“There’s nothing to say / And nothing to lose.”
It’s been nearly eight months since Phish stepped to the line and unveiled nine of the ten songs that would come to make up Fuego. Lots of words have been written and lots of air expelled in the intervening time debating whether they got nothing but air or nothing but net that night. Finally, the album’s release gives us all an opportunity to release from those modes ourselves, and examine these songs anew. As they richly deserve.
I’m not sure why it took the band this long to get around to it, but I can guess. Whatever your take on the Joy songs in the live setting, it was a milestone album for Phish. It is their resurrection hymnal, their Easter Mass – both a celebration of their new life and an exhalation of relief for having stared down artistic and human mortality as brothers and prevailed (at least for now).
So how do you follow that act? Another concept album? About what collective passage or triumph, exactly? What do you have to say?
What’s your point?
[Oh, and please hurry up! The fans are waiting.]
If Joy bore witness to Phish’s urgent rebirth, Fuego bears witness to their settled maturity. They are now a band with very little if anything to prove. That state of mind has pros and cons. You’ve got permission to fall flat on your face without the fear that you won’t be able to get back up. But it can also diminish your edge, your urgency, your desire to go out there every night and deliver your audience the proper rock rogering they deserve.
Both dynamics are on display here, among many others. With the exception of a few tracks, this is not a party record. There is no “Down with Disease,” or even a “Moma Dance.” A gauze of melancholy drapes over most of the material. Fist pumping opportunities do not abound. On the other hand, Phish is most definitely taking bigger risks than they were in the Joy sessions, and some of them pay off.
The opening title track is one such risk. You have to look back at least as far as “Scents and Subtle Sounds," and “Walls of the Cave” before that, to find a Phish composition as densely proggy and with as much potential for improvisation as “Fuego.” Producer Bob Ezrin – a bona fide wizard and Badass Motherfucker – gets out of the way here, resists the temptation to gild the lily, and lets the song’s Rorschach inkblot essence emerge.
The result is absolutely spectacular. “Fuego” can be deeply appreciated from a number of different angles: its hooks, its movement, or its lyrics, which offer plenty of slack line for delving interpretation, but can just as easily be experienced viscerally, like an abstract painting. Hear it as GAF View-Master flashes of a midlife crisis gone horribly awry. Hear it as the triumph of abandon over madness. Hear it your way, but hear it, because it’s the goods.
What follows “Fuego” is a six song progression that might be described as relentlessly polite. Or purposefully sedate. Phish for waiting rooms. These songs are not bad, in fact they all have their charms. They simply tend to blend into one another.
Phish has a few cool “moment of truth” songs – from “Llama” to “Limb By Limb” – and “The Line” is a swell addition to that quiver. As a college hoops nerd, I fantasize that one day it will replace “One Shining Moment,” and I’m not convinced that wasn’t Phish’s ulterior motive for writing it.
“Devotion to a Dream” benefits quite well from the studio treatment; I just wish I could put my finger on what it reminds me of once and for all. The elegant “Halfway to the Moon” boasts a chord progression that goes down like a complex whiskey, revealing new flavors ever so subtly as it rolls past your tongue and into your throat. Gun to my head, it’s my second favorite track on the album. Superb.
“Winterqueen,” a delicate ballad in the vein of “Anything But Me," marks Fuego’s energetic low ebb, but suddenly we are awakened by new sounds: horns! We’ll hear these horns a few times more, but here they herald the start of the climb upward toward the album’s climax. Densely layered keyboards lend a bit of gravity to the pop confection of “Sing Monica," and “555” serves to remind us that Phish still has a dangerous rhythm section. More horns and a cascade of gospel voices lift this joint right over the top – so convincingly that it’s already hard to imagine the song without them.
“Waiting All Night” is eerie and impossible to ignore, like one of those hyper-produced 10CC breakup songs from the mid-70s. Phish paints something here that I’m not sure I’ve ever seen: a lingering, cool, but intensely psychedelic portrait of distilled sadness. Yes, there are reasons not to love this tune on paper, but it is compelling through headphones.
Though it earns bonus points for its goofball ambition, the first half of “Wombat” suffers from a dearth of musicality. It’s not the first time the band has sounded as if they’re satirizing themselves or taking the piss, but it sounds the way an ill-fitting suit looks. The second half (“post explosion” – those who’ve listened will know what I’m talking about) is viral and greasy but over all too soon. It will be interesting to see what direction this tune goes over the next tour or two.
“Wingsuit” makes a much better ending than it did a beginning, back when it was a “title track.” The song is, after all, a benediction – an exhortation to cast aside fear and live fully. Trey’s concluding solo is nothing short of breathtaking, and a graceful denouement to it all.
Of all the Phish fans I know, precious few regularly listen to the band’s studio output. Fuego may not do much to change that, but maybe that’s beside the point. Maybe the point is illustrated by the album’s cover, which depicts a team of giant old-timey baseball players warming themselves around a thermonuclear fireball.
Or maybe there is no point. And maybe that’s okay.
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Particularly well-stated about 'Wombat' -- after the Halloween debut funk-fest, the first half of this tune notably falls flat on the album. Perhaps this will only serve to highlight the tune's live development, but it still seems like a strange choice. Otherwise the record is impressive, and I'm looking forward to becoming more familiar with it. And to my utter delight, my wife --not a big fan-- likes this one too!
I cant wait to see the song placement. I really think that will be the key of how each of these songs grows or shrinks. Just for Fun, I thought of where I think each song will end up in the setlist.
Feugo- Mid to early second set jam vehicle. I dont see any other spot for it. Similar to where we have seen epic Carinis lately
The Line- I think it will end up in a mid first set position, but there is something about the chorus and ending of the song that kindof feels like it could be a late second set, or even in a penultimate spot in the the second set before the show closer.
Devotion to a Dream- I think its the only song on the album I can see as an Opener as I mentioned before in the mold of Chalkdust or KDF. So odd to see it in a Mike's Groove....So who knows.
Halfway to the Moon- Mid Second Set song. The Darker tone fits well with a later in the night slot perhaps, especially in the summer at outdoor venues. Could fit anywhere between and opener and closer in either set in an arena show.
Winterqueen- This is a tough one. I can see this being a mid-late 1st or 2nd set breather, but then I can see it just appearing out of a 20 min jam song (Like Architect at SPAC 7/5/13 out of carini). I would guess it would be found in some sort of "breather" or "sandwich" spot. Then again I can see this as part of a multi-song encore
Sing Monica- I dont see Sing Monica being placed anywhere but early first set. Its just got that feel.
555- Total flex song. Could be anywhere except probably a set opener or closer. I can see this showing up anywhere else.
Waiting All Night- See Winterqueen
Wombat- This one is interesting because placement is going to be really important to the growth of the song. If I had to guess i think its a first set song, mid set. I could see it, if it grows into a funk jam vehicle, fitting nicely in a funk heavy second set.
Wingsuit- Sound so much like a song that will morph from a second set jam. I can also see it in an Encore spot.
Interested in seeing what others think.
But the best part about it? At least we have something to talk about. And Tour is right around the corner so it wont be long to see how far off I am
I hear Number Line….
I hear the Jerry Garcia band through and through......
Your descriptive prose rivals the subtlety of the album itself. Thanks much.
I was psyched for the studio treatment of this song after the live debut. It had so much potential! All it needed was a bit of polishing and tightening up. Instead, they sound terribly out of key and time through the intro, they've included this ridiculous explosion sound effect, and the jam, the best part, is faded out almost as soon as they get into it! I know it's a goofy song and they're just having fun, but they could have taken it a bit more seriously, and totally knocked it out of the park. This version will grow on me with repeated listens, I'm sure, and it will be awesome live, but for now... harumph.
Also, I'm bummed that they left off "You Never Know." I really thought it would make the cut. It's such a fun track! Oh well, saving it for the next album I hope?
Again, overall, I love this album. The more confident, groovy, mellow vibes come as a welcome change to the straight ahead pop rock of 'Joy,' and the bits of Floyd and Zeppelin I'm hearing from Page are lovely
Stoked for the tour!
Steam would go nicely with Fuego.
Too late now...
I feel totally privileged to have heard these songs in their first form, pre-studio, and am very excited to hear them on album to hear the studio treatment. OP, the Phish albums get heavy rotation in the car, and after your review, I can't wait to have this one in the stereo for a few weeks straight!! And, I can't wait to hear it and reminisce about the years that have gone by and all the changes the band has gone through, and to reflect on the tour> studio/studio> tour/tour> studio> tour treatments we've gotten from these great guys over the last 30 years
Great review
I'm a huge fan of Devotion to a Dream and I think it's in the Heavy Things/Numberline category. If Phish would ever have a radio hit (I know....) it would be this. Great tune.
Those are my two favorite tracks and I like them a lot. Great and fair review and I enjoyed reading it - thanks.
Wharf > Oak Mountain > Alpharetta. Gittin sum' suthern pheesh
I have this weird feeling that Wombat will be little brother to Tweezer, a ridiculous song that ..... well, when you're at a show and they bust into Wombat, fans will be singing "Want that! Had that!" Getting all excited and shit..... and then into type II...... can happen.
Devotion to a Dream: to me sounds like a cross between Traveling Wilburies and a few of the studio cuts from GD Go to Heaven like Alabama Getaway or Don't Ease Me In . . . ish.
I strongly disliked Monica when I first heard it but the studio version is growing on me. i like the word play in it. ....stole my manhood - de sired me - lol.
Mike's tone is unbelievable. Just truly some of the best Mike sound I've ever heard on a recording before, I think even better than Moss and Overstep even. He's in the mix so perfectly. Speaking of mix, anyone notice how amazing and dominating Page is on this album? All tracks except for Fuego, to us listening to the whole album all the way through last night for the first time, have Page way out front in the mix, so much so that on The Line, we couldn't really even hear Trey's guitar lead on the solo. Trey is there, but its so well mixed it just sounds like the whole band is in an orchestrated, "I'm not stepping toes," jam/solo.
The lyrics of the album overall are pleasant. I like the quirkiness of Fuego, it's mysterious, it makes us feel like there's meaning to it, and it means nothing at the same time. But the thread of "stealing" or "things stolen" is in many songs (if you include "you never know," this theme is actualized perfectly). And the stolen car references, very interesting. The basketball game was "stolen" from the team from those missed shots. Fuego is a stolen car...??? "Steal away/Let's steal a car.." opening lyrics to Wingsuit. Phish even "stole" a segment of the Fish TV show opening theme for Wombat (if you hear them back to back, it's so close). Phish is obviously a little too much fun
Lastly, the number of songs written by all 4 members, and that's the majority of the songs, should be something we all should be rejoicing over! Let's give it up to the 4 minds' creative genius that gelled together to create this sick, sick, sick album.