
Many of the songs will remind the listener just how turbulent the cultural climate of the late '60s and early '70s was in the U.S. White's soulful southern-tinged spoken drawl introduces "The Change" (as in a "change is gonna come"), then a potent theme and oft-spoke clarion call that, indeed, the times they were a changin'. "Black Panther Swamps" and "I Just Walked Away" (the album's first single) are also successful at what they attempt. Meanwhile, over on the more sentimental side, "The Daddy" concerns itself with the generation gap between father and son, and mentions the son cutting his long hair ("a little respect will never hurt you"). The mawkish "Five Summers for Jimmy" will appeal to fans who liked Bobby Goldsboro's "Honey." On a more positive note, "A Night in the Life of a Swamp Fox" was White's somewhat-frustrating look at what was going on in his life, playing his sole hit for fans but wanting something more out of his career. Unfortunately, this album never did bring him the success he craved, although it deserves another listen.
[Bryan Thomas]
Well, The first Warner Lp for TJW is kinda mixed bag of half cool and half so so stuff. What I really dig here are stompers as opening They Caught The Devil..., closing Voodoo Village and The Change, My Kind Of Woman, A Night In The Life Of A Swamp Fox. To make the package stronger some bonus trax are included here as '76 single A-side fine cover of Susie-Q [my fav version], legendary Even Trolls Love Rock And Roll, Backwoods Preacher Man... Dig the Swamp!