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.
Review by toddmanout
Ouch.
But a few days before Phish played their one and only show in Canada’s capital city another friend of mine played me a cut off of the band’s Junta album, a catchy rock number with the unlikely title Golgi Apparatus. “Pretty good,” I said, not entirely convinced. He put on one more song that he thought would hook me, and he nailed it with Contact. The bass-driven song was quirky, weird, and clever; I was in.
The venue was sparsely attended to say the least, with perhaps 200 people in a room that could hold three thousand or more. I grabbed a couple of drinks from the bar and walked right up to the stage and stood audience-right in front of the drum kit.
That was odd (thought I), having the drum kit set up on stage left instead of in the middle.
No matter, I had the whole area to myself and if I remember correctly I even used the stage as a table to set my drinks upon. Soon the band came on and changed me.
They opened with Rift and then Sample before The Curtain went into the first Letter to Jimmy Page in several years. The second set had the first Cities played in half a decade but none of that meant anything to me - I had never heard any of this before. Frankly, I had never heard anything like this before.
For me the show was a mind-bending display of musical and instrumental pyrotechnics that poured out of the four guys with a never-ending cavalcade of shock and surprise. Nothing went the way I thought it would, the music was utterly unpredictable with sharp turns and right angles all over the place; time signatures overlapped each other in ways I had never heard before…vocal harmonies that shouldn’t have worked landed perfectly on top of jagged melodies that were unforgettable.
I was flabbergasted, sonically and otherwise.
At the time I was just finishing up my music degree and I was in a band that I thought played some pretty crazy, off-kilter rock and roll so I was completely ready for this Phish concert whilst simultaneously not at all ready for it.
The gorgeous instrumental beauty juxtaposed with the Dada-esque lyrics of Stash, the miraculously original melody of Bathtub Gin (how had nobody found that one yet?), the absolutely jaw-dropping YEM with an intro that pits Trey’s 11/8 guitar part over Mikes 5/8 bass line and Page’s 10/8 keyboard part while Fishman pounds 4/4 underneath plus the vocal outro jam and oh yeah, they were jumping up and down on trampolines? I mean c’mon now! I was thoroughly humbled and awed.
Oh, and then the band plays Pink Floyd’s Great Gig In The Sky with the drummer doing the solo by blowing into an old vacuum cleaner, then they performed two songs with no amplification whatsoever, just melodica/standup bass*/acoustic guitar with the crowd alternating between hushed applause and shush-ing each other, then they did a couple of barbershop quartet classics and ended the set with that very first song my friend had played for me a few days earlier, Golgi Apparatus. I was dancing like a fool laid out to dry. My t-shirt long wrenched from my body, I flailed away banshee-like with the entire Fishman-side floor area all to myself.
Capping the show as they did with a Good Times, Bad Times encore was perfect, proof that Phish could tear up a straight-ahead rock and roller without any gimmicks quite fine, thank-you very much. The show I had just seen had changed how I looked at rock music and to see them Zep out and nail it hard for my walkaway song felt like a kudos to the history of the genre…a reminder of what rock music used to sound like now that I had seen its future.
To date I have seen the band 131 times. I’ve travelled all over North America and met friends from a thousand places while following Phish around, so yeah, this was a pretty big show for me.
*Wait now…there couldn’t have been a doublebass could there? Mike must have been playing his electric bass.
https://toddmanout.com/