Second album from Zzebra being now a septet, having hired a full-time vocalist Alan Marshall, despite having four instrumentals on the present album. Musically the group sounds more or less the same than on the debut album, as Marshall doesn't sound that different to Yeadon. As Yeadon had done (pun not intended, but left in the text), guitarist Terry Smith will leave in the course of the album's recording. In some ways, Panic is a better album than the debut, but the surprise is gone. Overall the number of instrumentals obviously leaves more space for the musicians to express themselves and interplay between each other.
Album · 1975 · Jazz Related Rock. Second album from Zzebra being now a septet, having hired a full-time vocalist Alan Marshall, despite having four instrumentals on the present album. This album is the logical continuity of Panic, with its ever softer jazz tracks, and the vocals, courtesy of Alan Marshall are not helping, sending Zzebra more mainstream jazz-funk. Most of what would’ve been the album’s first side is relatively boring, soft, sometimes veering at sometimes at crooner tunes out of which the African themed Bai La Jo is probably the most remarkable.
Album starts at 114BPM, ends at 136BPM (+22), with tempos within the -BPM range. Try refreshing the page if dots are missing). Recent albums by Zzebra. Take It or Leave It. 1999.
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Is Panic the best album by Zzebra? BestEverAlbums. com brings together thousands of 'greatest ever album' charts and calculates an overall ranking. This album At A Glance. Panic by Zzebra (1975) Overall rank: 75,852nd. Accolades: Top albums of 1975 (773rd). Top albums of the 1970s (7,458th). Best albums of all time (75,852nd). Zzebra Panic MM5 LP/Tour Advert 1975 Condition: Like New. Time left: 3h 40m 31s. Ships to: Worldwide.