[Please welcome guest recapper Rob Mitchum, @PhishCrit. -CD]
For most of 3.0, my working theory for understanding Phish has been one of retracing the steps of their history. There’s even a solid nerdy ph- pun for it: “ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny,” the biological hypothesis that developing embryos recreate the evolution of their ancestors. To be a little less pretentious, the idea is that Phish, since their 2009 comeback, had to reenact their 90s climb from cult bar band to giant-venue superstars, like a stroke patient re-learning how to speak. The awkward part was having to go through this rehabilitation in full public view, playing from the start in the arenas, amphitheatres, and festival fields they’d left behind when they called it quits.
Nevertheless, heroically, they got there somewhere between the Tahoe Tweezer and Magnaball, reclaiming their prior role as the big-stage experimenters we knew and loved. The tricky part is what to do next, when the familiar path they were following ran out. Add in the fact that -- artificial ticket scarcity to the contrary -- they are past their commercial peak as concert draws, and the next chapter of Phish becomes even harder to conceive, one of playing to a loyal-as-ever but aging and often smaller audience.
October 24th in Grand Prairie, Texas -- and to be fair, a lot of Phish’s 2016 -- reflected this awkward stage. Even on a Monday night, a long distance away from their New England home turf, it was once unfathomable that they couldn’t fill a 6,350-capacity venue. But the relatively cozy confines of the Verizon Theatre still surpassed demand, with empty seats in big chunks of the balcony. For the common fan, this is not entirely a bad thing, of course, offering an intimacy that many late 90s bandwagon jumpers (this reviewer included) never experienced firsthand. But for a group used to selling out Madison Square Garden and “selling out” Wrigley Field, there’s a recalibration needed for a swing through their less established Southern markets, an adjustment to conditions that may become the norm instead of an aberration.
As a result, what we might be witnessing now is a reversal of the recapitulation theory, a Benjamin Button-like backwards aging to their mid-90s era of bouncing between the theater circuit, minor-league hockey arenas, and the occasional outdoor shed. Since Phish has always been deeply influenced by the venues they play, that might also mark a return to the more scattershot approach of those earlier days. Instead of the self-confident/indulgent gauntlet-throwing of their '97-'04 imperial phase, they’ve settled back into throwing out a lot of different flavors in a given show, hoping that a few will land with the various unique subsets of the fanbase.
That revival doesn’t necessarily have to mean regression, or a retreat into nostalgia. Monday night opened with two songs from Big Boat, and three more made appearances by the end of the show, one providing the undisputed improvisational highlight. Twenty-some years of touring and recording give Phish a much deeper songbook and broader sonic arsenal to draw from on any given night. But that’s a double-edged sword, amplifying both the variety and the lack of cohesion in shows, like this one, where a consistent narrative never really takes shape.
The first set started out as a mixture of new album promotion (competent versions of “No Man in No Man’s Land” and “Breath and Burning”) and nods to Texas’ country-blues musical traditions. “Wolfman’s Brother” provided an early highlight, featuring an extremely patient, minimal jam that built up to the kind of ferocity seen often these days in first-set "Gins." A songy middle section gave way to a segment of pure Phishy humor: a triptych of heavy metal goofs in “Fuck Your Face,” “Ass Handed,” and “Saw It Again,” with some interstitial banter from Trey and Fish on their ranking of the greatest Phish songs.
After that increasing derangement, dropping into an evil late-October “David Bowie” would have been perfect. But in a pattern that would come to define the night’s second set, the building tension was brutally sapped by the intrusion of “Running Out of Time,” a pleasant enough Trey trifle that had no business showing up right then and there. Thus handicapped, “Bowie” had to do a little extra work to re-establish the sinister vibes, though it eventually got there, helped along by throwback lights accompaniment that thankfully dispensed with the LED screens in favor of washes of Loaded-smoke pink cut through with frantic white searchlights.
[An aside: the close quarters of the Verizon Theatre cruelly emphasized the gratuitous nature of the LEDs again and again -- they were often a distraction at worst, gilding the lily at best. Where an argument could be made that they provide an interesting long-distance backdrop for large-venue shows, in a smaller setting the bland and often out-of-sync visualizations detracted from the simple, mind-bending pleasures of room-filling beams of light. Most criminal was “I Always Wanted It This Way,” the kind of deep space that would have once been Kuroda’s sweet spot, but which instead unfolded in front of an ugly brown-and-blue screensaver.]
Opening the second set with “Dog Faced Boy” was a real head-scratcher, though in retrospect it telegraphed the mellow school-night mood that the majority of the show’s reminder would inhabit. A playful “Seven Below” might have put things back on familiar ground, but the curious call of the first-ever second-set “Petrichor” ensured that the show’s 3rd quarter wouldn’t be the epicenter of improvisation this time around. Questionable timing aside, it’s a pleasure to witness Trey’s latest extended piece performed in person (at least once), with the band clearly in a state of deep concentration following its complex route.
After that, the Riffs, Relax, Repeat pattern returned with another rare second set visitor, “Maze,” and the cooldown lap of “Dirt.” It was pushing 11:00 when they started in on Page’s “I Always Wanted It This Way,” which nobody would have picked as the night’s centerpiece. But building on its promising debut in Charleston, the song delivered bigly on its potential, stretching their freshest-sounding studio track in ages into dense, rhythmic psychedelia. Page appeared to have his wayward electronic samples under tighter control for this second appearance, while Trey’s crunchy counterpoint swirled deeper and deeper with Echoplex as the jam intensified. Once he switched to marimba and Mike started stomping on his Moog Taurus, the band reached something remarkable for their 33rd year in existence: genuinely new sonic territory.
“Piper” was the tightly-wound, hard-rocking chaser to this atmospheric voyage, moving through the now-customary stop-start rituals, and “Bug” took the set home as the first legitimately-earned breather of the night. “Buffalo Bill” was an apt encore to fit the weird logic of the evening’s setlist, and “Rock and Roll” was a nice reminder that Halloween -- and, presumably, yet another dose of new material -- is right around the corner.
Coming after an excellent week of shows in Nashville and Alpharetta, this first night in Dallas had high standards to meet, and its unpredictable path likely sabotaged those expectations. No arguments that it was disjointed from the perspective of someone who enjoys set flow and lengthy improv, but it was also a success if you want the full firehose of Phish, a mix of new songs, old songs, long songs, short songs, weird songs, slow songs, etc. etc. etc. In the context of Phish’s current transitional period, one balanced precariously on the contradiction of moving forward and satisfying an increasingly concentrated core of loyalists, it wasn’t the best show, but it certainly was a representative one. -Rob
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This review gives me some good context. I am looking forward to listening to the I Always Wanted it This Way > Piper sequence.
If the bizarro embryonic trip continues, they are scheduled to play "Dear Mrs. Reagan" at Nectar's on a Tuesday in 2023...
This review glossed over what was an awesome Maze .. no frills, right to the point, but the highs were executed flawlessly (which to be fair, isn't always the case). Would have enjoyed something to keep that vibe going but the Dirt was also welcome treat that's not played all that often. Same with Bug, as this version rocked pretty hard, welcome treat.
Overall, the new songs were done well and mixed in with playful old tunes and some good powerful stand-bys. Thoroughly enjoyed this show and was better than last years Austin / Dallas run I believe. Personally loved the Dog Faced Boy second set opener .. that's when you know they're having fun!
Hoping they really bring the magic tonight. We are overdue for a spectacular YEM.
Really enjoyed the way you describe their current draw and the diminishing demand for tickets, as well as the often perplexing nature of setlists like this one: disjointed, deultory, and meandering. The only thing I want to disagree with you on is that you cite Tahoe Tweezer as the launchpad of the 3.0 high water mark...i personally believe 8/31/12 (fuckyourface) to be the show where they undeniably "back" (and i actually think the tour opener in Worcester that year, 6/7, to be a contender too).
Otherwise, great job!
Ah yes, the setlists. As someone who has zero interest in the "OMG! I hope they play a 25 minute version of some song with lots of Type II improv!!!!" thing, I want to hear songs, lots of them, even as I listen on headphones here at work. However, where to place songs seems to be a knack they've lost, the placement of ballads especially is weird.
Very curious about what the musical costume is going to be this year........
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that I like "I Always Wanted It This Way." It feels like the first sonic departure Phish has taken in a while. A genuinely new sound that yet still manages to feel like Phish. It was great to see them take it deep last night and delve into the possibilities.
Bands that don't change and explore new territory stagnate and die. And while certain fans may complain the "new stuff" isn't as good, I'd rather Phish continue to push and explore than become a greatest hits act.
Set 2?- Curious from a yo-yo-ing energetic standpoint with Maze and Piper as the standouts (I'm reserving my thoughts on IAWITW until it finds its footing- which it has not quite yet. I sense there is something jawdropping in there...) Every set or show wasn't a home run in the halcyon days of 20 years ago and they can't be on this tour. But my eyes saw a band much more practiced and engaged than earlier this year.
A word on the LED screens- I agree that they detract from the experience. In a venue of that size it was like playing with the house lights up- the ambient light fills the whole space. CK5 could only be felt when those things were turned way, way down or off.
Excited to see what Night 2 & Vegas bring and stoked to see the boys focused and tight.
Thank you everyone Page Side for reclaiming the aisles from security to GTF down- I love ya'll.
Peace--Matty in Austin
1. I have seen, as of late, most of the Texas shows (Austin 2015 included,) and his mentioning of the crows size last night was on point. Would there be a larger crowd if they booked it in Dallas? I think they know their market, and they, according to last years banter, enjoy playing at this venue. I had plenty of space to dance, and being a Monday night, the staunch phans were pleasant.
2. The criticism of "Maze" being overlooked is correct. Rob does a perfect job describing the beauty and eccentricity of Wolfman's, but the true energy balance was the incendiary Maze coupled with the spacy IAWTW. Yes, it's not mindfucking Type II, but it's experimental, it's new, and sometimes new can be tough to take.
on a postscript, I've been a fan of Rob's writing for a long time, and I hope that, one day, he writes a book on Phish.
Ha! Subtle jab at Trump?
I'm generally wary of the thesis "3.0 = scattershot." This show certainly is, but the review takes that and connects it to a narrative about 3.0 ("they got there somewhere between the Tahoe Tweezer and Magnaball") that has dominated the front page reviews. That this one is written in a lively and engaging manner doesn't make it any less cliche.
However, I don't understand the notion that 'I Always Wanted It This Way' is a new sound or direction for them...? What about the first Vida Blue album that came out 15 years ago. I get that it's the first time we see this in the Phish catalog, but in a way, it's classic Page. Definitely not a new direction for Phish, maybe just a detour? Seeing what sticks to the wall at this point?
My only hope is that this is not a new direction and just a bad set of shows(akin to 2014 summer), it will take them time to get the big boat stuff out of their system. Not all of it is great and they are playing all of it right now. I am hoping only a few of these tunes will stick. Ultimately, it is their choice and they will play what they want. But, playing sets like the shows in Charleston and Texas will result in a lot of fans walking away.
Tahoe is an obvious high water mark, an absolute masterpiece of spontaneous compositon that stands up to damn near anything the band has ever done, but it's part of a tour where the band seemed to fall back into some old patterns that - for me at least- brought on a twinge of disappointment as often as a rush of nostalgic excitement.
This fall seemed like a good course correction after a summer that was my least favorite tour since summer 2010, but then Texas pops up and messes up the narrative for awhile the same way it did last year. Hopefully the recovery is just as triumphant this time!
Shout out to MattyBWeston above - I was in front row of 205 and my son was getting off on the high fives and general reverie. He's not hooked on the music yet, but he loved the environment. Thanks to everyone for the good time.
With both Dallas shows on the books, it's pretty clear that the band was in a reflective mood, but were also feeling experimental, setlist-wise.
Though by no means a dance party or rager, 10/24's second set has more cohesion, to my ears, than it would appear 'on paper.' I'm a big fan of instrumental or odd-ball, 'prelude' set openers (like 'Demand' from San Fran this summer), no head-scratching there--it's one way to frame the set-as-suite composition that we love, and this 2nd set seems more intentional than many. Can't say the same for 10/25, though. ;-)
Loved both shows, songs and crowd. I'm a little perplexed as to why previous shows create "a high standard to meet"; I look at them singularly, but whatever.
IMHO, any Piper is better than not. Thanks again.