"Waiting on the World to Change" received mixed reviews from music critics.
Kelefa Sanneh of
The New York Times called the song "a lovely and anger-free ode to a vaguely dissatisfied generation," while Matt Collar with
AMG wrote that "Nobody — not a single one of Mayer's contemporaries — has come up with anything resembling a worthwhile anti-war anthem that is as good and speaks for their generation as much as his 'Waiting on the World to Change.
Rolling Stone called the opening track and first single "a moving apologia for Gen Y's seeming 'apathy. Other reviewers commented on his progression as an artist; Tony Pascarella found the song "gives listeners, both old and new, an idea of how far Mayer has come. To be frank, this is no 'Your Body Is A Wonderland.' With
Continuum, Mayer broadens his fan base by infusing a very blues and R&B-influenced sound." Not all reviews were glowing:
Entertainment Weekly and the
Los Angeles Times were both less than impressed, with the
Times saying that, in the song, "his mood tightens up unpleasantly".
Greg Kot in the
Chicago Tribune also referred to the song (in his report on Mayer's appearance at the
Crossroads Guitar Festival) as "[perhaps] the most spineless social-justice song ever written. It advocates a passive approach, whereas the song it most closely resembles ---
Curtis Mayfield's classic "
People Get Ready" --- urges everyone to get involved, or risk being left behind".
Pitchfork found in the track "the gravitas of an infomercial but only a fraction of the soul", giving it the least grade. ==Commercial performance==