[We would like to thank Cotter, the youngest fan ever to recap a show for this blog, for recapping last night's MPP2 show. -Ed.]
Phish means more to me than nearly any other aspect of my life, so the months leading up to any given show are filled with anticipation. I imagine I’m not alone in this sentiment, but my point of view may be different. Being a diehard Phish fan in high school is one hell of an experience. Be it the incessant checking of this very site in class, or even explaining to people that "no, I’m not in love with a water-dwelling animal, but instead with the magic four middle-aged rock stars produce." This leads to some pretty obnoxious scorns, but shows like last night make it worth it. The 40-minute drive north was chalk full of questions by my family on setlist predictions and song meanings, but that’s really not a problem, as I’ll proudly flaunt whatever knowledge such an obsession leads to. Now to the music.
The "Carini" opener was obviously welcomed with open arms. I liked the jam that ensued, and based on the reactions by those around me, almost everyone else did as well. The first thought that popped into my head was the "Fee" from 7/27/14, another Sunday Merriweather gem, and I started to draw parallels between the weirdness of the two openers, and chills followed as I wondered what was next in store. "My Soul" did nothing to dampen this idea, as the dancing continued. Then onto "Rift," my first phish love, which brought back memories of building elaborate Star Wars structures with my little brother. It was relatively well played with a few bumps here and there, but it’s a tough solo, and we still love you Trey!
"Gumbo" sent the crowd into a frenzy, and I can’t remember a more welcome falsetto ending than Trey's during this jam. The “oh crap I didn’t let Page do his solo” look, and the two extra minutes of funk, were awesome and were well deserving of the hollers from many around me. "It’s Ice" seemed like a change, maybe not in energy but in pace, and a fun Page-and-Mike-led jam followed.
Then the four song slowdown arrived, and the general mood followed suit. "Winterqueen" began the slowdown, but Trey's solo was fantastic, and I don’t think anyone can say it wasn’t pretty, so I had absolutely no quarrels with it. "Yarmouth Road" is always a fun sing-along, and it felt like Mike’s first real moment of the evening to shine at the microphone, so I was still out of my seat and dancing like only 17-year-old knees can. "Shade," much to nearly everyone’s dismay, slowed the slow-down even more, but then again, if all Phish fans had their way, only about 30 songs would be played all-too-frequently and whatever surprises a show offered would be taken away.
"Halfway Home" came next, and while it was my least favorite of the quartet, I was still standing for it. I am certainly no jaded vet with 20+ plus years of experience under my belt, but I still know a lot about Phish. I know for sure that no one knows what’s coming next, or what songs they’re going to jam, and---much like last night---what songs they’re going to bust out. So for this reason, I never want to miss a moment, and I’m sure as hell not going to let a four-song stretch of music ruin a night that’s been built up for so long. That’s just my two cents.
"The Wedge" was received in a much different fashion by the crowd, as most everyone stood back up and began the telltale jam-band dance. "Run Like An Antelope" damn near burned the place to the ground, while CK5 brought the lights to near seizure inducing levels.
The second set lived up to the all too common mantra, “never miss a Sunday show," while Trey might still be waiting for "Crosseyed and Painless" to end I’m still waiting for the hair on my arm to sit down after the note Mike hit during "Everything's Right."
Speaking of, the second set opened with a solid "Crosseyed and Painless," which jumped right into "type 2" territory with Mike leading the jam, which I feel like he’s done all weekend. "Everything's Right" came in the two hole, and a solid dance party obviously followed with some weird experiments going on towards the end with Page”s new found toys. "Ruby Waves" was my personal highlight and the woos were well deserved to my ears. The segue into "Twist" was the best segue of the night, and made the near permanent smile on my face even larger. "2001" was a dance fest with a glow stick war like always, but a relatively short version gave way to the crowd favorite, "Blaze On," which ended the second set with about as much energy as it started with.
At this point I checked my phone and saw it was only just after 10:30, and I wondered what kind of weirdness we were about to experience. The weirdness was a "Maze" in the encore slot for the first time ever, and in my view it was incredibly well played, with Trey hitting every note on the white-light-backed solo. "Waste" came next, garnering groans from even me, the most optimistic 3.0 fan ever. "SANITY" was amazing, and all 20,000 collectively lost whatever marbles they had left, as the guy in the row behind me can attest: he screamed like there was no tomorrow for a solid two minutes. The closer was the seemingly all knowing "Wilson," which thousands of Phan’s were more than willing to sing after going insane just prior.
All in all it was a fantastic show with some great highlights, and much like my previous 12 shows, it will not soon be forgotten.
Thank you Phish, for everything.
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.
Last night was one of those shows that I felt like I won the lottery. If I knew what winning the lottery feels like.
I have to elevate these notes @Laudanum posted on the setlist page:
I love these observations, which echo my quick note about the Roo2 "Twist":
While not totally unique, the band does seem to be emphasizing these subversive and deconstructive approaches A LOT more this tour, which is (so far) producing mostly shorter, more compact and dynamic jams that together comprise incredibly fluid (sometimes set-long) sequences. This bodes mighty well for the continuing tour. Lively up myself!
I have a 5 year old who was disappointed just as much as anybody about Curveball... Because his two favorite things in life are Phish and Jamming to Them, and Playing Baseball.. What I am getting at is that my Father shared his "Love of Music" with me, and I have in his very short life shared "The Love of Phish" with my son.
If this band is still playing in 12 years when my son is celebrating the summer he turns 17, I hope I am on show 100 and counting and he is hovering right around your mark. Great writing and thanks for making this old head feel like a young Phan touring for the 1st time again. Enjoy the ride.
Phish is DEFINITELY the best thing I attached myself to at that age...
Notes: Focus less on the crowd and more on you and the band.
I am still hving trouble getting my brain working after the shows but you have a excellent review man.
Such a good review my plan is to try and memorize it and then try to repeat it when people ask how the show was.
I hope thats cool with you
I'm 50 and started seeing this band when I was 24. When I'm at a show, I'm always 24. Or 35. Or 18. And that's the point. Phish is an ageless band playing ageless music. In Trey's most recent NY Times interview, he said as much:
Interviewer: But I’m curious about what a midlife crisis might mean for someone who’s spent the better part of 35 years in the extended adolescence of a rock band.
Trey: This is a good door you’ve opened. I’ll step in. It is true: Being in Phish is a bit of an extended adolescence.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/06/24/magazine/trey-anastasio-phish.html
/>
There's nothing wrong with that. In fact, I feel Phish keeps a part of me perpetually young. Keep going, my friend! Never give up! I'm about to go to three nights at Alpine myself for the millionth time, and I look forward to the lot scene, the grilled cheese, the hula hoops, the whoops from all of us headed onto the hill, the evening sky, the show, and the memories to be made. OK. I'll admit. At 50, I'm more likely to head out and play some golf during the day, and having figured out at age 45 that I needed to get sober, my days prior to the show are more clear headed.
And of course, all of this is right. Everything's Right just so hold tight.
Great review, blaze on!
I'm guessing rarity, especially when talking about Sanity.
There were far rarer songs than Sanity that night, and Gumbo is certainly in rotation. Maybe they were just special to that guy.
OMG Thank you for this. People can complain about set list flow I get that. But if Phish only ever played what we wanted it would lose ALL unpredictability. And unpredictability is a cornerstone of a Phish concert.
Anywho, I've been thinking about the strange and somewhat sleepy first set and wondered if I am the only one who noticed the overarching theme of the first set being the change of the season and the juxtaposition of hot and cold in a lot of the lyrics? Maybe I'm crazy reading too much into it and it's just a coincidence, but you've got:
Gumbo: Trapped in the snow / hot sand
It's Ice: Ice
Winter Queen: Winter Queen/ Summer Queen, Butterflies and Bees; Ice and Snow
Yarmouth Road: "Buzz with the Bees and Hang with the Honeycomb"
Shade: "Gets so cold in the dark of the night - And I only like the shade when you're blocking the light"
Halfway Home: "Waked outside in my winter coat - I can feel you here in the cold" - Halfway Home also could be a metaphor for changing of the start of summer?
If you're reading this and thinking maybe I'm on to something, you'd be crazy if you didn't think Trey brought it to a close at the end of the 2nd set with Blaze On, kinda as an afterthought to the motif, and also just to say that now that it's summer it's gonna blaze on.
MPP2 was my 70th show, all 3.0 since I was in middle school as of 2004 (could that make me a “jaded noob”? Is there such a categorization? LOL). Though I haven’t yet listened back, I thought Sunday was fantastic and have zero complaints about any of the songs or set flow. To me, the first 40-minutes (Carini > My Soul > Rift, Gumbo, It’s Ice) represent what I love about Phish – an eclectic mix of genres & pace changes, technicality and jamming (a slight flub here and there but otherwise pretty darn good). Winterqueen came next (only other that I’ve seen was @ Randall’s) and at this point of the show I thought a slow-down was appropriate given the energy from the previous 5-songs (just my opinion though). I look forward to listening back to this version. Yarmouth Road’s silly lyrics provided for some fun people watching from my post against the front lawn rail (quite entertaining to see people of all ages “hang with the bees and buzz in the honeycomb” on the cement pathway below), and Shade was a nice surprise for my fiancé, providing an opportunity for us to embrace each other in slow-dance (there are thousands of different preferences at every show, so there’s gotta be something for everyone!). The details of Sunday's Halfway Home is a bit of a blur for me, though I will say – again my opinion – that I personally like the GOTF additions more than previous non-Phish song additions including certain of the Kasvot Vaxt & Thrilling Chilling Sounds songs. Many likely disagree (perhaps strongly, in fact is it taboo for me to say that or do others agree?) … GOTF is certainly not for everyone, and can be a little dismal but in general a welcome addition in my book.
I will need to listen back to the show in its entirety to offer a more precise evaluation but overall I thought The Wedge>Antelope, the entire second set and encore were excellent. Maybe I was having too much fun or was too far from sober to critique the show as much as I inevitably will during my second listen-through, but I guess that’s good right? Having recently moved back to the west coast (after 8-years in NYC) I’m still adapting to life with Phish being significantly less accessible than before. Unless I attend Mexico, these will be the only 2 shows I’ll see until next summer (and were the only 2 I caught since attempting to attend Curveball) which doesn’t quite reach my preferred quota. Songs like Yarmouth Road used to warrant a grumble or two from me, but not so much nowadays. The comedic, yet emotional and unpredictable nature of each Phish show is like traveling internationally … you never know what you might see, hear or experience. Even Waste – albeit on the slower side – was a beautiful addition to the encore, especially since my friend had bartered a “Come waste your time with me” pin for a cigarette prior to them starting Maze. Funny how things work out – the value of that pin appreciated 400% in just 2 songs (jk)! Might be the same with the hot/cold juxtaposition mentioned above – just a “coincidence” – which I believe is likely given the expansiveness of the band’s repertoire and the post-diction interpretations you could offer from any set list, but you (certainly not I) never know the extent to which those things are planned. Phish is no coincidence, but rather all the energies perfectly colliding in space and time.
I love that this exists. Thank you all for contributing to one of the most special things in the world.
Totally! I missed that on my first listen, thanks for pointing out. "Crazy Sometimes" was an insanely good call after that "Birds." Easily one of the strongest sequences of summer so far.