, attached to 1992-07-23

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/pzNwI7u7X4E?si=TwRjxjSX0dE4hp3W[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the Phish appearance on July 23, 1992 at MTV Studios in New York, New York. This appearance is alright I enjoyed the video. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1992-08-29

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/sObmFq6yM5M?si=GbKr49ZvmwvmThT_[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online for the Phish show on August 29, 1992 at Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1992-05-18

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/MdqSz0MKTcA?si=xPEXT-0mfY0EQmRx[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online for the Phish show on May 18, 1992 at The Flynn Theatre in Burlington, Vermont. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1992-03-24

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/rz9oHJhUAt0?si=ooYJWgv8T5uUByfq[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online for the Phish show on March 24, 1992 at Flood Zone in Richmond, Virginia. This show is very good and I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1992-03-17

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/t6AHUEjQQSk?si=X80XERt0fh3cj152[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the first set of the Phish show on March 17, 1992 at Lisner Auditorium, George Washington University, Washington, DC. I liked this show. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1992-03-06

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/ZIzhuqcs4UQ?si=-sWmX0gRupQyKCxI[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online for the Phish show on March 06, 1992 at The Music Hall in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1992-07-31

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/5I3h518WtGI?si=lyDVsgn4TgFzJXY1[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the Phish show on July 31, 1992 at Blossom Music Center in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1991-11-30

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/lH5xuAeNkps?si=kPUllTKGpZY1d_XO[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the Phish show on November 30, 1991 at The Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, New York. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1991-11-20

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/9TEFrcd5ppc?si=6CAxATHwVSVf58Ki[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the Phish show on November 20, 1991 at Campus Club in Providence, Rhode Island. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1991-08-03

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/M-J8UnYhgjE?si=kPj3uHDSCEmprFnh[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the Phish show on August 3, 1991 at Larrabee Farm, A.K.A. Amy's Farm in Aubrun, Maine. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1991-07-21

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/77Nu2gF-rLs?si=YkIfQo_p6iruKc0a[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the Phish show on July 21, 1991 at Arrowhead Ranch in Parksville, New York. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1991-07-19

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/Me1G5af8aRE?si=dsp0hqtS-uFHNq6U[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the Phish show on July 19, 1991 at Somerville Theatre in Somerville, Massachusetts. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1991-07-18

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/VB2lrxxokYE?si=Ze3I-Xob7xx2nAIH[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the Phish show on July 18, 1991 at Hampton Casino Ballroom in Hampton Beach, New Hampshire.vThis show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1991-02-15

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/4UrSzuzfusY?si=quGoxSBGkge9H4WE[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online for the Phish show on February 15, 1991 at The Colonial Theatre in Keene, New Hampshire. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1991-02-14

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/SYvSCyLIraU?si=HrajD-qyiYWzbCVy[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online for the Phish show on February 14, 1991 at State Theatre of Ithica in Ithica, New York. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1990-05-13

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/3OUlKiYUee8?si=5t6vgdZnvSIX-tyN[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online for the first set of the Phish show on May 13, 1990 at The Front in Burlington, Vermont. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1990-04-29

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/5k-MpZF2Dtw?si=uZ64Nm95d8olkz_l[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online for the Phish show on April 29, 1990 at Woodbury Ski and Racquet Club in Woodbury, Connecticut. This show is very good I enjoyed the video a lot. I hope you enjoy this footage as much as I did and find it helpful.
, attached to 1989-12-01

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/THN1xRIrrvw?si=clcDZYLRYsbHvcV1[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the second set of this Phish show on December 1, 1989 at The Paradise in Boston, Massachusetts. This set and show are very good I enjoyed the video. The Possum from this show is a highlight from their early years. I hope you enjoy this footage and find it helpful.
, attached to 1989-10-31

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/YaRciLEOKxc?si=yk_JPayGUP6J1wmR[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the first set of this Phish Halloween show on October 31, 1989 at Goddard College in Plainfield, Vermont. This set and show are very good I enjoyed the video. The David Bowie from this show is a highlight from their early years. I hope you enjoy this footage and find it helpful.
, attached to 1989-05-01

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/BNBpc1vwh-0?si=aH6-2VIqcfuTfaxb[/url] Video from May 1, 1989 at Pearl Street Ballroom in Northampton, MA. Quote about the footage from Page. "As I recall, the video for this show came into being rather spontaneously, without too much forethought or planning. As we were setting up our gear, in a basement club in Northampton, MA, we were approached by a well-dressed, diminutive gentleman. As best I can remember, his name was René. And he was there to pitch his video idea to us. For a nominal fee he would shoot the band’s set with one camera, artistically. He spoke with a French accent, almost spitting at us in a kind of broken English, with an urgency that was quite compelling. As his pace and volume increased, he kept saying it would be “avant-garde.” And the more times he said “avant-garde” with that thick accent, the more I believed him. Rene’s use of the fisheye lens, the “negative image” effect, the odd angles and abrupt movements…I’m not sure it all adds up to “avant-garde.” And, at times I wish he would settle down. But, he went for it, and there is no denying that Rene’s camera work brought a certain excitement to the overall shoot."
, attached to 1989-10-01

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/udNM_AQNOEQ?si=gibZbR7cPSqivMtB[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the entire Phish show on October 1, 1989 at The Front in Burlington, Vermont. This show is very good I enjoyed the video. The Reba from this 89 show is a highlight as well as Possum. I hope you enjoy this footage and find it helpful.
, attached to 1989-06-23

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/Cx8WVpyYbBY?si=H-NzJDRBc4JtA-kc[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from the first set of this Phish show on June 23, 1989 at The Paradise in Boston, Massachusetts. This set and show are good I enjoyed the video. The entire footage from this show is a highlight from their early years. I hope you enjoy this footage and find it helpful.
, attached to 1987-05-20

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/Sh9Pws7mOjE?si=Z-B8mK4Y926By-Ky[/url] I was able to locate the video footage online from this Phish show on May 5, 1987, at The Ranch in South Burlington, Vermont. This is a good show I enjoyed it. The Run Like an Antelope from this show is a highlight from their early years. I hope you enjoy this footage and find it helpful.
, attached to 1993-02-27

Review by Hendrix22

Hendrix22 [url]https://youtu.be/Mk3zfqUBaAw?si=JCjYzEJrO4keOe3r[/url] Look at and check out the show video from this Phish show on February 27, 1993. I hope you enjoy and find the video I was able to locate helpful! The Run Like an Antelope in this show was very good. Stash was also a departure from the normal and good for this era. An exceptional Weekapaug Groove rounds out this show's highlights.
, attached to 2009-12-05

Review by jive1twoandlee

jive1twoandlee Mike rips through this whole show! Seriously! 2009-2010 was a great era for Mike. Anyway, Fall '09. Classic tour, great moments. The band was happy, and it really shows through the music. Bag > Chalkdust was a very common pairing in this era, they started a show with it back in New York, only 2 shows prior, but, I can't complain, it's a great opener. Chalkdust shredded a little harder than Bag this time around, great energy. Energy continues with a standard Faulty Plan. Divided Sky is perfect, down to every last minute detail. Ya Mar is really fun, streaker energy, Mike still rages! Sneakin’ Sally is funky, great energy (this is going to be a common theme). After the vocal jam, it gets even more funky. Real nice. The Old Home Place is a great grass choice, now with an exclusive Charlottesville reference! > standard Cavern > the funk keeps going with Funky Bitch, a pretty great version, too. This Bowie is standard, but still really fuckin’ cool. I think The Wedge is one of the best songs to display Fish’s drumming, and this one is no exception. Bold As Love is a great way to end a set. Tweezer generally remains in type 1 territory, but it’s still funky, awesome energy to start a set -> smooth as butter transition into Light. Trey dominates this jam for sure; around halfway through, he turns on his intergalactic communication device and sends audio signals into space, hoping to reach life beyond Earth. The last 4 minutes or so of this jam is pure alien noise. This Light is fuckin’ awesome, guys > Jumpin’ right into Piper, wasting no time. The energy here is great. Even though they don’t stray too far from the path on this one, this is very satisfying jam -> short but sweet Free. Mike struts his stuff. Sweet Virginia is a pretty good Stones cover. A nice cool down from the hype we experienced before. Harry Hood is pretty standard, but still a great time > Suzy is standard > the trio version of Golgi is pretty standard. Mike does some cool stuff in the second half to make up for losing the bass in the first. Run Like An Antelope is awesome, Mike and Trey are the kings of this jam. More streaker antics. The encore is standard, with a standard Loving Cup (second Stones tune of the night) and Tweeprise. All in all, this show is pretty awesome. I think it’s a great way to end the tour. Mike and Trey are just on it the entire time. A lot of ‘09 is pretty underrated. Check this one out!
, attached to 2019-12-04

Review by jive1twoandlee

jive1twoandlee Holy shit! This set 2 is awesome! Set 1 had some pretty sick moments; Theme > Bitch, Halley's, Victim > Antelope, but those are all veggies compared to the meat in set 2. Cavern is a perfect way to start a set, gets folks off their feetsies > This is probably the best Jim I've heard in a while. Trey and Mike lead the jam, but that's kind of normal for Jim. All-timer for sure > Ghosts of the Forest is a pretty cool debut, it's real hazy, and the sound fills in the space perfectly. I don't know why they haven't played it since, it could be fleshed out to some excellent places. Imagine it being the powerhouse of a second set, imagine what that jam would entail! In due time, we will get a type 2 GotF. ASIHTOS -> Caspian is a nice ocean adventure; serene but fierce, much like the sea herself. Ocean Song is patient and exploratory. I've always had a soft spot for 2.0 tunes. Caspian starts faster than it usually is, and I kinda wanted it to keep going like that, but we return to the normal formula. So be it, if that's what Caspian wants, then that's what he'll get. This one is pretty short, but they do a lot within that short time > Fuego, as the title suggests, is nothing but pure fire. Mike takes it in a really weird direction around 9 minutes in, and I honestly can't get enough of it. These last couple of minutes are pure gold, check it out > A perfect YEM. It's spooky in some places, funky in others; you've heard YEM before, what else can I say? It's just awesome. Mike and Trey kill it, especially in the end jam. GTBT is standard, but hot. The encore is great, we get some Fishman antics with Terrapin as well as an energy jam with Julius. Good way to close! Check out this second set, for sure. It's an adventure
, attached to 2009-08-16

Review by toddmanout

toddmanout Once one starts going to see the same (generally jammy) band enough times one inevitably begins to notice certain songs that they have yet to see the band in question play live. As in, “I’ve seen X play Y times without ever hearing a Z.” In my case, before August 16th, 2009 (can we have a quick moment of silence in honour of Elvis Day? – – Thank-you) I could have said, “I’ve seen Phish play thirty-one times without hearing a [i]Llama[/i],” and I probably did. [i]Llama[/i] is the lead-off track from my favourite Phish studio album; it’s a mile-a-minute guitar-rifiesta with a beautiful outro melody and glancing at the plethora of Phish statistics on the interwebs it was clear that the band played the song often enough that I should have heard them play it plenty of times after seeing so many shows. But I hadn’t, and I wanted to. In lotspeak it’s called ‘chasing’, so it could be said that I arrived at SPAC that day ‘chasing a [i]Llama[/i].’ I was also chasing a reasonable place to watch the show from. There are two kinds of concert-goers in the northeast US: Those who love SPAC and those who have only been on the lawn at SPAC. The Saratoga Performing Arts Center is a somewhat unique venue in the middle of a beautiful state park. It’s classy and surrounded by trees – kind of like a woodsy Hollywood Bowl – but what makes it stand out from other pavilions is the vast, bouncing balcony that is great if you’re in it and lousy if your behind it; say, on the lawn. To be fair, there is a strip of grass on the lawn about eight feet deep that affords a fair view of the band but if you’re anywhere else back there forget it. You’re left dancing on the steep incline and wondering how cool the lights must look from inside the pavilion. So there I was searching in vain for a patch of good grass big enough to comfortably sit me and m’lady for the evening when we both decided it would be prudent to find a porta-potty before the show began. Climbing the steep hill we discovered several hundred like-minded people lined up a dozen hippies deep at the row of portable toilets. Slowly, slowly, slowly we got halfway through the line – no emergency yet but I was starting to worry – plus the show was sure to start any minute… I noticed that many people waiting in line were obviously couples. Sneaking a glance inside the plastic loos I could see there was a side-urinal in addition to the toilet seat. I started chanting “Two At Once! Two At Once!” M’lady joined in, “Two At Once! Two At Once!” Soon the whole lineup was chanting and sure enough people started entering the bathrooms in pairs, which got a big cheer every time. Couples went in together, guys that were friends went two at time, even strangers were crossing the streams, it was beautiful! And just then the band started playing. And the opening song? [i]Llama[/i]. And there I am way up on the hill well out of sight of the band, I’m dancing on the spot near the point of explosion and leading a chant in an effort to convince people to pee using the Buddy System. M’lady and I made it in just in the nick of time (as far as I was concerned anyway) but by the time we made our way within sight of the band my Llama was long gone. It would be four-and-a-half years and thirty-eight more shows before my chase finally ended on New Years Eve in 2013 when Phish performed [i]Llama[/i] from the roof of a truck that had been driven to the middle of the floor of Madison Square Garden for their second set. Anyway, we finally found a good enough spot on the lawn and enjoyed the rest of the show fully. The band was clearly feeling whimsical, playing a Katy Perry song and ending the encore with AC/DC’s [i]Highway To Hell [/i](the only time to date that I’ve heard them play either), and a good time was had by all. And the moral of the story is: A [i]Llama [/i]in the can is worth two on the lawn. Obviously. https://toddmanout.com/
, attached to 2014-07-25

Review by Esperanzan

Esperanzan SET 1: Mike’s Song: pretty decent fiery jam to get things going. Nothing special but I’d be sufficiently pumped up if I were there. Pretty abrupt into > Back on the Train: Mike’s Train Groove? Sure. Another solid standard version. Quality 3.0 Phish. > Weekapaug Groove: Page totally rips it up on piano here and Trey gives it back with some crazy old-school runs at around 4 minutes in. Serious rippage from both Page and Trey here! Would recommend this Weekapaug for sure, definitely in the upper tier of 3.0 versions. Crowd is successfully fired up by this point and they could get away with playing just about anything next. There’s a big gap afterwards as the band works out where to go. Crowd is rowdy. Wingsuit: very valid placement. A nice soaring Trey solo here, reminds me of a good type I Wading. Ends with some eerie synth pads that build up some pretty massive anticipation, and then like the master he is, Trey drops into… > Possum: YES! Way to make the crowd eat out of the palm of your hand. Fish keeps this intro going for a solid minute which feels very long for the era. Standard, but awesome placement. Tube: Somehow not an ideal placement IMO but can’t hate on a Tube. Fish misses the very beginning but recovers quickly. Jam is short but good while it’s around, including an ersatz whale call section from Trey that fits this song absolutely perfectly. Mike also slaps his way through nicely. My Friend, My Friend: back to a great placement. Flow in this set is on point so far. Winterqueen: could’ve probably used another song between Myfe and this. Very whale-heavy Trey solo and I’m torn on whether it works or not for this song. He’s clearly trying to make his guitar sound otherworldly and fae but it definitely sticks out. Beauty of a Broken Heart: standard. David Bowie: nice. Some talkbox-ish stuff in the intro from either Trey or Page, what’s up with that? Also some noticeable echo on the vocals which you don’t really hear on other versions. Beginning composed section is very clean – well done. Jam is classic tension and release stuff but very well done. Trills are a little shaky. Overall a good Bowie for the era and adds to the set. Golgi Apparatus: probably could’ve ended on Bowie but I’ll take it. Quite a few Trey flubs, he seems to forget a whole section at a point. — SET 2: 555: lol @ the lady screaming ‘play Harpua’ before this, good luck with that. It’s 2014 so this showing up somewhere is to be expected, but set opener? Probably not necessary. Very slow funky version, mostly standard though. Chalk Dust Torture: okay, let’s start the party! Has good energy early on for sure. Trey starts a great funky ‘woo’-laden section at 6 minutes in, but this does not last long. Band seems unsure where to go around 8 minutes in so Page lays down some awesome pads and effects, Trey doesn’t really take it in any sort of direction though and there’s a lot of treading water here. Trey starts strumming chords at about 13 mins and it’s clear he’s already looking for an escape hatch. Mike and Trey lock in on a couple motifs trying to get something going; no dice. Dissolves into space at 15 ish minutes and then transitions. Pretty whatever version. > Fuego: like CDT, pretty good until the jam and then the wheels come off, just treads water until a great transition into -> Twist: some vocal miscues in the composed section. Page wrests control of this jam almost immediately and pretty much exclusively makes it good! Feels like a 7 minute long Page solo as he starts with some crazy jazzy piano work and then moves to some awesome electric piano stuff, very Miles Davis. Trey for his part doesn’t add much at all. He feels MIA this set. Worth relistening to though, because of Page. Another great segue here – you can tell Trey is setting something up but you can’t put a finger on what until suddenly -> When the Circus Comes: not sure we needed a cooldown here but the transition is elite – not even a tempo change needed. This version isn’t one of the best they’ve played or anything but definitely is unique because of how they ride off the end of the Twist jam. Feels a little faster, a little fuller, a little bit jazzier. > Piper: pretty fast out of the gate. Extremely short version. Did anybody really need a 4 minute Piper, Phish? This one’s funny though because Trey basically ripcords it into Rift about 40 seconds before the transition happens and the band (especially Fish) fights it tooth and nail for that 40 seconds. Trey’s playing the Rift riff so long that he starts flubbing it out of exhaustion/frustration, lol. -> Rift: Fish and Mike are unsure when to go into the main feel. Trey actually executes this one mostly fine which is funny. Waiting All Night: love this wherever it’s placed. Can’t imagine the crowd shared my love though. Reba: nifty placement of this, always down for a set two Reba. Composed section is pretty spotless. Jam is good for the era too. They deconstruct this one to near silence and build it back up to a mellow peak. Fuego teases in the jam. Would recommend this Reba. Character Zero: the ol’ ‘let’s wrap this shit up and get to Merriweather already.’ — ENCORE: Loving Cup: this works well in many places but needed more after that second set. — OVERALL: there are actually some pretty nice – albeit vanilla – highlights in this show. Weekapaug, Wingsuit, Bowie and Reba all deliver the goods and are firmly in ‘strong’ territory. Set 1 is also strong with a particularly well-paced first half. It’s just that the second set craps the bed big time. Trey just is not firing on all cylinders is any of the jams, especially CDT and Fuego which are sadly aimless. The Piper > Rift is worth hearing for the LOLs though. 3.4 stars seems about fair.
, attached to 2009-11-28

Review by toddmanout

toddmanout On November 28th, 2009 I attended the second of a Phish two-nighter in Albany, New York, something I was really starting to get in the serious habit of doing. Actually, checking my stats (yes, there are Phish stats*, and yes, being a Phish fan is much akin to being a sports fan), I see that this was Phish concert #37 for me, and if that shocks you then I think you’d better sit down. Sitting down? As of this covid-mired writing I have seen Phish perform live a full one hundred and seventeen times, and if you think that boils yer pickle wait until you hear this: I still don’t know the names of the damn songs. I mean, I just checked the setlist from this concert to jog my memory a little in the right direction and not a word of a lie, I had to ask m’lady to hum eight of the twenty songs on the list; it was like having my own little abbreviated a cappella concert. Taking out their cover of [i]Walk Away[/i] by James Gang that’s pretty much half the songs. I know…it’s absurd and quite unbelievable, especially when you consider how much we listen to Phish radio around here (which is much). I just don’t get it, but it happens to me with the Grateful Dead too. I wonder if my inability to remember the song titles contributes to my not-irregular difficulty in recalling the music itself? For example, I remember checking into the hotel for this run, specifically that they made me sign an agreement that I would pay a $300 fine if anyone smoked in the room (one of these days I’m going to peel off three $100 bills and hand them over right then and there. “Don’t you worry darlin’, we’ll be smoking in there all right.”). I also remember that we were sitting in the upper section for this show, and that the merch area was at the top of a wide concrete staircase. I also remember being very excited about the poster for this show which featured a cartoonish pinball machine. But [i]Vultures[/i], [i]Cool it Down,[/i] [i]Sanity[/i], and [i]Uncle Pen[/i]? Not so much. Of course I do recall the killer encore, a rollicking romp through one of my all-time favourites and a song I could name from a hundred and seventeen feet away, even though it clocks in at 20+ minutes long and the four discernible words that are sung aren’t in the nonsensical title at all: [i]You Enjoy Myself[/i]. Maybe I remember that one because it’s how it makes me feel. It’s like emotional onomatopoeia. I’ll readily admit that it’s all quite weird, but I suppose it gives me something to write about. *41% of my shows have taken place in New York state. I have seen Phish play on Saturdays more than any other day of the week (30 times), though I’ve only seen them play in November six times. I’ve seen the band in a total of forty-four venues in forty-three cities across twenty states and three countries. My “most seen” songs are [i]Chalk Dust Torture[/i] and [i]Harry Hood[/i] (tied at thirty-four times each), neither of which was played at this concert, and of the sum total of 2,580 songs I’ve heard Phish play live I’ve heard 128 of them only once. In total I’ve heard Phish play 385 different songs. For the musicians out there I’d like to repeat that last bit. I myself have heard Phish play 385 different songs. Imagine! https://toddmanout.com/
, attached to 2009-11-27

Review by toddmanout

toddmanout Don’t get on the bus. Once I started seeing bands like the Grateful Dead and Phish on a fairly regular basis the odd and angular travelling roadshow that inevitably follows the scene around from arena parking lot to arena parking lot gradually became somewhat normalized. I started being able to discern the many helpful, smiling faces that beam from every corner of the culture from the genuine freaks and weirdos and soon became able to spot and avoid sketchy lot rats from a fair distance away. It was early in this Shakedown training that I started noticing the bus. The bus is hard to miss; it’s actually two busses one on top of the other that have been sculpted and welded into a single vaulted and very flashy mondo-bus. I can’t remember when I first saw it but it’s probably been there since my first show, undoubtedly parked on the fringe of each parking lot blending into all the other sights so strange and wonderful back then. But once I started to gain some familiarity with the scene the bus began to stand out. The bus is conspicuous enough: brown paint, silver chrome, and cleverly contoured with bubble windows all art deco cool. When the bus finally caught my eye it really caught my eye, but there seemed to be something fishy about it. Early on I found myself right outside of the bus after a show somewhere. There were a few young people hanging around near the open door who were obviously part of the bus entourage, and inside I could see someone way up high, sitting at a table and mundanely working on some paperwork or some sort of task. Up close the bus loses absolutely none of its charm. It’s a beautiful piece of machinery with curves like a ’50’s Cadillac. I mean the thing is stunning. The car-guy in me was dying to see inside but my Spidey-senses told me otherwise. I soon moved on. It was immediately clear to me that the bus had some sort of cultish thing going on. The night that I got close I found out they had a motto, and it was a creepy one: We’ll Drive You Home. I forget if I saw this motto on some literature or if it was printed on the bus itself, but either way it seemed pretty clear that they were preying on young, lost post-psychedlic souls who would probably be getting a redefinition of the word “home” thrust upon them. Occasionally the bus would come up in late-night post-show conversations and a few second or third-hand stories would trickle out about somebody’s friend or sister or whomever who ended up on the bus for months or years or both. You’d hear tales of kids dropping contact with their legit family or even birthing children into the bus cult…scary stuff, and not very fun at all. And then on November 27th, 2009, as I was walking through the lot heading in to the first of a two-night stand of Phish at Albany's Knickerbocker Arena I saw two of the heady, quasi-doubledecker cultmachines parked nose-to-front. There were two of them?!?!? First off, it was a nifty little spectacle. Cult or not, the bus, or rather: "busses", were quite beautiful - when I become a billionaire magnate and can afford adequate parking I might just get myself one - and seeing two of these creations face-to-face tickled both my obsessive-symmetry bone and my admiration for well-sculpted motorized vehicles. Secondly, discovering that there was more than one bus suggested that this wasn’t just a small, grassroots gathering of the brainwashed, this was an organization. This was exactly the sort of coordinated and well-financed cult that keeps parents awake at night worrying and wondering why they ever let their innocent and impressional son or daughter go away for the weekend to see some weird band with their strange, odd-smelling friends. And seeing those two busses together suddenly made all of those late-night horror stories about the bus-people ring true. Don’t get on the bus. These cultish weirdos give regular old fun-loving neo-hippie weirdos like me a bad name. Oh, the show was great. [i]Maze[/i], [i]Fluffhead[/i], [i]Harry Hood[/i], and how can you go wrong with a [i]My Friend, My Friend[/i] second set opener? You can’t. And don’t get on the bus. https://toddmanout.com/
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