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Widespread Panic Tickets

Georgia, the land of peaches and REM, is also home to Widespread Panic, the popular jamming band that spawned the hits “Airplane” and “Can't Get High”! Widespread Panic is on tour! Don't miss your chance to catch the band that has been a touring force since early 1980s! Buy your Widespread Panic tickets now!
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[1 of 1 customers found this review helpful]

WOW !
By T C from along the coast on 4/30/2009

Saw 1st show of 3 at HOB Orlando. Last year was at St Aug amphitheatre, they had to stop at 11pm. Well the HOB show they weren`t done till 1am!! 4-1/2 hours of jamming! I`ll be dissappointed if I see a shorter show. And I still only knew maybe half the songs. Impressed a buddy who only heard "Panic in the Streets" once maybe. Need a weekend night show to convince more friends to see em.

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[0 of 1 customers found this review helpful]

Great Show
By HandiMan from Jackson WY on 7/6/2008

Great Venue and easy excess to food, drinks, and bathrooms.

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[0 of 2 customers found this review helpful]

prefectly fabulous
By shilz from salida,co on 6/30/2008
Pros:
Every song every momemnt

best 3 day concert series yet!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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[1 of 2 customers found this review helpful]

Well worth the wait!
By Mags from East Rutherford, NJ on 4/13/2008
Pros:
Amazing theater, Crowd was excellent, Staff was friendly

Amazing theater to see a show in...spent hour before show just checking things out. Haven't seen Widespread Panic in years and it was worth the wait to see them in this forum. Fabulous!

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Widespread Panic Biography

One of the many neo-hippie jam bands inheriting the road-warrior mantle left behind by the Grateful Dead, Widespread Panic established a devout grassroots following on the strength of constant touring and a loose, rootsy brand of Southern rock informed by jazz and blues textures. The group's origins date to 1982, when vocalist John Bell and guitarist Mike Houser first began playing together while attending college in Athens, GA. When bassist Dave Schools left academia to join the duo the next year, Widespread Panic were officially born. The band recorded its debut single, Coconut Image, in 1986 drummer Todd Nance joined soon after, followed by the addition of percussionist Domingo Sunny Ortiz and finally keyboardist John JoJo Hermann.

Widespread Panic released their energetic debut LP, Space Wrangler, in 1988 on the tiny Landslide label. After several years of relentless touring, they signed to major label Capricorn, which issued the group's eponymously titled sophomore effort in 1991. Appearances on the 1992 and 1993 ~H.O.R.D.E. tours greatly expanded their fan base prior to 1993's Everyday, while 1994's Ain't Life Grand spawned the AOR hits Airplane and Can't Get High. After teaming with fellow Georgian Vic Chesnutt to record 1995's Nine High a Pallet under the name Brute, Widespread Panic reconvened for the album Bombs and Butterflies, released in 1997. In the spring of 1998, the band released Light Fuse, Get Away, and 'Til the Medicine Takes followed a year later. Another Joyous Occasion (2000) and Don't Tell the Band (2001) marked the band's first albums of the new millennium. In June 2002, Widespread Panic returned to the road for their annual summer tour of the States, but within a month, founding member and lead guitarist Michael Houser had to bow out. Houser was battling cancer and returned home to Athens, GA, to rest while guitarist George McConnell stepped in to finish the tour. On August 10, 2002, Houser succumbed to complications from pancreatic cancer at the age of 40.

Houser's wish was that the band would carry on after his passing, and with McConnell becoming a permanent replacement, Widespread Panic did just that. Their next full-length album, Ball, was released in April of 2003. Night of Joy and ber Cobra, both of which appeared in late March 2004, featured live selections from two of the band's shows at ~The House of Blues in Myrtle Beach, SC, while they toured in support of Ball. These marked Widespread Panic's second and third live efforts, follow-ups up to 2000's Another Joyous Occasion. They returned to the studio later that year for the Halloween-themed covers record Jackassolantern, and again in 2006 for Earth to America. Free Somehow, the band's tenth studio album (and first with newcomer guitarist Jimmy Herring), followed in early 2008, with Dirty Side Down appearing in 2010 it was followed by the in-concert set Live in the Classic City II in the fall. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi