Monday, January 11, 2010

Phish - November 21, 2009

I have been neglecting this blog and will be catching up with some relatively old shows now. It is not that I haven't been thinking about this show a good bit. I have also listened to it often since the show, courtesy of my friend Mike and the live phish soundboard downloads. That does bring up interesting questions regarding live music these days. Back in the old days, a concert happened and afterword you might discuss it with your friends but listening to it later was not an option. For many of the artists I follow, I am able to obtain a live document of the show.

This particular show was quite different from the one the day before. This was evident well before the show began. Outside the venue, there was none of the surreal drug mart street scene. I assume the police from the night before had decided they had been a bit too permissive. This actually seemed like a relatively normal concert. The band got down to business with three songs I consider to be standard Phish crowdpleasers. Wilson with it's always fun shout out; NICU and Wolfman's Brother - all well played and something of a piece. This contrasted well with the previous night with it's constant mood shifts. This show seems to have been about finding a groove and sitting with it awhile.

Ocelot came next with it's shuffling beat and relatively straight forward, long, gradually building guitar work - a generally mellow song. Next came the first breakout of a song off of the Rolling Stones Exile on Main Street (their Halloween costume). I had been hoping for a song from Exile, in particular Shine a Light. That was not to be tonight but the song the did pick, Torn and Frayed, has long been a favorite of mine. Trey did a wonderful job of playing the Pedal Steel guitar part on his electric. Another mellow and thoroughly enjoyable performance. More mellowness followed with arguably their most mellow song, Strange Design, short, sweet and quite beautiful. Also short, sweet and mellow though with a quick tempo came a cover of Norman Blake's Ginseng Sullivan, a song I had been hoping for all year. Another mellow cover song followed that I must admit had me stumped. The guy sitting next to me filled me in that it was Neil Young's Albuquerque. The tempo on this song is so slow that it almost falls apart (but not quite).

Things did shift gears from the mellow-fest into an intense Split Open and Melt. This song may always be intense, with it's insistent rhythms and fracture time signature but this one was particularly abstract, synced beautifully with the light show. The contrast with the before and after this song accented it's strange beauty. Mellowness returned briefly with a nice Dirt.

The set closed with intense crowd pleasers, well played though not taken to any great heights - Limb by Limb and Run Like an Antelope.

The Velvet Underground's Rock & Roll opened the second set - a long jam followed the "song" part of the song - well played, building in intensity slowly over the 12 minutes of the jam section. One of the best jams I saw this year from the Vermont boys. This wound down and segued nicely into a fairly intense Story of the Ghost. This was only about a ten minute Ghost but it felt of a piece with the previous song.

A relatively rare If I Could followed - nicely done with a good long well constructed guitar solo. Backwards Down the Number Line is a fun song, well placed here - not stretched out but clicking on all cylinders. Prince Caspian just seemed to have a bit more intensity than usual. Suzy Greenberg illustrates again what can happen at a Phish concert. Not my favorite song but the crowd and band were in such synergy that I became totally wrapped up in the moment. There was now no pretense at clearing the aisles - it was an 18,000 person dance rave at this point. Page McConnell took over the song with a nice concise synth solo, followed later by an unusually long and intense piano solo that Trey joined at the climax. Another segue straight into Also Sprach Zarathustra kept up the intensity - Mike's bass leading the way now. Some young teens working for the venue, making their way along the walkway were so happy (probably had no idea who Phish were before this weekend) getting high fives from Phish fans as they bopped along. I believe to acknowledge what a great show Page had had, Squirming Coil finished the set. Beautifully played, the solo piano finish with other band members leaving the stage was drawn out and a particularly emotional moment.

Perhaps the emotional finish called for a silly encore. Sleeping Monkey was the call and it did seem quite silly - Fishman's falsetto was perfect. Between songs, Trey stated how much they liked being here and that they wished they could stay all week. A long deafening roar came up from the crowd. The last encore was to fulfill the request of a dedicated sign holder up front, a loud, rocking Axilla.

This show seemed to be about finding a groove and letting it play out for awhile. The five of us that saw both shows had an easy consensus that this one was the better show. I particularly liked getting some unusual songs like Torn and Frayed, Albuquerque, If I Could - and the Bipolar mellow/intense thing they had going at this show.

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