There is a long and rich if somewhat unfortunate tradition of veteran country acts re-recording their classic material for a new label in the latter years of their career, and 
Blue Mountain have apparently chosen to introduce this phenomenon to the alt-country community. 
Blue Mountain recorded four good-to-excellent albums for Roadrunner Records between 1995 and 2001, breaking up not long after the release of 
Roots. In 2008, 
Blue Mountain has reunited and now that bassist 
Laurie Stirratt is running an independent record label, the band has chosen to recut 14 songs from 
Dog Days, 
Home Grown, and 
Tales of a Traveler for a de facto "Greatest Almost Hits" collection called 
Omnibus. (This album has also been released at the same time as another album of new 
Blue Mountain material, 
Midnight in Mississippi). While this album was probably created so that 
Blue Mountain could earn a second payday from these songs, there's little arguing that they've done right by the music; the production on 
Omnibus is simple and straightforward but effective, and the arrangements don't stray far from the versions fans have come to know and love without sounding at all rusty. 
Omnibus was recorded after a seven-year layoff, but 
Blue Mountain sound admirably tight and emphatic in the studio; they tear into these songs with the respect they deserve, and while nothing on here tops the original recordings, they come close enough that folks who've always wanted a well-chosen collection of the group's best songs will be satisfied with this disc. Of course, the relatively small number of people who fall into that category probably own the group's back catalog, or might be swayed towards buying the recent expanded reissue of 
Dog Days, which is still 
Blue Mountain's best album. But in a field of endeavor that's usually pockmarked with bad decisions, 
Omnibus is a modest but genuine success.