[10] The Milwaukee Journal called the album "an impressive collection of rocking tunes driven by Hopkins' fervid guitar playing and vocalist Dave Slutes' passionate singing.
"[14] Entertainment Weekly wrote that "songs, such as 'Get Out of That Town' and 'Sara's Not Sober', are set apart by their warmth as well as their subjects, which are elaborated by the Sidewinders in vivid detail... That combination seems to electrify the band's music, making it reach out with melodic curves as compelling as speech.
"[16] Trouser Press concluded: "Hopkins' expansive 'big guitar' references Neil Young and Crazy Horse; his uncomplicated melodies are as immediate and hummable as Tom Petty's.
And Slutes' enigmatic lyrical concerns (the drug of love, the mystic powers of the sun and moon, the dark edges of the soul)—delivered in the best romantic baritone since Neil Diamond ... make for a charismatic combination.
"[12] UPI praised the "big, blasting rock sound that begs to be played at top volume," and noted that the album is "anchored by the raging one-note guitar solos of Rich Hopkins.