens, Georgia, and was released in 1992 by Capricorn Records. On the album, band leader Bruce Hampton is joined by guitarist Jimmy Herring, mandolin player Matt Mundy, keyboard player Chuck Leavell, bassist Oteil Burbridge, conga player Count Mbutu, and drummer Jeff Sipe, listed as "Apt. Q-258."[1] [2]
In a review for AllMusic, Brian Bartolini wrote: "Mix together some Southern rock, some blues, some funk, a little jazz, and a touch of psychedelia, and that's what you'll find on this enjoyable live set."
Rolling Stones Robert Palmer noted that "there's a truly unique sensibility at work," and stated: "there's a bit of the Allmans' jazzier mode of improvising, Sea Level's sophisticated song structures and Wet Willie's cranked-up roadhouse R&B in the ARU's stylistic mix master. But this music is also post-Beefheart, post-Steely Dan, postbebop, post-Dixie Dregs, post-Sun Ra – it's just about posteverything." He concluded: "It rocks, swings, smacks, clangs, walks and runs, this music, with its eyes rolled back in its head."[3]
Dan Kening, writing for the Chicago Tribune, called the music "an anarchistic mixture of jazz, rock and blues," and praised the album's instrumental work, but cautioned: "this chaotic curiosity is not for the faint of heart."[4]
In an article for The Baltimore Sun, J.D. Considine commented: "Combining the best elements of Little Feat, the Dixie Dregs and Captain Beefheart, Hampton's... band offers a deft mix of Southern rock, casual jazz and warped blues that's tuneful, funny and unexpectedly addictive. Definitely worth taking a chance on."[5]
Mike Joyce of The Washington Post remarked: "Hampton and the Rescue Unit shake things up..., improvising freely on Southern rock, blues, jazz, folk, R&B, bluegrass, fusion and gospel styles with a kind of playful virtuosity that's drawing increasingly bigger crowds."[6]