Similar to Gib, I have talked about Rees Jones in the past here and offered similar criticisms of his work. I've been amazed that someone who has had incredible exposure to the world's greatest classic courses on a detail level would veer so far from that standard in his original work, for reasons I simply couldn't fathom.
For the record, I have played 2 courses he designed under his dad's name in 1968-74, 9 courses he built solo from NY to FL in the years from 1974-2000, and 6 courses he restored or renovated, either partially or fully.
To be honest, I liked his very early work best. Sometime after 1983, his courses began to all look the same, in a style I found neither site specific nor aesthetically pleasing. We've talked ad infinitum here about the mounds he created, as well as the squiggly amoeba and round circle bunkering, everywhere from the Oregon coast to south Florida, and I'm not sure which if any of those courses could be considered above a 6 or maybe 7 on any scale. Most are 4's and 5's...not bad, but hardly inspiring. Yes, some of them were quite difficult, but more in the way Gib suggests than in anything particularly innovative or thought-provoking.
I understand from some here that he is currently evolving into a more classic mode on his latest creations. Certainly, the pictures shown here last year of Olde Kinderhook looked like nothing I've ever seen from him and seem VERY promising. I hope to get there this year to see for myself.
So, I don't know if that's bashing, but I think I'm keeping an open mind based on what I've seen, experienced, and heard. I personally hope that he improves tremendously in the years to come and builds many great courses; not only because he gets many fabulous sites, but also because I understand that he's a helluva nice guy.