Safety In Numbers

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 54:55

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UM, Progressive and Aggressive!

EMUSIC-00C27D7E

Excellent opening track with "Believe the Lie". Blistering hi-hat work in the intro by the drummer, Kris Myers. Impressive composition in this track alone...very driving, intricate and melodic. I believe this is UM's best studio effort to date. Early on (fan since '98) they would jam HARD on some odd-metered groove and just completely freak us all out. Now, they are evolving. This album is full of musicianship. Complete musical thoughts (they're alls growns ups now). Safety... is a unique and just bada** album in my opinion. "Nemo" "Ocean Billy" and "End of the Road" are also standouts.

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ehhh

HarryHood

overproduced umphrey's sucks

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Phenomenal-- Year's Best, So Far

MusicLab

Though they defy catergorization, UG are the ultimate evolution of the best of prog rock from the 1970's. Oh sure, on this LP they Little Feat-it with "Women Wine & Song" and ZZ Top-it with "Intentions Clear." But if you could blend the syncopated beats of Gentle Giant, angular rhythms of Yes, the fury of King Crimson and add youthful vigor to foment your own compelling concoction-- wouldn't you? This album may have a few more quieter/introspective moments than some of their previous efforts, but there is balance: a sumptuous, seamless blend of acoustic music and searing "rock" that bespeaks artistic maturity. Well done boys.

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They Say All Media Guide

When “jam bands” began to infiltrate the music scene in the ’90s, it seemed like fans were content to hear bands jamming away for hours on end — à la a Grateful Dead show. But later in the decade, these Dead offspring began to branch out into other musical styles — even going so far as to streamline their compositions to start resembling actual songs. A good example of this is the third studio album overall by Umphrey’s McGee, Safety in Numbers. With more than half of the album’s compositions not exceeding the five-minute mark (something that was virtually unheard of “back in the good old days” of jam bands), Safety in Numbers covers an impressive amount of musical ground. And you’ve got to love a band that invites Huey Lewis to lend his harmonica skills to the tracks “End of the Road” and “Women, Wine and Song” (the latter of which sees Lewis lend a hand in the vocal department, as well). Additional standouts abound — including the speedy album opener “Believe the Lie” and the tough riff rocker “Nemo.” There is a new dawn for jam bands in the early 21st century, and Umphrey’s McGee is definitely helping to usher it in. – Greg Prato

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