IT does not happen often: a Phish set with "bustouts" so plentiful that as each one begins, the excited utterances of fans intensify, fostering a revelry of Dionysian proportions. Although it was only a month ago that Phish performed a show with many bustouts (6/22/2016), shows like this are still rare. And when in the course of such phishy events it becomes necessary to SCREAM FEVERISHLY, in a room ablaze with vibration, at yet another song you never believed you’d see Phish play, you realize you are at THAT show. Phish reminded each one of us in attendance last night at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco why we fell in love with them, and why we continue to see them whenever life permits.
Photo by Rene Huemer © Phish, used with permission
But that said, last night’s show was not without its musical shortcomings, and it is, in a sense, an exemplar of the “you just had to be there” phenomenon.
Opening-up a show with “Demand” for the first time since the Vogue Theater in ‘94, Phish immediately befuddled vet and noob alike. No one saw it coming (it hadn’t even been played since 12/31/09), and the band established early-on that we must never forget that we should expect the unexpected. While not perfectly executed, like “The Curtain With” that delightfully and soulfully followed, its frailty was forgivable and easily excused given its technical difficulty. And, more importantly, along of course with the “With” jam of “Curtain,” it proved to be a wonderful way to introduce the rest of the set, which (we now know) would unfold with bustout after bustout after bustout.
“Alumni Blues > Letter to Jimmy Page > Alumni Blues” raised the roof. Having not been played in 114 shows, it was a real treat to get it, and to get it again for those of us who were at the BGCA 114 shows ago. It was an even-more-animated-than-normal version, and the “Fuck Your Face” that surprisingly came next, seeming to thrill most in attendance, further propelled the crowd’s enthusiasm.
After a timid but entertaining cover of The Beatles’ “Cry Baby Cry,” the first since Hampton in ‘98 496 shows ago, Trey remarked that the band had just finished their new album, and gave a shout-out to Bob Ezrin, for whom the bouncy, happy, poppy “Sing Monica” was performed. Given the surprises that had already occurred in the set, some initially appeared to be ambivalent about “McGrupp,” but most of us were delighted to hear it, and managed to enjoy it, even though it likely hadn’t been rehearsed (Trey had difficulty with bits of its tricky composed sections).
Photo by Rene Huemer © Phish, used with permission
The Phish original instrumental “The Very Long Fuse” came next, once again surprising us, as it had only been performed once before, last summer at Alpine, about ten months after its debut on Halloween in the improvised, all-hallowed “Haunted House” costume set. The frivolously charming monstrosity “BBFCFM” included Trey playing on his back (see photo above), and Fish at one point saying “one, two, buckle my shoe,” a quote from the count-off before the song “America Drinks” on Frank Zappa’s Absolutely Free album.
The “Walk Away” > “Sanity” -> “David Bowie” to close the set was a blast. First sets have rarely ended with such a mix of classic rock and hilarity. “Bowie’s” intro is silly, with vocalizations trailing into it out of “Sanity’s” wake. But the jam is, for the most part, expertly led by Trey, reminding one of other strong, though certainly not game-changing, performances of the song in the last decade. Trey employs his pitch shifter to be sure, but does so tastefully and melodically, reaching a clean peak in this short-but-tight version.
Setbreak was abuzz. The “vibe” at a Phish show is, of course, usually marvelous. But when a first set is replete with bustouts and everyone in attendance has likely just seen something either for the first time, or at least for the first time in awhile, the vibe is truly stunning. Just look at this show’s gap chart. Thousands of visibly-giddy fans chatted away wide-eyed and vibrantly, possibly creating one of the loudest setbreaks in Phish history. There was the feeling that, in the set yet to come, each of us present had a good chance of catching "IT," and that "IT" could happen at any moment.
“No Men In No Man’s Land” (aka “NMINML”) opened the second set. The funkiest of the new-ish batch of songs from the last year, Trey yet again employed his Trutron pedal and envelope filter to dramatic effect, reminiscent, for example, of Jerry in late 1970’s versions of “Dancin’ in the Streets.” “NMINML” featured a big guitar solo, followed by a relatively brief, dreamy, open jam that fizzooled-out steadily before “Mike’s Song” kicked in. “Mike’s” jam was artfully colored both by Trey’s filthy, disgusting, echoplextactic tone, and Page’s ferocious and sustained assault on the clavinet. It was a proud return of the first jam of “Mike’s Song,” albeit a short one.
In response to a huge banner that had hung from the center balcony’s front row from the show's beginning, “Fee” was next, and would be the final bustout of the evening. The 208th unique song of this year, it had last been played at MPP, opening a memorable show there two years ago on July 27, 2014. Although Trey didn’t cleanly play the composed intro of “Seven Below,” it was improvisationally quite pleasant, though shorter than many other top versions of the song.
While one might think that the choice of “Waiting All Night” at this point in the second set was beyond rude of Trey, that would be mistaken. It is a beautiful song, which had it sprang-forth instrumentally during a lengthy improvisation, would be forever revered as a gloriously uplifting, blissful, “must hear” groove. (Coincidentally, “WAN” is also the perfect amount of time for a break to the bathroom, for anyone in need of such relief, especially during the middle of the second set.)
The “Jibboo” that transitioned the set from the third to the fourth quarter was crisp and peppy and mellifluous to be sure, perhaps even worthy of consideration among the top Phish versions (as opposed to TAB versions) of the song. And the new original song, “Miss You,” that followed (only its second performance to date) was very moving, particularly because it was written by Trey purportedly with his sister Kristy in mind. Kristy Anastasio Manning died from neuroendocrine cancer in April 2009 (shortly after the band’s Hampton return) at only 46 years of age. Whatever you may have heard (or think) about the song’s musical merit, if you deeply miss a loved one and think of them while listening to this song’s lyrics and gentle melody, it may choke you up.
Photo by Rene Huemer © Phish, used with permission
When “Weekapaug” triumphantly started, many no doubt wondered what we’d be treated to this time. While there have certainly been versions performed in the last decade that are worth a listen (including several last year), it has generally not been as consistently fierce as it had been in previous eras. In last night’s ten-minute take, after some passionate playing typical of previous versions, Trey put down his Languedoc and moved to the marimba lumina behind Fish, hammering away as he did early last year in Miami. Mike eventually set down his bass and moved to a keyboard behind and beside Page for a duet of sorts. In a sense, there were “dueling duets” for awhile, with Trey and Fish essentially on percussion, and Page and Mike on keys. The version ended with a bass bomb that rattled the room, though Mike was still beside Page and at a keyboard, and it was not clear who or what created the effect (presumably a button or key in Page’s rig somewhere)[Editor's Note: It was apparently Trey on Marimba Lumina.]. In any event, it was a musically bizarre version, but in a good way given the limited improvisation “Weekapaug” has witnessed since 2004.
The set concluded with a loose “Oh Kee Pah,” and customarily-spirited performances of “Suzy” and “Julius.” This may appear to be perfunctory. But those of us in attendance continued to be delighted by this show, hoping for the best in the encore. While it is of course typical for everyone to be genuinely amped before the band begins the encore, in light of the prior bustouts, speculation about what we’d soon hear seemed even more rampant and fervent than usual. After all, we’d been repeatedly reminded to expect the unexpected.
Thus, when “Velvet Sea” began, there was an audible, collective groan (even gasps) from the audience, which while possibly disturbing from the band’s perspective, was nevertheless hilarious. The placement of such a serene song in the first encore position seemed incredible, given all that had come before in the show, and especially in light of this song’s very heavy history (watch, e.g., its performances at Big Cypress and Coventry). Notwithstanding its setlist placement and the apparent indifference of many fans, “Velvet Sea” was a nice, relaxing version, before “Character Zero” rocked the concert to a close, with most in attendance belting-out the chorus, hands in the air, souls soaring.
The band heads south to play The Forum in Inglewood, and then Chula Vista. There’s still plenty of time for Phish to kill it some more this tour. Don’t miss LOCKN’ (especially since Fish and Page will be sitting-in with Phil) or Dick’s. And, please, remember to enjoy yourself! -$0.02.
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.
...and at least from my perspective, the crowd pretty much sang the entirety of Character Zero (with the band filling in on the chorus). Trey had a huge shit eating grin at the time, and kept looking over at Page in disbelief that the crowd was rocking it that hard. He even turned his mike stand around at some point, pretty content to let the crowd take over the vocals.
Other personal highlight for me from the show is having Page point and laugh at my "ass handed" sign as they walked off at set break. And I definitely got my ass handed to me that show!
Second, every encore of SF went past curfew. Last night's second set ended at 11:32 p.m., and they gave us a very moving take on Velvet Sea, which holds up on the recording much better than any 1.0 or 2.0, or possibly even 3.0 version in memory. And that sing along on Character Zero... diss it all you want. Trey's vocals did not go beyond supporting and guiding the singalong. A beautiful calibration of the band's sound to the dynamics of the human phan's voice.
Bill Graham was dancing in the sky, as Phish continues the legacy!!!!!!
Let's see if that 3 day run can be had...? Always possible with Phish
Having only listened, I'd throw my hat in w/ best first set of 3.0 if only on sheer flow of the set--a focused willingness to move directly into the next song that early Phish did so well (when they composed setlists)--those chatty breaks between songs in most sets tend to kill the buzz--this set was determined to impress and did exactly that.
Also, no mention of the return of whisper/chant/moan weirdness at the beginning of Bowie. A true sign that vintage Phish has shown up to play.....
Also, it's pretty obvious that a slow song to open the encore means you'll at least get a second tune.
I have to disagree with you on one thing... In order to truly have 1.0 tightness there should also be 1.0 tempo, which was not there. The show is good, and the song selection in the first set is outstanding, obviously, but I still think night 2 is the best complete show. Better jamming, overall far better second set. First set songs that were well chosen (save for Breath & Burning, but maybe thats fine for some people) and were played as well as anything in night 3 first set.
I laughed out loud to this Sanity; it reminds one of 2/20/93 or similar shows from the 90s when they're goofing around and making each other laugh. In lieu of 25 minute monster-jams (woefully absent on this tour), moments like these are more than acceptable. The HYHU> Jennifer Dances> HYHU> I Been Around from 7/27/14 was an equally hilarious moment thats worth revisiting
It's so funny to listen to jaded phans these days and compare them to some die-hard fans of other great bands who've had long careers and gone through similar processes. Take Metallica for example. In the late 90's Metallica fans were complaining about their new stuff and wishing for more music like the Black Album. But back when the Black Album first came out, a lot of the hardcore fans were upset that it didn't sound enough like Ride the Lightning. Same old story. Over and over again. People get used to a particular thing, and then they complain when they don't get it. As much as Phish would love to, they simply cannot please everyone. In order to continue doing this, they need to stay true to themselves, which is exactly what they seem to be doing.
First set was a mindfuck. just rarity after rarity. i think they planned Demand and The Curtain With, but past that something just gave way and they decided to make the whole set a stats phreak's wet dream. I guess you just get sick of playing wolfman's brother and need to fuck your own face sometimes. it was totally whacked, the whole place was laughing laughing fall apart. My girlfriend was there (show #3) so she didn't quite appreciate it in the same way. but now she's got better stats than your significant other, probably.
what this did mean, though, is that after a musically stellar night two they fell back to tricks and...gimmicks?...manipulating song economics to go over well is not as impressive as good patient listening and improv, to me at least. I'd trade a solid padding of my stats for a 30 minute Tweezer any day of the week. but damn set 1 was fun. Set break was spent wondering what they could possibly do next. Everyone around me was giddy.
Set two was a letdown, given the buzz coming off of set one. It started out phish-mediocre: NMINML didn't really launch from its homebase, Mike's had a good groove to it, but it was clear that coming out of mike's, Trey didn't have a vision for what was to happen next. Things simmered and there was some back-and-forth on stage. As noted there was a HUGE song request banner for fee, so there it happened. Almost as if the band couldn't come up with anything on their own. Sometimes Fee opens up at the end into textures and colors but that was shortlived as well. Through jibboo it was...meh. Jibboo had a nice build but stayed close to home, things were played very safe.
Then things came off the rails. Miss You is a pointedly sad song - this requiem for trey's sister who died is full of pain. Emotional pain isn't an experience you have with phish very often, hardly ever. Tension? Yes. lots of that. but emotional pain has never been part of the phish pallete. You listen to Ray LaMontagne or Pink Floyd for emotional pain, not Phish, because when Phish does it, it comes across as cheesey. trey/phish simply don't do heartbreak well, or explicit emotions for that matter. Phish is much more impressionistic: splashes of light, color, texture. An explicit rendering of any emotion, the "tell" instead of "show," just never works. and that range of emotions is just out of place at a Phish show. I know Trey's themes in songwriting as of late are about getting older, confronting mortality and middle age, time slipping away, and so on. Which is fine, but I'd rather he cut a solo album full of those songs and leave Phish as its original vision and bread and butter: one big overblown word salad cartoon. I'd be a much more satisfied phan if we never heard Miss You, Joy, Show of Life, Summer of 89, Time Turns, Sleep Again, or similar (although some of these are actually good songs, they're just out of place in the phish context).
I digress. Somewhere in Miss You i think Trey got into his own head a bit too much and completely shut down any ability to pull himself out of it. I mean, the song is absolutely wrenching. Trey phoned it in for the rest of the night after Miss You, never really took a leadership role to bring us all home. He spent Weekapaug absolutely uninspired, not even playing his guitar and banging on that marimba (i guess i can say i now got a drums/space at a phish show, can we count that as a bustout?), he flubbed oh kee pah, handed suzy over to Page to lead, peppered standard blues riffs in Julius that he could do in his sleep, and then again gave Page the lead in Velvet Sea. The objection to Velvet Sea wasn't to me the song choice, but the fact that Trey was sidelining himself. Even Character 0 (possibly the biggest no effort gratification of an encore/set closer in the Phish Catalog, and for that reason i don't like it) was a path of least resistance attempt to make something of the encore, but he didn't even sing the lyrics, he literally turned his mic to the crowd who did his job for him. And then he bolted off stage and was out of site before everyone else was done bowing. i haven't ever seen Trey do that before, but clearly something was off. i guess everyone's allowed an off night, but damn. Should have encored with Coil.
All in all from the BGCA run this year, night 2 set 2 is the pick to click, and while the bust out set 1 of night three was cool, it was one of those things that probably doesn't translate to tape well.
$.02
Overall, San Francisco provided an incredible environment perfect storm. Only looking at the paper, I doubt anyone would understand how amazing Wednesday night was, as were the previous two nights. Even if they played the exact same songs every night right now, it would still be incredible.
Truly some of the nicest and diversely beautiful group of fans I have ever experienced. All I can say is there was a whole lot of love in that building, and everyone can thank themselves for bringing the love out there. Thanks y'all.
While they've been significantly sharper than the murky sludge that was most of 2014, I just don't think they have it right now.
I don't think it's a lack of effort. I think they're trying really hard and I think they really do care, I just think they are a band in transition right now, and I'm not overly interested in enduring it right now.
I lost interest in this tour entirely after the 2nd night of the Gorge, which was one of the most disappointing shows I've heard them play in recent years, on top of five or six major clunkers earlier in the tour.
Oh well. You have to have tours like this in order to compare them to tours which are great. I'll have hopes that Fall will be different.
Then things came off the rails. Miss You is a pointedly sad song - this requiem for trey's sister who died is full of pain. Emotional pain isn't an experience you have with phish very often, hardly ever. Tension? Yes. lots of that. but emotional pain has never been part of the phish pallete. You listen to Ray LaMontagne or Pink Floyd for emotional pain, not Phish, because when Phish does it, it comes across as cheesey. trey/phish simply don't do heartbreak well, or explicit emotions for that matter. Phish is much more impressionistic: splashes of light, color, texture. An explicit rendering of any emotion, the "tell" instead of "show," just never works. and that range of emotions is just out of place at a Phish show. I know Trey's themes in songwriting as of late are about getting older, confronting mortality and middle age, time slipping away, and so on. Which is fine, but I'd rather he cut a solo album full of those songs and leave Phish as its original vision and bread and butter: one big overblown word salad cartoon. I'd be a much more satisfied phan if we never heard Miss You, Joy, Show of Life, Summer of 89, Time Turns, Sleep Again, or similar (although some of these are actually good songs, they're just out of place in the phish context).
This paragraph above represents, to me, one of the most profoundly accurate expressions of the subconscious reality of Phish and its audience I've ever read. This paragraph (and the comments made after it) sum up my own feelings of this tour.
I think there is a major disconnect currently happening between Trey and the whole Phish experience. Perhaps Phish no longer works for Trey. Maybe he's more into the TAB thing now. That's fine, it's his right, they're his songs, but to blend the two night after night just doesn't work for me.
Love these guys to death, but I think it's time to spend my money on more of the large catalogue of their past and not expect this year to deliver. There's something off with the band but we won't know until some time goes by, because they won't tell.
For those who claimed that the band fizzled for set 2, I say this: "You're deaf!" That was the most loving performance of the year.