Tag: Phish

  • Mike Gordon Releases Live Album “Vancouver”

    Phish bassist Mike Gordon has released a new live CD. Recorded on March 22, 2014 at The Rio in Vancouver, British Columbia, the CD features Scott Murawski on guitar, Tom Cleary on keyboards, Craig Myers on percussion, and Todd Isler on the drums in support of Gordon. The show has been remastered and is available at livephish.com.

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    The Rio in Vancouver show includes tracks “Long Black Line,” “Face,” “Paint,” and “Jumping,” off Mike Gordon’s studio album, Overstep, which released on February 25, 2014. Also on the Vancouver release is “Peel,” during which front-row fans joined in the music-making process by hitting the keys on a light-up keyboard that spanned the length of the stage. According to Gordon, “all the new cannons were firing,” and “’Peel’ kept traveling into crevices of our dreamworlds.”

    Gordon will be taking his talents to South Beach. Phish rings in 2015 at AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami, December 31-January 3.

  • Best of Upstate 2014: The Albums

    Here we are, reaching the end of an incredible 2014 and it’s time for our annual ‘Best of Upstate’ series, this one focusing on albums. The Upstate staff have been hard at work this entire year covering local and national acts across New York State and beyond. We are blessed with the great deal of music that passes through Upstate and brings a wide range of offerings to the 8 million New Yorkers who call Upstate their home.

    best albums 2014Our staff writers and photographers were asked to look back at the full year of music in Upstate New York and beyond, and weigh in with their best of 2014. We looked at 12 categories – Upstate Album, Overall Album, Upstate Show, Show, Upstate Festival, Festival, Family Friendly Festival, Club, Best Theater/Theatre, Arena/Amphitheater, Bands on the Rise and Best Collaboration. –  and came up with the best music we have seen and heard this year. We’ll bring you a couple categories each day this week, starting with the best albums today.

    Best Upstate Album

    Aqueous Cycles

    Honorable Mentions

    Formula 5 Edging on Catastrophe

    Mister F The F Stands for 4

    Turkuaz Future 86

    Tauk Collisions

    Perfect Pussy – Say Yes To Love

    Best Overall album of the year

    Tie: Phish Fuego and String Cheese Incident A Song in my Head

    Honorable mentions

    Umphreys Mcgee Similar Skin

    Aqueous Cycles

  • LivePhish Releases Darien Lake 8/7/93

    phish-darienUpstate Phishheads can rejoice today as one of the most memorable shows the foursome has ever played in Western New York is released by LivePhish with beautiful sounding board quality from Darien Lake on August 7, 1993.

    1993 was a time of change for Phish – transitioning from small theaters into larger amphitheaters and watching their fan base literally explode in size. The summer of ’93 contains some of the most memorable moments in Phishtory and this heater of a show from the then 16,000 capacity Darien Lake Performing Arts center was no exception.

    Highlights include a ripping “Llama” opener, a radically non-standard “Mike’s > Groove” (w/ “The Sloth” taking the Weekapaug spot), and an ascent up Colonel Forbin’s mountain via the “Roller Coaster of the Mind”. This show is top notch from end to end – I should know, I was there and it was my phirst.

    LivePhish subscribers can listen to Darien Lake 93 immediately. The rest can add it to their stash and enjoy this amazing show for ever.

  • The Sounds of Fabulous Phish in Chilling Thrilling Las Vegas

    The day of the dead saw the demise of one Phish Halloween tradition and the birth of something completely different. Rather than play another band’s album as a musical costume, Phish opted to interpret a rare cut from the Disney collection – Chilling Thrilling Sounds of the Haunted House (1964), turning a 25 minute sound effects album into a 65 minute demonstration in improvised interpretation.

    The result was one of the most talked about nights of Phish, not only for the performance that was experienced, but the potential of what was to come the next two nights and over their upcoming New Years run in Miami.

    chilling thrilling soundsThe first of three sets was bookended with haunted numbers, an opening sequence of “Buried Alive > Ghost” and a funk filled “Wolfman’s Brother” to close it out, steadily building the anticipation for the grand mystery of what this Chilling Thrilling Sounds of the Haunted House set would end up being.

    The stage and lighting were well done, per usual. The word in the casino was that the Cirque du Soleil show at MGM Grand, , was not in production that night, meaning the elaborate stage performances that Phish has become known for at their larger events would be accompanied by some of Vegas’ best. Phish began their set with “The Haunted House” inside of a haunted house that was pushed out onto a stage filled with smoke and a graveyard. An audio-visual highlight, “The Fuse” showed a slow burning fuse across the front of the haunted house which built the audience to froth and a jam that is hopefully heard in Miami. When the fuse went out, the walls from the house blew down and it was game on – the band was dressed in white tuxedos with ghoulish makeup, playing on top of this haunted house. The cheers were defeaning.

    chilling thrilling sounds
    photo by Rene Huemer

    During “Dogs” the audience, naturally, howled along with the pre-recorded barks and screams and the band worked into a jam that could re-emerge in “I Saw it Again.” “Timber” was the first really spooky song of the night while “Your Pet Cat”, like all songs on the album, were introduced by Esther, a graveyard resident who kept the interpretation of the album true to the original by including the original narration.

    chilling thrilling sounds
    photo by Rene Huemer

    The spaciest jam of the night, “Shipwreck”, was full of weirdness and had the deepest jam, in the vein of “Sand”, a looming threat in Set 3. “The Unsafe Bridge” became a Pulp Fiction-esque surf rocker while both dark and foreboding.

    “The Chinese Water Torture” ended up being the song that sounded most like an above-standard Phish-jam while “The Birds” got deep and heavy and gave the crowd a gift in the form of Esther’s pre-recorded “They Attack!” serving as both a catalyst and bridge to the jams that developed. The set was ending on such a high note when “Martian Monster” followed “The Birds” with its own sound snipper with ‘Your Trip is Short’. Repeated over and over, the crowd caught on quickly during a 10 minute groove that never let up.

    chilling thrilling sounds
    photo by Dave Vann

    I look forward to finding out how this album came to the band’s attention and how their discussion of how to play this set developed, as well as how the night was produced and choreographed. Those who put the show together command respect for contributing such a major component to evening.

    The third set kept the energy flowing, starting with “Punch You in the Eye > Golden Age > Tweezer > Heavy Things”, all of which flowed together seamlessly. Guyute was greeted with cheers for its rarity while “Sand” gave us the longest jam of the weekend, clocking in at 18 minutes and segued seamlessly into “Tweezer Reprise”. An encore of Leonard Cohen’s “Is this what you Wanted” referenced ghosts of a relationship haunting a house, and doubling as a question to difficult to please Phish fans. Page McConnell broke out the keytar for an appropriate “Frankenstein” cover that ended the night.

    chilling thrilling sounds
    Poster by Michael Boyer

    The introduction of brand new improv, a counterbalance to last year’s brand new album Wingsuit (later released in June as Fuego) was more than welcome by fans – there was no ambivalence here as nearly all saw this for what it was: Phish doing the unexpected and  appealing to the pleas of fans who seek a greater degree of improvisational jamming.

    We all won in Vegas with Phish. Each night kept getting better and we had reminders on the 1st and 2nd of November with some choice teases and jams. Never a dull moment to be had, Phish connected early with a surprise roundhouse and we enjoyed the bewilderment that followed through the bold choice of Chilling, Thrilling Sounds of the Haunted House.

    Set 1: Buried Alive>Ghost, Scent of a Mule, Sample in a Jar, Reba, 46 Days, Big Black Furry Creature from Mars, Lawn Boy, Saw It Again>Tube, Wolfman’s Brother

    Set 2: The Haunted House, The Very Long Fuse, The Dogs, Timber, Your Pet Cat, Shipwreck, The Unsafe Bridge, The Chinese Water Torture, The Birds, Martian Monster

    Set 3: Punch You In the Eye>Golden Age>Tweezer->Heavy Things, Guyute, Sand->Tweezer Reprise

    Encore: Is this What you Wanted, Frankenstein

  • Phish Announces LivePhish+ an all Inclusive Subscription Service

    LPBIGGERFollowing the lead of the always innovating Umphrey’s McGee – who announced a similar service earlier this year – Phish today revealed a new upgrade for their LivePhish app called LivePhish+. Fans will be able to sign up for a free ten-day trial which they can continue for $9.99 a month or $99.99 for a full year. Subscribers will get unlimited access to the entire LivePhish catalog including archived shows, new shows, studio albums and side projects.

    Along with the subscription offering the app has gotten several upgrades such as playlist creation, gap-less playback and the ability to rewind and fast forward tracks. Phans can sign up now at plus.livephish.com. Those that do not wish to sign up will still be able to stream their own collection the same as before along with the app upgrades.

  • Phish Big Cypress Midnight Set

    The largest concert to celebrate ringing in the year 2000 was held just west of Miami at Big Cypress Seminole Indian Reservation, and 75,000 Phish fans flocked to spend the last two days of 1999 with the Vermont quartet. Over the course of the those two days, fans were treated to bust outs (Light Up or Leave Me Alone), special guests (Seminole Indian Reservation Chief Jim Billie), a smoke filled “Mike’s Song”, a set-ending “After Midnight”, merely 5 hours before the band returned for a marathon 7 hour, 37 song set that ended at sunrise.

    phish big cypress
    photo courtesy of PhanArt

    Big Cypress stands out in the lore among Phish fans, and with 2024 on the horizon, a return to the hallowed grounds in South Florida is sought after by many. The festival marked the largest concert to celebrate the arrival of the year 2000.

    Fans have longed for a box set or official release of the footage from the weekend, and just yesterday footage began to leak of a pro-shot version of “Down with Disease” and now, an almost complete video of the first 5.5 hours of the fabled midnight set. Bask in the awesomeness of Phish at Big Cypress.

  • Randall’s Island gets Rocked from Phish and Phans

    Phish and their dedicated followers are no strangers to New York City, seeing that they visit during the bitter cold New Year’s Eve runs each year. But the holidays came early for fans as they enjoyed the three-night run of beautiful weather, famous skyline and jam-packed Phish set lists on Randall’s Island, located between Harlem, Queens and the South Bronx. With a capacity of 35,000, Randall’s Island was a comfortable and familiar fit for fans that long for the Phish festival experience, but were happy to spread out on the lawn or rage by the stage.

    There was a strict curfew each night of 11pm, causing the shows to actually start on time around 7, and with gates opening at 4, there were more than enough activities to keep fans entertained. Ben & Jerry’s handed out free Phish food ice cream and Hippieshop.com sold raffle tickets for a Fuego themed bicycle. One of the biggest attractions were the Official Phish Freezer and Water Wheel Foundation tents, offering vintage merchandise, Pollock posters, DVDs, and vinyls such as the new exclusive release of Picture of Nectar.

    Thousands of phans travelled by ferry, car, subway, bus or walked the almost 2 mile hike over the East River to partake in the unique experience of Phish. The start of the three night run on Friday night brought a funky “Moma Dance” opener as the first “Ya Mar” of the season had the classic Page McConnell solo plus a stand out bass solo from Mike Gordon. The first set had possibly one of the best “Bathtub Gin” versions of the summer, clocking in at a solid 18 minutes. The Gin started in the traditional sense of phans singing along with the lyrics before the band dove into a fast paced melody of pure exploratory bliss.

    The second set was a continuous flow of surprise and delight as they started with a dark and rare “Steam” with a slow build up that got pretty weird before the stand out “Down with Disease” that featured high energetic guitar riffs from Trey Anastasio. The soft and gentle melody morphed into a “Golden Age”, followed by a mellow “Limb by Limb”. The ever popular new hit “Fuego” made an appearance and set fire to the “David Bowie” that followed with triumph.

    The show ended with a simple, yet groovy “Character Zero” as the first impressions of the night were grand, making everyone eager to return for two more nights of Phish. Randall’s Island has proved to be high on the list of venues and stand out jams for the summer tour this year.

    Friday July 11th Setlist

    Set 1: The Moma Dance, Kill Devil Falls > Ya Mar, Bathtub Gin, 555 > Rift > Sample in a Jar > The Wedge, Waiting all Night, Stash

    Set 2: Steam> Down with Disease [1] -> Golden Age > Limb by Limb > Fuego > David Bowie, Cavern Encore: Character Zero

    [1] Unfinished.

    Notes: Trey teased the Munsters theme in Stash. DWD was unfinished.

  • Show Number One: Phish at CMAC

    It’s interesting how perception can alter your own reality.  For the longest time, I wanted nothing to do with Phish, jaded by some fans who surrounded me growing up.  As I got older and ultimately left that circle, my musical journey continued. While that bad taste was always in the back of my head, I began liking bands of similar ilk and that perception towards Phish started to be internally questioned. One week ago today, I stepped through a door and saw my very first Phish show.

    While it’s slightly embarrassing now, I realize what I’ve missed all of those years and now know why so many bands I enjoy today list them as a huge influence. Here are my takeaways from my first Phish show at CMAC on July 15, 2014.

    • Unique hardly describes Shakedown Street. Every walk of life was there peddling their skill, from music and glass work to food and jewelry. It’s literally like a small, self-sustaining village that is temporarily setup and torn down offering anything you might need.
    • There’s a communal feel like nothing I’ve ever felt before in the music scene. I was told by a friend that you can hold one finger in the air to let everyone know that you need a ticket. Within minutes, I bartered with a guy who was more than happy to take an uneven trade just to help me out.
    • Holy sh** – lot food is SO damn good!
    • I thought I’ve seen some of the best lights, but Kuroda easily puts them all to shame.
    • Even though the music has always come first for me, I can now see why people see Phish just for the party.
    • During the first set, someone turned around and told me, “Nobody has crowd participation like this band. Nobody!” My observation: the fan couldn’t be more right. I have never seen a collective fan base that knows every song in and out and participates as much.
    • A three-dimensional matrix of lights swept the stage in hues and shades that only added to the spectacle. Fans were literally sent into pure elation through simply color and sound.
    • In any public space, people usually put a guard up; guards don’t exist at a Phish show though. Everything seemed to be simply accepted here with a smile and friendly interaction.
    • I’ve honestly never been a fan of Phish’s vocals, but if you can step back and see it as a piece to the overall musical puzzle, the blended effect is actually pretty good. The lyrics are still another story for me.
    • The band works the room. In the same way where a comedian has ups and downs throughout a show, so does Phish. It’s not by mistake though as it sends the highs higher. To draw an easy parallel, Stevie Ray Vaughan didn’t go all out, all the time for a reason.
    • Their songs sometimes end in the softest of landings, similar to a feather; I mean that as a compliment.
    • Smiles continued to get bigger as their set progressed.
    • Towards the end of the first set, the band took a long pause which lead directly to an outpouring (and I don’t think that word is big enough) of appreciation. Watch the video all the way to the end and tell me it doesn’t give you chills.
    • Dammit, they’ve converted me…at least partially.
    • The art they produce is pure professionalism in a varied state, making each night deeply meaningful to a true follower. Think about it; could a circus come to town and just wing it? Does Broadway just ad lib each night? What Phish does has an infinite vision and breadth.
    • People were just FEELING it. If at some point we need a unit of measurement for “feeling it”, can we call it a Phan?
    • You can literally feel the band get their feet underneath them.
    • Chris Kuroda doesn’t even flinch when he’s hit by a glow stick. The man is just as focused and dialed in as the band. As lights trigger, Chris will occasionally snap a finger in the air right on beat.
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    • The reason why Chris Kuroda defined the Lighting Director position in the jam scene is because he puts as much thought and energy into his contribution as the band does.
    • In the same way a blender can puree multiple parts into a unified substance, Phish does the same with music. I know that their base is blues, jazz, rock, and a few other genres, but the sound that emanates is Phish and only Phish.
    • Best salesman pitch from a peddling fan: $5 heady vegan water
    • I would’ve liked to see more personalization from the band. I was honestly surprised with how dedicated the fan base is that, minus some jumping and smiling, the band was fairly robotic onstage. There was limited talking between songs, and while I don’t like that to go on for too long, it’s nice when a band mentions the city or tells a little story about it.
    • My biggest surprise/let down was the encore. A one song encore from any band is pretty weak, but this is the biggest jam band in the world. Not only was it only one song, but it was one of the shortest of the night.
    The  crew during set break
    The crew during set break

    While I don’t think I’ll ever be the guy who researches every version of every song, intently listening for subtleties and memorizing Phish’s musical footprint, I think the band, at least for now, has converted me from a cynic to an appreciator of all that they do.  I know for sure that even though I can’t follow them around the country, I will definitely catch them the next time they’re in town.

    Set List

    Set 1:  Buried Alive, Twist, Heavy Things, 555, Halley’s Comet, Bathtub Gin, Wingsuit, Divided Sky, Wombat, Bowie

    Set 2:  DWD > Back on the Train > NICU > Gotta Jibboo > Theme from the Bottom > Meatstick, Fuego, The Wedge, Antelope

    Encore: Character Zero

  • Phish in Canandaigua: Cuddly But Muscular

    The 2014 summer tour from Phish continues to be an ever-unravelling adventure in setlist construction and jam sequences. The show at Canandaigua on Tuesday was no exception. Launching into the rarity “Buried Alive” right out of the gates, the foursome then segued into an oddly placed but adventurous first-set “Twist”, clocking in just over 8 minutes. From there, Phish went right into straight-forward versions of  “Heavy Things”, “555” (the first of 4 tracks off the new album Fuego) and “Halley’s Comet” before really finding their stride for what was potentially the most focused closing 2nd half of a first-set the band has played this summer tour. Starting at 8:06 p.m., When they started Bathtub Gin and really not letting up until the closing notes of David Bowie at 9 p.m., the band painted a melodic canvas for 54 minutes straight swaying in an out of intensity and exploration until the set finished.

    Phish in CanandaiguaHarkening back to the aforementioned adventurous setlists, this writer can assuredly say pre summer-tour, he would not be clamoring to ooze compliments over a “Bathtub Gin”, “Wingsuit”, “Divided Sky”, “Wombat”, “David Bowie” First set closer. However, it as if Phish, whether it be intentionally or serendipitously, is beginning to find their footing for the new Fuego tracks. The Canandaigua setlist did not contain one cover and had a ton of new material, so it could be argued the band is carefully, and strategically trying to integrate the new material into their setlists, that in many ways in recent years, had become very predictable.

    Phish in CanandaiguaOf note from the end of this first set, was the 17 minute “Divided Sky”, which seemed to perfectly jive with the divided sky and piercing sunset over Canandaigua Lake at the same time.  This version is definitely a top-3 version from the 3.0 era. Another impressive showing also came from “Wombat” (clocking in at over 7 minutes) which has quickly risen to be a ridiculously fun dance number with bassist Gordon and keyboardist McConnell having enjoyable interplay. This has got to be one of the silliest, yet funkiest phish songs to come out of the barn in the past decade with the chorus “Cuddly, but muscular.” The entire pavilion inside of CMAC was getting down with many observed to be thrusting their Wombat wings in almost mock Chicken-dance and shadowing the original Wombat strut from Abe Vigoda from last year’s Halloween set. The jam was shorter than many of us would have liked but was a tight little package of funk. Definitely: one of the “jammiest” highlights of the night.

    Phish in CanandaiguaThe second set began with a monstrous “Down With Disease” that ebbed and flowed from a laid back sonic sound scape to an intense funky jam with Page McConnell crushing several sections of the arrangement with powerful keystrokes. All told, the DWD clocked in just over 20 minutes and was truly a playground of emotions. It perfectly summarized where this band is at on this summer tour installment. Seemingly firing on all cylinders, Phish has is leaving predictability aside and blazing new trails, especially in the song selection and placement in the second set, specifically the previously notable 2nd set, 2nd song which had previously been “thee slot” to expect an exploration. That continued Tuesday at CMAC when the band, coming off the heels of the raucous DWD, eased into a shortened “Back on the Train”.

    Phish in CanandaiguaThe second set continued in this quick-hitting fashion but never officially stopping and starting an arrangement and seguing set start to finish. Albeit short affairs with a 6 minute “Back on the Train”, a 5 min “NICU”  (first one of summer tour), an 8-min “Theme from the Bottom” and a 5 minute “Meatstick”, the set truly felt like one big melodic jam with a 9-minute “Gotta Jiboo” and a 10+ minute “Fuego” taking center stage before a longer than 2014 summer-tour standard “Run Like an Antelope” brought what was one, very cohesive set and show to a close. The encore was “Character Zero” and the band quickly exited the stage to hit the long overnight trip to Detroit for next show on the tour.

  • Phish Phans Getting Randy for Randall’s Island in NYC July 11-13

    Phish fans will once again flock to the greatest city in the world for a three night consecutive run on New York City’s Randall’s Island. The recreational oasis set in the middle of the concrete jungle will host the jam band carnival on July 11 – 13, with three-day and single day tickets still available here.

    Randall’s has hosted major events before such as Lollapalooza, Vans Warped Tour and the Electric Zoo, but local residents are in for a treat as thousands of dedicated followers are currently en route to share in the groove. Those heading to the event should be aware that gates will open each day at 4pm and a show time of 7 pm with a strict curfew of 11pm. Since Randall’s is located in the East River, between East Harlem, the South Bronx and Astoria, Queens, one of the easiest ways to get to the venue is by Ferry. Passes are available in short supply with carpooling being strongly encouraged and only available with a parking on-site pass.

    Photo by Jim Gilbert
    Photo by Jim Gilbert

    There are great rewards to those who arrive early for the first ever run of Phish shows at Randall’s. The forecast is set to be partly cloudy in the 80s all weekend making for a great excuse to check out The Freezer. The official Phish Archive merch store will feature original shirts, hard goods, and many more rare items such as classic Jim Pollock posters. Besides the hot merchandise, things will heat up with The Freezer hosting the JEMP Records Store and their exclusive release of the band’s third full-length studio album, A Picture Of Nectar on vinyl. The WaterWheel Foundation will have their own tent with a collection of autographed limited edition posters for phans to admire plus the Hippieshop.com will give fans a chance to win a “Fuego” themed bicycle.

    Photo by Jim Gilbert
    Photo by Jim Gilbert

    Despite the early curfew, folks will still have the city that never sleeps to play in. The Dead Sessions featuring Todd Stoops (Kung Fu), Adam Terrell (Assembly of Dust), Seth Yacovone, Kevin Shapiro, Pat May and Trevor Ainswoth will perform at The Cutting Room on Friday the 11th with proceeds to benefit The WaterWheel Foundation whereas Wobble Sauce and Space Bacon will perform at Fontana’s. Digital Dharma will host a Phish-Viewing Party as well as After-Party at Spin New York with Sprocket on Saturday the 12th. Night Moves, featuring Steve Molitz (Particle), Clay Parnell (Brothers Past/Particle), Tom Hamilton(Brothers Past) and Mike Greenfield(Lotus) will play at the Highline Ballroom on Sunday the 13th.

    Artist James Flames created this poster for the three-night run
    Artist James Flames created this poster for the three-night run

    Be sure to like on Facebook, follow us on Twitter and Instagram for live updates throughout the weekend.