[The following was submitted to the Phish.net Support Team from a User, "Sweet Caroline," who explicitly requested it be posted as a "rebuttal," presumably to the Alpharetta3 recap. -Ed.]
(Please read with a horsed Dixie chick accent) Hi my name is Sweet Caroline named after the Neil diamond song true fact ... I’m not good at this inter webbing, im actually using my husbands email bc I only use the triple w’s to look at setlists and tickets because being on tour driving America don’t have time to make accounts and passwords of my own but would you post my comment rebuttal pretty please: first could you remove the review because I’m missing my cousins wedding and my father turning 3 quarters of a century last night to see this show and if they were to read that review I would disappoint them even more with my “20 yr long addiction “ words from my father just last week with the confusions of why I drive so many hours to strange corners of this earth, to see band that performs like a unrehearsed garage band ... Sunday shows my husband and I call church I dress more conservatively and always go sober mostly due to the fact how tour works you most likely will be driving some distance the next day or even that night to stay ahead of the wooktrain. But with a bruise on my thigh the same size of all 13 I had on my legs this time last year, where to the point my husband got severe looks on the subway because unlike your reviewer I don’t close my eyes I open up my legs to DANCE (I’m 5’1” and every cup holder and msg tv is my karate sparing partner), phish is my geppetto and I’m it’s puppet, due to there work and words, believes that I can become human ... I put so much sweat equity in last night that I scared 2 girls in the bathroom mid golden age looking like I just received a golden shower and proud of my phreakdom rewrapped the tour bandana and exited the bathroom with a karate kick for the concession stand attendants so they would understand what was being warmly softly streamed in there ears too. I returned to my seats 102 row R for RAGE (the harpua killing in the name kind) where fans around me held on to the hats, stood on there seats and did praying hands to the tuxedo shirt wearing Jesus. It was as beautiful as the timing of the T-shirt I just saw in a petro station in North Carolina of the “Jones Jewels mega stars” it had a check list on the back that read ï¸activityï¸attitude ï¸attendance... so thank you phish.net to get this hippie Fuego-up for a cause because “you can save the whales, you can save the toads , I don’t care if the world explodes.” That review is insanity and I know because even the “what the fuck it’s a buck wAter” was free! Bravo boys thank you for the slap and tickle, the mire mortal mistakes dominate dedication to change the nobs with your mouth. Next time find some one to point out the my pet cat tease in bath tub and the fact that managed to mash together “I believe in miracles,2001, tweezeprize” which I’m calling a “Tweezybaby” because that was the name of my waiter at Waffle House after because I do believe in miracles! Megaphone drop. See you in Camden if you open your ears bud guy pal! Forever flub Fee!
Sent from my iPhone
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I understand that the reviewer was harshly critical and injected some biased opinion (in re You Sexy Thing). I also understand that it’s always all good, always a fun time at a show. I understand that this band has nothing to prove and throughout 3.0 has displayed their genius and creativity over and over (Bakers dozen, chilling thrilling, ‘13 fall tour, Magnaball, 12/30/17, etc, etc, etc).
But I fail to see how it’s controversial to be disappointed when the band flubs a song you love. Especially a relative rarity like Mango. Especially when you know they are capable of never missing a note. And if it occurs frequently over a show or tour, it does seem a little unprofessional.
Again, this “rebuttal” is absolute gibberish.
:::storms out of Phish:::
Yes! Best part of the rebuttal OTW to deserved memeification.
Time to close the books on that show and move on to Camden.
The “don’t you dare criticize the band, everything they do is perfect” mentality is nothing new, though. I remember listening to the tapes from Coventry and much of 2004 in general, then hopping on .net to read show reviews and being alarmed by how many people thought the band sounded perfect, when they clearly sounded like a strung-out shit show (with some mind-bendingly great jams, mind you). And there’s always the old chestnut, “a bad Phish show is better than any other band’s best show,” which is nonsense. Paying to hear a band butcher their own catalog is a bummer.
That’s what the original recap was getting at: Phish have had far better moments than the “Vultures” from Sunday. If you had a great time at the show, or if technical execution isn’t important to you, then someone’s criticism of a technical aspect of the performance shouldn’t hurt your feelings. I had an amazing time at 8/11/09, which wasn’t a great show.
Recaps are supposed to be critical evaluations of Phish performances, the good, the bad, and the BGCA “Waking Up Dead.” If you can’t separate your subjective experience of being at the show from a critique of the music itself, reading recaps may not be your thing. And there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that.
I love what happened over these three nights. Night 3 wouldn't have happened without night 1 and 2. There is no doubt that the band is elevated when they execute perfectly but there is so much going on at a Phish show in terms of the band-audience interplay and the psych factor that you've got to let all that into the mix in order to TASTE what happened in a show or shows. There's a curveball for ya!
I think there are two types of folks. One, those who hear Waking up Dead quite butchered and think: “That didn’t go so well; not so well at all actually. But let’s try the next. And I’m ready for the next moment, because it could be anything!” Two, those who hear Vultures slightly butchered and think: “That was terrible. What an embarrassment. Why do I spend my money on this (or stream for free) unrehearsed junk?”
I don’t mind hearing both sides. But I’m definitely glad I am part of the former group. It must just be our personalities. I tend to be laid back and do not get upset too easily. Rip on me all you want, but it won’t phase me.
@hdorne said:
Sunday was high octane on energy, a dream setlist, and a lot of creativity/spontaneity. I think the original reviewer would be happier if the setlists were like 92 where A: they only had o many songs to choose from and B: there were a boatload of repeats. I can get that. If you jam a song 12 times on tour, you're going to be good at that song. If you have catalog like phish and want to play a lot of different songs, there simply just isn't a way to do it, get older, and simultaneously add to your catalog. Its give and take. I thought the review was spot on for being a "good version bad version" of a song review or "did Trey hit all the right notes"....but the reviewer should ask themselves this: Do you want it to be like 92 in that all you;re hearing are songs they've written in the past 5 years over and over again? Cause for this phan, that's a hard NO.
TLDR: original reviewer doesn't understand the difficulty of the position that phish has put themselves in. Not gonna comment on their musical background, but it was like reading an essay where there were some good general points but no real meat and potatoes. Maybe they were just dumbing it down or keeping it short for the non-musicians out there.
Look, it was a super-fun show for phans of all ages, and the setlists throughout the weekend were EXTREMELY difficult ones. Maybe the original reviewer would prefer no mans>blaze on>winterqueen>more>joy as a set that gets a bunch of repeats and is pristine by end of tour, but I for one would not. Everyone at Friday and Sunday had a lot of fun and the overall show experience for the run was far superior than the average in 3.0. Can.You.Still.Have.Fun?
-signed,
Lifelong musician and huge 3.0 critic
/lifelong internetter
//that’s actually not true
I would like to point out that there has never been a "flub free" era of Phish. Go ahead and go back and listen again if you doubt me. This is improvisational rock and roll, people.