In the lot before last night’s show at Merriweather Post Pavilion, @mikh2wg, @the_Crested_Hogchoker, @GhettoSloth, @ivy_light and myself were discussing how many people (including some of us) had a strongly negative reaction the first time we heard Phish. It seems so unthinkable to me now that there was a time when a friend gleefully played for me a newly acquired tape of 8/14/93 and my response was something along the lines of “Well, that’s nice, dear. But do you realize that idiot is trying to play a vacuum cleaner?” Sloth speculated that 30% of people hate Phish’s music the first time they hear it. I was one of those people once, but almost two decades later, here I was about to see my 30th show. Ain’t love funny?
Last night’s first set was an expert blend of high energy, funk, funny, and pure musicianship that left my jaw hanging. “First Tube” is such a powerful opener, flooding the venue with exuberance. This one was tight and I loved the sudden drop in volume in the middle of the composed section. “First Tube” plugs directly into our first funk fix of the night, “The Moma Dance,” and everything is just working at this point. Fish is filling with little rolls and splashes and vocals, and there’s fantastic wokka-chikka and little licks from Trey. “NICU” is up next, and now Mike catches my ear with dips and flourishes in his bass line. Fantastic way to start the evening.
“Roses Are Free” always puts a smile on my face, extended or not, and I noticed that someone threw what I assume was a bouquet of roses on stage for Trey, who politely and deftly set it down next to his mug without losing his place in the song. What a gentleman he is. “Chalk Dust Torture” gives us another energy boost, and does so with a fairly impeccable jam. A lengthy conference follows before we are treated to the highlight of the first set, “Stash.” Mike and Trey are communicating well right away, and then Page joins in, all with sad and tender phrasing. By 6:40 (LP timing) they begin a shift to the major and stay there for about a minute in a passage which is simply beautiful. Everyone shines, but I love the freedom that Mike has here to create rich, heartfelt tones. Then they just move effortlessly back to the minor, and back to the “Stash” theme proper. The fluid and natural shifts in mood and style within jams is one of my favorite elements of 3.0 Phish, and I thought to myself at this point that even if they just complete this jam in typical “Stash” fashion, I will love it for that transition from sad to joyous and back again without skipping a beat. Yet the conversation continues, each band member contributing, until at 8:54, with Fish leading the way via woodblock tapping, when things get AMAZING. Jazz piano, fat bass, funky guitar. Trey employs some expert, focused use of the whammy pedal in this section, which culminates in a feedback-infused second return to “Stash.” Oh, yes, this band can play.
I don’t know why Kitty Malone would slam on her mule, but we’ll give Mike a pass since “Scent of a Mule” hasn’t been played since SPAC2 last year. I so enjoy seeing what antics they will come up with for the Mule Duel, and this one was great. First, Trey and Mike face off in something that almost sounded like a classical piece. Then, Trey points to Fish, who finally debuts his Marimba Lumina that has been looming in the background since tour began. The effect was hypnotic, bizarre, and terrific, and I’m a little convinced Fish would still be playing it if Trey hadn’t tossed an errant balloon at Fish to break his concentration. And we’re still not done with the first set. “It’s Ice” is not just played well, it features a short jam that is flat-out funk NASTY and will require an update to the jamming chart. Yes, there was a time when "It's Ice" would often feature a variety of cool jams in the middle, so seeing one sneak back in is a refreshing development. The transition back to the ending theme is flubbed, but no bother, it’s an absolute must-hear version for “It’s Ice” fans. Need more funk in your life? Need to double your tube intake? You’re in luck, “Tube” is up next. It’s a quick dose, but quite welcome (and listen for the “It’s Ice” tease from Trey at the start of the jam). To put the exclamation point on a total beast of a first set is a total beast, “Run Like an Antelope.” (Fun stats fact: I’ve seen 30 shows and this was my 12th Antelope, a 40% clip.) This is a textbook Antelope, sleek, clean, and on fire. Can’t think of any better way to head to the break.
While “Stash” is a good example of what I love about 3.0, the start of set two is a good example of what I find frustrating about it. The jam out of “Golden Age” does spin its wheels for a couple of minutes, but it did sound to me like it was starting to get traction. Barely four minutes in to the jam, though, it is allowed to die off, with “Twist” bursting forward. Sometimes I think you need to press forward through a tough section, find an idea, rather than just abandoning a jam and starting over with a new song. Of course, what do I know? I’m just a recapper, and this is Monday morning frontmanning. (Spoiler alert: I’m about to do it again.) “Twist” begins with a great, angry solo from Trey and hits a sweet peak before settling back to a groove fueled by spectacular drumming from Fishman. Then they get stuck again, sounding like they’re grasping for an idea, and suddenly, quite jarringly, Trey launches back into the closing lyrics. To follow that up with “Backwards Down the Number Line” was not an encouraging sign for me at that point. I enjoy the song, but it’s placement in the set made me worried about a repeat of the previous night’s set two, which I didn’t find particularly compelling. Trey, however, knows more about music than I know about almost anything. Ripcording “Golden Age” and “Twist” may have been exactly the right call. If they had eaten up too much set time with pointless meandering in search of a theme, we might have missed out on what followed.
“Light” got me back in the game right away because of its exploratory prowess. “Light” can lead you anywhere, and this version led us back to the place where we started the evening. For the non-fan, what begins to develop around the seven minute mark is going to sound cacophonous. It probably sounds that way to many hardcore fans as well. To me, it was thrillingly insane, a transmission of alien greetings sent from the Antennae Galaxies (see Trey’s playing at 9:11). All of this is set amidst fiendish stop-start jamming. It ate my brain. I loved it. In 1993, I would have hated the crap out of it. And out of one of those breaks, Mike turns on the follower, and Ivy (my wife) calls for “Boogie on Reggae Woman,” as I swear she does *every single time* Mike uses that effect. Well, she nailed it this time, and the segue is perfectly executed, leading us from synaptic restructuring to booty rotation like only Phish can.
To prep us for the end of the set, we are treated to the best version of “Julius” EVER. Who needs a breather, right? And with such a fantastic show now mostly behind us, there is really only one appropriate way to close the second set: “You Enjoy Myself.” Now YEM is YEM, and no one is going to complain about getting one, even when the composed sections are less than perfect, as is the case here. This holds for even your everyday rendition, but this is NOT an everyday rendition of YEM. From the start of the jam, it’s just dialed in to the flavor of the show. Trey on the wah, plucking and scratching, Fishman sizzling and popping, Mike pouring buckets of funk all over everything, stop, start, get down and dance! Every break in this jam is nailed, every space is either filled or left empty to perfection. I’m not sure how long it’s been since I’ve heard a “You Enjoy Myself” that I’ve enjoyed this much, and it was a blissful way to end the set.
“Loving Cup” encore. We joke, and it’s overused in the slot, but it rages. ‘Nuff said.
Please forgive this tired commentator for not having heard everything that has been played so far this summer. I’ve tried to hit the highlights, the jams people have been talking about, since I haven’t been able to listen to every show in its entirety. I have a hard time believing, though, that I will hear a show from the tour to this point that I will enjoy more than this one. There are “must-hear” versions of “Stash,” “It’s Ice,” “Light,” and “You Enjoy Myself,” plus flame throwing renditions of “First Tube,” “Run Like an Antelope,” and even the first section of “Twist.” It was a superb night.
These days the emotion I most associate with Phish is gratitude. Not just gratitude for a show like last night, of course, but gratitude for being a part of this, for being allowed to get IT and share the experience with a community of friends. I’m so thankful for the music, for the memories, for the way my life has been changed and for the people that have changed it. And I am thankful for whatever force it was that opened my soul to the stupid band that covers Prince with a vacuum cleaner.
If you liked this blog post, one way you could "like" it is to make a donation to The Mockingbird Foundation, the sponsor of Phish.net. Support music education for children, and you just might change the world.
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Phish.net is a non-commercial project run by Phish fans and for Phish fans under the auspices of the all-volunteer, non-profit Mockingbird Foundation.
This project serves to compile, preserve, and protect encyclopedic information about Phish and their music.
Credits | Terms Of Use | Legal | DMCA
The Mockingbird Foundation is a non-profit organization founded by Phish fans in 1996 to generate charitable proceeds from the Phish community.
And since we're entirely volunteer – with no office, salaries, or paid staff – administrative costs are less than 2% of revenues! So far, we've distributed over $2 million to support music education for children – hundreds of grants in all 50 states, with more on the way.
Peace,
Dosque
The other clear example of such commitment in the face of repeated failure from last night...
"And out of one of those breaks, Mike turns on the follower, and Ivy (my wife) calls for “Boogie on Reggae Woman,” as I swear she does *every single time* Mike uses that effect. Well, she nailed it this time, and the segue is perfectly executed, leading us from synaptic restructuring to booty rotation like only Phish can."
Finally, I can say...I WAS RIGHT.
As last night's show was my first Phish show I'm proud to say that I am one of the 70% that loved Phish's music. Last night was amazing!
(That was such a good review that this was the best I could do for a negative comment. But I know you're not reading it anyway)
Winking smiley face
MMMMOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
As for the show, certainly the best first set of the tour. The little breakdown in Ice was so left field and summed up what this tour has been about so far, the little moments. One thing I find interesting is the comfort level they have with Number Line and Light...for two opposite reasons. Why is it that Light ALWAYS produces the jam of the night now, a la Ghost for many years, and BDTNL is the go to ripcord, Trey needs an old friend solo song? I guess it is all about comfort level. At least we know that Light is nearly guaranteed to blow our minds now, which it did....again...last night.
Number Line, I think Trey just REALLY likes playing that solo and singing it. The big reason they played Bouncing and Sample and Free and Sparkle and If I Could and Heavy Things all the time had much more to do with then being excellently written songs than being more noob-friendly than some of their other short songs. I wish they'd play an 8 minute Heavy Things instead of every second Number Line. Accomplishes the same thing as far as an uplifting solo goes, but with dark humor instead of birthday singing.
Like most things, I think they could fix it by taking them weird or even just slightly extending them every once in awhile.
I'm guessing some people would gripe like crazy about
Ghost (4:35)
Piper (5:00)
Bouncing Around The Room (12:05)->
Number Line (16:00)->
Heavy Things (11:30)
Joy (11:07)
"What happened to the ghost jam?? Bouncing, Number Line, Heavy Things, Joy? Ohmygerd that's the worst setlist ever!"
GREAT playing this weekend and I think they are enjoying playing together which will produce certain highlights the rest of the summer.
Dosque
We were talking at .net meetup that with todays technology, with couch tour
& everyone listening to all the shows, phssh should start thinking about
'Tourlist' intstead of setlist. They have so many great tunes, how much space
Is there for the repeats & two cover encores in a row? That's a vision &
Really my only neg comment. I've had my fill of loving cup.
Nice thorough review.
Finally, the fact remains that their rotation is tighter, smaller, however you want to describe it and it's irritating many of us. Yet there may be no cure but to wait, because they simply may not be ready for some of the songs we want to hear. I don't know what the rest of the band has been doing, but Trey has had a pretty straight out schedule with the Broadway thing and TAB. They haven't exactly been too committed to the tour thing if you ask me. 20-something shows all year since New Year's? Really? That's not the workload of a band that's "pushing forward" as someone said above. That's a band on the back nine that has already accomplished everything they need to and is simply enjoying themselves and their fan base, which, by the way, there is NOTHING WRONG WITH AT ALL. In the end, they are what they are, for all their faults, which is only the best band on the planet.
That's my 200,000 cents.
And that brings me to the thread regarding tight setlists. I too have seen the lists and am concerned. Why no PYITE, Fluffhead, Tela, McGrupp etc. My take is two fold. One, as pointed out above, they don't tour as hard and are simply staying in the comfort zone with tunes they can play easily and rock out on. I'm ok with that. After 30 years they probably know their limitations. Yes it would be great to see some bustouts but if the band can't play them well, it's just a novelty then isn't it? If they are going to bust out some complex big guns, we want to see them played well.
My other thought is the way tours are constructed and I imagine they move from city to city in a somewhat random order and take days off and play a 3-4 show rotation is they probably don't want hangers on and tour bugs following. Look how out of control The Dead got at the end. Just my $.02 but I suspect Phish does not want the scene to degenerate into a gypsy fest of drunks and hang on's. Please feel free to flame me but, like many of the posters here, I have a job and a life and cannot follow the band for months on end. I strongly believe Phish wants it that way, playing to devoted Phans in certain strong markets and having a small core of people that follow all the way but do not turn it into a circus.
Cheers all and enjoy being free and having the health and wealth to see one of the best bands ever.
Jay
My other thought is the way tours are constructed and I imagine they move from city to city in a somewhat random order and take days off and play a 3-4 show rotation is they probably don't want hangers on and tour bugs following. Look how out of control The Dead got at the end. Just my $.02 but I suspect Phish does not want the scene to degenerate into a gypsy fest of drunks and hang on's. Please feel free to flame me but, like many of the posters here, I have a job and a life and cannot follow the band for months on end. I strongly believe Phish wants it that way, playing to devoted Phans in certain strong markets and having a small core of people that follow all the way but do not turn it into a circus.
Great point, Jay. Hadn't thought of that but you're right. Three cheers for giving the band credit for foresight and planning. I buy it.
I know this might be phish heresy, but I'm totally in favor of them planning out a tentative setlist that is not set in stone and open to change as they see fit. It seems to me like this would give them some direction and balance in setlist construction. The fuckyourface sets show how amply rewarding that can be. Even without playing guyute, fluffhead, et. al much there are enough songs there to avoid repeats. Plus I'd imagine there would be less ripcording in the jams because unless a segue is organic there's no reason to head toward something out of left field prematurely. The bottom line is they would still play what they want but just with a little thought ahead of time about it. Plus you'd get less shows like SPAC 3 that use multiple major jam vehicles without really letting loose on any of them. Obviously, in past years they played less songs per show so this issue wasn't as pressing or problematic. It's gotta be difficult to even remember every single song they played for four shows at a time or so.
As a whole they just need to practice more before tours. Maybe I'll catch some flack for this, but the start of this tour was as sloppy as 09. They've recovered pretty nicely in the actual jams to the point where trey is again a rhythm demon. So I'm not really as concerned about the few meaningless cringes throughout a show, but as mentioned earlier, this certainly is evidence of a narrowing down in song choice to a comfortable level delimited by what they've practiced.
I want to be crystal clear, though, that I find this issues to be minor compared to the amazing jams going on. Which at the end of the day is what I'm mainly here for.
Thanks for the great review. I'm glad to hear some nice discussion about Fish's playing. One thing I've noticed about a lot of these shows is his playing... his phrasing, dynamics, and pocket grooves have been outstanding. BOAF from SPAC this year really stood out to me while I was grooving on the hillside. Since that jam I've focused a bit more on his playing than usual and that focus has been rewarded.
cheers all!!!
I for one would never give you flack for your opinion. That what makes this board so great, we are free to share ideas and opinions. The members here usually post well thought out opinions too. You do make a good point. @Tando, yes Fish is a beast right now!!!! Page has been especially impressive so far this tour (from what I've seen/heard) as well but in my mind he's always kicked ass and is happy to step in and save a jam if Trey is fumbling a bit. Damn I wish I would have picked the Sunday show to go to at MPP but seeing folks there I haven't seen in a long time on Saturday made it worth the trip alone. I was reading a website that's dedicated to just to what to expect from Phish in 2013. He says that Dick's won't live up to the hype this year because of the 25 day break before the run. What? I can see his reasoning but I don't agree with it. I've been out there both years and the 2nd year was even better than the first. Besides, it's Dicks! Trey loves dicks, Page loves dicks, Mike loves dicks, Fish loves dicks, we all love dicks! They wouldn't disappoint. It's such a generic venue but its great at the same time and it's friggin Colorado...how can that be bad? Take care everyone.
However, at the risk of sounding heretical, I am so tired of hearing about the FYF show from Dick's. I own it and have listened to it a lot and I'm telling you it's extremely overrated. The Runaway Jim is a pathetic mess, that Trey surely would've ripcorded at about the 8 minute mark if not for the fact that they needed to stretch it out to make the gag work. It really is an uninteresting uninspired mess and it's clear these days that the song no longer stimulates them. The most interesting part of the show was the Undermind jam and the transition into Farmhouse. Otherwise the show had zero cohesive flow and was downright jarring at times to listen to.
The two shows on 9/1 and 9/2 are far superior.
My point is one made above....long jams aren't always the answer. AlbanyYEM makes an excellent point. More songs means more repeats.
IT'S ALL MAKING SENSE NOW.