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Review by JerrysMissingFinger
S2 Notes: A patient Wolfman’s kick’s things off. I would call it low-swing funk, for a certain almost-tangible quality of something swinging below your perception and bobbing you along from below. Mike starts igniting the thrusters, getting the old ship ready to go, Trey begins to set a destination to depart for. We embark, and set a gentle course towards the Red, Red Worm. This is a museum grade, textbook slow-build Piper. At this point, I noted that I fully left the room, and apparently my listening session, as I remember nothing until I snap back into the opening lyrics of Twist, fully awoken by the first “Woo!”. As the jam reveals itself, I realize that I think this has been a “Mike” show, with him being the main driving force in the improv, as far as my perception is concerned, as he lays down contrasts of pounding low notes and melody interchanges. My mind begins to receive a strange tour of a seemingly random survey of the week’s events, with minor incidents suddenly taking on weird, often unnerving significances. I work to quiet my thoughts, reaching a calm, still place, and it becomes clear that this whole show, and especially this second set, has all been in service of reaching this point, somewhere deep in Twist. Slave flies outward assertively and triumphantly, as if we have suddenly escaped the gravity of Twist. This is a slow-build Slave. It is really a slow, slow build Slave. It takes its sweet time getting there, and by the end, that’s alright. The Bold as Love encore evokes the “transportive” nature of much of the show. The second set was about one-hour, that’s why it felt short. You know, it works, but it’s hard for me to see an argument against even 10 more minutes of deep space jamming somewhere in this set, maybe in Wolfman’s. I'm asking for extra dessert at this point, though.
If you like late 90s-Phish, there is no reason not to have heard this show.