Outside Inside The String Cheese Incident

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CD

  • Release Date: 05/15/2001
  • Sales Rank: 34,859
  • Label: SCI FIDELITY RECORDS
  • UPC: 662102100929
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Outside Inside

1LISTENOutside and Inside 4:42
2LISTENJoyful Sound 6:28
3LISTENClose Your Eyes 4:50
4LISTENSearch 4:38
5LISTENDrifting 3:28
6LISTENBlack and White 6:11
7LISTENLost 4:50
8LISTENLatinissmo 5:10
9LISTENSing a New Song 4:41
10LISTENRollover 10:56
11LISTENUp the Canyon 3:01

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Jam bands get rapped for their apparent bipolar nature: Few can duplicate the energy of their live shows in the sterile environment of a studio. But on their third studio album, the String Cheese Incident proves they can do it inside or out. Outside Inside has nearly as much energy as their vaunted live show and captures the joy with which they play. It overflows with effervescence on almost all of the very different tracks. Perhaps credit is due to their new producer, Steve Berlin of Los Lobos. The cuts on this album sound fuller and more energetic than their previous studio albums, Born on the Wrong Planet and Round the Wheel. Even compared to their last album, Carnival 99, a live collection, the album stands up well. The band certainly has no fear when it comes to throwing disparate musical genres together on a single album. On the ruckus roots-rocker "Outside and Inside," the band shows the influence of the mother of all jam bands, the Grateful Dead, without coming across as imitators or hacks. The band delves deftly into Southern rock on "Sing a New Song," with Bill Nershi's slide guitar setting the tone. Keyboardist Kyle Hollingsworth leads the funky "Lost" with his Hammond organ and pulls off a respectable salsa jazz piano on "Latinissmo." They'd have been better off, however, avoiding the calypso-tinged "Search," which sounds like a Jimmy Buffet reject. With all these styles to chose from, the band seems to be moving away from the bluegrass jams that it has been known for, but the final track, "Up the Canyon," gives older fans some down-home accordion and mandolin sounds to groove to. ~ Michael Gowan, All Music Guide All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

Outside Insideby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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July 19, 2002: Another great album,..... I would like to comment on the cover artwork in relation to the title. Whoever designed this cover was expressing a deep mystical truth, the inside and outside in relation to the unfolding reflections within the mirrors. The inside is the image in the present, while the outside is the reflection in the past. The inside is everything invisible, yet eternal as it expands into the present. While the outside is everything visible, yet temporal as it contracts into the past. A cascading series of reflections through time each one coming before one and after another, what comes before is internal within the present. While what comes after is external in the past. A basic concept, yet fundamental to the inner traditions. Just remember Love comes from within!