[phish.net welcomes and thanks guest writer, Alaina Stamatis, @farmhose & @fad_albert for the recap of 12/31/18 - ed]
Last year at the stroke of midnight, during the first few seconds of 2018, and the very earliest notes of “Free,” I immediately caught a whiff of an unmistakable scent, similar to mothballs on fire; that’s right, I’m talking about DMT. I looked over and discovered that a hippie goddess with sparkling dreads and a hemp cotton dress had laced her joint with the spirit molecule. She passed the deemster doobie to a guy with floor-length dreads, legendary in his own right, but eternalized in that moment: for as he hit the DMT joint at the very genesis of 2018, he attempted to stomp on one of the balloons that had just landed in front of him, but instead he slipped on it and fell on his ass.
This year I convinced my husband @twicebitten that we should enter the venue earlier and secure a closer spot on the floor, that somehow it would be less chaotic. Outside the rain really sucked (tonight) and it was sad to see the little hunched over wookies soaked, simultaneously attempting to get miracle’d and sell more doses. Inside the scene was all glitz and glamour: flappers, prom dresses, barefoot guy giving out gummy bears, silver balloons ready to drop, Phish jocks in their chic athletic wear, young bros in bathrobes, the faux monk in his hotel sheet tunic, and the kids whose shirts spell out ICCULUS.
The first set was a strong, standard set (an average-great set) featuring two Kasvot Växt tunes, “Stray Dog” and “Play By Play,” both of which won me over (harder) in their second performance. The KV material was mixed in about once a set for the entire run (nine of the 10 songs made the cut) and I felt they all worked really nicely alongside Phish’s existing material.
“Down with Disease” opened the second set with a life-affirming journey. It was so effortless and natural that I didn’t hear a lot of people even verbalize how “sick” it was. Some amnesia may have set in because after "DWD" we were “Farmhouse’d.” I like “Farmhouse,” as you can see from my handle, but I understand. They couldn’t "Farmhouse "the whole set though! Wow! “Was that still ‘Seven Below’?” Insane, high-speed echo jamming, with appearances of space age synths, definitely the best "Seven Below" of my concert-attending career. Trey tried to get the audience to woo. The audience kind-of woo’d.
“Twist” brought the energy way up and “Harry Hood” rode it out, went type 2 for a little bit, and while the band kept setting up to go back into the end of the song (probably because it was like 11:15 and they wanted to take a break before the countdown), Trey kept going. He reached a little plinko jam, and started searching for a way to segue into “Passing Through,” another Kasvot Växt tune. They made it there after stopping and having Fishman count it off. The KV lyrics, “Sonic sea vibrations passing over you,” is definitely code for, “Phish rules.” Trey tried to get the audience to “Way-o, way-o,” which, after the low quality woo’s, is like asking to hit someone’s joint, getting rejected, and then asking to borrow everything. In the future, it could be Phish’s “Not Fade Away” chant, which I’m here for. The band had to pick up our slack and end “Hood,” which made everybody jump up and down and throw illuminated twigs at each other. Set break ensued.
A few minutes before 11:45 the band runs on stage under a dim glow of blue light. They bust into “Mercury,” and Chris Kuroda’s lighting rig encircled the stage like a dome, shooting cold temperature beams downward for the big reveal: Trey and Mike are wearing really cute little silver outfits. Sick prank, guys. “Your day is longer than your year.”
But then! Just as the song is describing the tomb of the red queen, a half dozen dancers in tattered astronaut jumpsuits run to the edge of the stage. And we collectively realize, “Oh snap, it’s about to get Peter Pan up in this arena.” They’re harnessed and up they go, wearing hula skirts trailing long tendrils of silver streamers, momentarily concealing the band like a curtain for the ethereal composed ambient section. Then bam! The skirts fall to the stage and dancers’ harnesses are actually little netted swings enabling them to perform aerialist stunts. “The nets unbreakable, so don’t worry about (them) falling,” Trey reassures the crowd. The aerialists’ cords extend and retract, lowering them quickly and raising them again, all while the dancers are retaining a smile and a challenging flexible pose (that nobody in the audience is capable of replicating). Then! Individual smoke machines drop from the lighting rig in unison with the movement of the aerialists, following them around with a ghostly puff, like Charlie Brown’s depression cloud only sexy. Kuroda is lighting them as a pale rainbow. Meanwhile Trey is shredding "Mercury," hosing everybody down, and giving amazing Treyface while watching the dangling people. Page’s face is also in awe, and it feels like a rare moment where the band is enjoying their own show as spectators.
The countdown is verbalized by a robot (because it’s the future) and then thousands of mylar balloons fall from the ceiling to our yearly, Hendrix-esque, “Auld Lang Syne.” Everyone is kissing and selfie’ing and overwhelmed by all the shininess, while surreptitiously on stage Trey and Mike are getting harnessed. It’s time to fly. They go into “Say It To Me S.A.N.T.O.S.” (which as we all know stands for Subterranean Arctic Neuro Technology Orientation Station). The whole room is yelling, “HI HO HI HO HI HO,” and slapping around reflective globes that have picked up the wetness of the MSG general admission. This is what 2019 smells like: floor beer.
Trey and Mike are hovering high above the stage like astronaut angels. We will always remember where they were.
In years past, particularly the “Petrichor” NYE, staff has come on stage as balloon population control, brandishing some sort of blade and puncturing each puppy shaped inflatable as if it were a teen in a slasher film. Just as the balloons were at capacity and about to start floating toward the band in large numbers, the dancers came back out in huge inflatable pizza and hot dog costumes, blocking balloons from drowning the musicians (and potentially concealing behind-the-scenes staffers who were covertly stabbing the orbs).
The rest of the show was a standard, average-great show. No "Reba," no "Divided Sky," no "Fluffhead," "YEM," "Stash" or "Bowie" (all weekend). An amazing four-night run without those songs in order to focus everybody’s attention on the newer material and fresher vibrations. They played “Lizards” for the “Icculus” truthers, who incorrectly gleaned from Trey’s social media prescience that Phish was planning to perform Gamehendge in its entirety. On a personal level, I’ve seen the past 61 consecutive shows and although I don’t have a lot of back history with the band, I’ve witnessed an amazing period of growth and rejuvenation. 2018 was the best year of 3.0, and if you “Ask Trey,” the best year of their career.
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Hilarious!
Musically the 30th slayed me, and will def be the show of the run for me. 29th was good too, and 28th felt slow and not very great, at least to me. NYE was a fine sendoff to one of the better years of 3.0, but 30th was def the hands down winner this time, and I expected as much heading into NYE--was impossible to imagine a show topping 30th.
Good writeup, thanks!
I too think a lot of “phans” are hard-partying fake-hippie morons who couldn’t care less about music. A lot of tour rats needed a place to go after Jerry died. Which is strange, because Phish have always been more of a dork band to me. But, I’m pretty sure Trey and Phish do whatever the hell they want. I don’t always love everything they do, but I never get the feeling that they’re doing it to appease heady brahs in the lot. And I sure as hell don’t love the band because of the “scene,” in fact I largely detest it. But I’ve been a fan for 15 years now, and this year’s Hampton Simple brings me to tears damn near every time I play it. They must be doing something right. I’m sorry you don’t enjoy it anymore. That’s OK.
Just one musical note - if you are going to get Farmhose’d, then it better be with a shimmeringly beautiful rendition of the tune. I’ve never been incredibly moved by seeing the tune live - I was this time. It just felt right. And speaking of being pleasantly wowed by unexpected tunes, the Waste ended up probably being the most emotional moment of the night for me, out of left field. All the feels and a few happy tears, thinking of loved ones who have passed on, and the distance traveled in the last couple decades since my personal journey with this band began. I’ll remember that as much as I’ll remember bobbing in the sea of silver...
so very limited compared to most fans..but as a music lover ..the phish scene and music is all happy , jammin, dancing , and very tight musically....in my opinion the boys are having lots of fun in their fifties as I am....and a big bonus is our adult children are digging the phish scene too..be happy that phish makes people happy....
Looking forward to many other shows...all the best in 2019
Anyway that's not the part I thought you were "joking" about. I was just giving you shit for hating on my wife's awesome review and acting like a nerd. Like anyone needs to read the same tired fanboy shit show after show.
Here's the thing: no good band keeps playing the same old stuff for decades on end. How boring would that be for the band and for (most of) the audience? You sound like one of those guys who thinks Bob Dylan should have never gone electric or that the Dead of '70-'78 was a betrayal of the (liquid acid!) Dead of '67-69. Both facially terrible opinions.
If you want bands that play the same songs they started with and without meaningful changes over the course of several decades, there is likely a band out there for you. They're playing state fairs and casinos across the land.
Me? I loved Phish in the 90s but I'm thrilled by what I witnessed in the latter half of 2018. If you didn't delight in the multi-layered genius of the KV prank--and the uber phish-iness of it all--then I'm not sure what to say.....other than I hope you enjoy listening to Junta and Colorado '88 on headphones, alone. Each to their own, of course. But you kinda sound like a jerk coming here right after this amazing fall and NYE run to put all the noobs in their place for experiencing joy (in 2018 of all years!) while watching an amazing band back at the top of their game.
Here's a New Years resolution for you: Try a little bit of that liquid acid yourself and dissolve that ridiculous ego of yours. Then come back and give another listen.
P.S. They played Glide II on 12/30. And it was gorgeous.
See you all in the summer!
Anyway, more to the point, and not for nothing, but what were you doing back in the late 80's to early 90's? I guarantee it's not the same thing you're doing right now. Why should we expect anything less of Phish? Yes, I get that we all have songs we'd like to hear. I would love to have heard Reba or Foam or Bowie, but you know what? It's not up to me. Because I'm not the one playing. I can't imagine how nauseating it must be to have to play the same shit for literally 30 years and people get pissed if you try to write something new. I've gotten to the point where I'd rather hear them play what THEY want to play because they're going to play it better and with more energy. And that's what it's about these days is the energy.
Songs I don't think have listened to them yet.
Listen a little closer and you will here all those things, (if you liked the music of phish to begin with) here. Great music with interesting changes/check
Funny story/check
Weird lyrics that keep you singing all day/ double check. as far as these shows I've listened 12/29, and 30. And glide 2 touché Mr. Anastasio you win again.