Here at Phish.net, we try to tee up recaps from people who were at the show, but sometimes it just doesn't work out and we have to weigh in from the couch. This opens a writer up to the critique that negative opinions expressed are the result of jealousy and sour grapes. In this case, I have no defense to that charge. I’m jealous as all hell that I wasn’t at Wrigley Field this weekend to see the band I love perform in the cathedral that my beloved Cubs call home. Does this mean that any criticism I may be about to level is tainted and biased?
Yes, yes it does.
The first three shows of the tour have felt, to me, like...well, like the early part of a tour usually does. Warming up, stretching things out, not getting too crazy too fast. Saturday’s first set, to my ears, was that process in action. For example, let’s take a couple of standard first set tunes that have been paired seven times, but for the first time, let “Moma Dance” precede “AC/DC Bag.” Let’s mix in some newerFuego material. Let’s sing "Happy Birthday" to the legendary Dickie Scotland, and let’s take a moment to bask in the sunshine of the Friendly Confines on a gorgeous June evening and tell embarrassing stories that you may not have known about Fishman and his dedication to art. Let’s raise our hands to “The Divided Sky” and imagine we’re not on the North Side of Chicago, but in a green field, surrounding a black rhombus, and we’re about to summon something magical. And if Fish flubs the end of “Cavern,” let’s rip through “Good Times Bad Times” and end on that note instead.
Once the sun had set at Addison and Clark, there really was some magic to be seen. I admit to being skeptical at first about Kuroda’s new screens, but what I saw on the webcast was utterly spectacular. I’m not sure if it was, in part, inspired by last summer’s “Drive-In” set, but it definitely evokes the surreal feeling of that performance. And here’s where it really gets exciting, because the prospect of a new album, steeped in the improvisation and collaborative songwriting of 2013-2015, makes me giddy. I can’t get enough of what Phish has been doing over the last few years, and the future seems awfully bright.
photo © Kristine Condon Photography
For now, though, there’s this particular second set, and once again, it has that early tour feeling to me. “Carini” heads right for the joyful 3.0 G-spot, and stays there long enough to generate an excellent, celebratory peak, before the electrifying “Tweezer” riff appears. I’m afraid I don’t have much to say about the “Tweezer” jam, which I’ve listened to twice, but which has not really held my attention during either attempt. The segue to “Fluffhead,” on the other hand, was both well done and grin-inducing, and ended the second longest gap in “Fluff’s” history (the first, of course, coming to end the night that 3.0 was born). The subsequent “Piper” is another jam that just hasn’t resonated with me yet, but which nonetheless delivered a memorable segue; this time a slick slide into “Steam.” It seemed to me as if the band circled around on the ending of “Steam” to set up Page for “Wading in the Velvet Sea,” which was followed by a straightforward “Harry Hood” > “Tweezer Reprise” combo to close the set.
The “I Am the Walrus” encore deserves a special nod, as it is the seventh song this tour to break a 100+ show gap, the eighth to break a 50+ show gap, and could potentially mean we’re in for many more such treats as the summer progresses. Not to mention new songs, of which we’ve only heard one so far, and new covers, like the tremendously moving and beautifully Phishy rendition of “Space Oddity.”
To sum up, then, while I don’t find a whole lot to delve into in terms of improvisation, and I can’t give you the benefit of a first hand account of what I’m sure was an amazing night at Wrigley, I can tell you that I loved so much of what I heard last night, and so much of what I’ve heard so far, that I'm off to figure out a way to swing Dick’s.
photo © Kristine Condon Photography
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At least the second set. I don't think I would be alone if I said that Carini and Tweezer are THE 3.0 jam standard bearers. To have them next to each other to open the last set of a hot shit Wrigley run....MAN that must have been awesome, right?!?!
I mean, kinda. Carini immediately switches to the bliss and I can't help but think that I've heard that jam before a lot over the precious few years. Tweezer (the one song I look forward to more than any other) starts awesome and there are a few minutes of the jam where I wish I still ate acid. But they really seemed to lose their way after Trey kept screwing around with his delay. Hood (I lied- this is the song I look forward to the most) just...ugh. I try to be mindful and appreciate the now and not look back, but this song has gone to the dogs more often than not. Yes, there are very good 3.0 hoods, but this was not one of them. It's directionless and limp and, really more than anything else epitomizes how the band is sometimes searching for a voice during a jam.
Maybe they're tired of playing the same songs? Maybe just need a few shows to warm up? I'll stay positive and look forward to hearing the new material. And to see them on the road.
That being said, I truly enjoyed the show overall, and it looked like the gang was having a blast up on stage, especially first set, and that to me my phriends, is what truly matters. This show showed me that they are getting a bit hotter, but still warming up on summer tour. But the promise of IT is in the air again in my opinion. It was a good show, no doubt, but not the barn burner everyone is making it out to be on other sites/blogs. Just my two cents, which is worth nothing in the current market
I mean the review was decent but this was one of those shows where I think you really had to be there to capture the full experience...
Maybe every show doesn't have to be the most unique or best ever. As long as they don't all become exactly the same or the band stops trying.
Clearly the Couch Tour is not very fun when you compare it to the Atmosphere of Wrigley.
I mean.....Good Times/Bad Times, Fluffhead, I Am The Walrus. <--- I feel like that sentence should sum up how good the show was haha. But hey, this is America, you're entitled to your opinion. I didn't think Saturday could be topped, and then Sunday Night Noblesville happened hah
And that's also why anyone who does like writing show recaps should talk to folks on the site team. It's an all volunteer site, and we can always use volunteers, especially ones who are willing to put themselves out there and review a show.
Now they play Wrigley...and the Cubs are in the first place....
I think we all need to see how this plays out. Everything these boys touch turns to gold.
I have the fortune of having years of tour experience listening to the first few shows, believing I know better, then 46 Days comes and establishes that I have no right to make comments other than, "THANK YOU!" Thank you for always proving me wrong as I sit on my laurels and hmmm and haw about how I think it should be done.
I am a Gorge awaiter. I am now a southern man wondering why they skipped us this year. I am a later-in-the-tour goer. I sit and ponder my navel early in a tour and expect more than early tour can grant me. I, too, hangover from last year's tour and await the hair of the dog to uncloud my small, but soulful spirit. I wade in slowly and hesitate as the water reaches my balls and suck in deep. . .then 46 Days happens!
Did you hear the Trey comment prior to heavy things? His uncertainty of whether he had the right note and if the beat was fast enough? I assumed, Fishman's look was saying, "Dude, I got this. Trust me." That is where I thought Trey's smart-ass comeback after "I Didn't Know" came from. Cavern was another prank pulled by Fishman on the whole band. . .or was there more my ears did not see?
There were parts of this show that made me still doubt if I am willing to jump right into the waters early in the summer, but this second set help me find my courage. Fuck it! Get in! Get wet! GO PHISHIN!
Carini. Tweezer. Fluff! And a Piper too?! C'Mon! Did you hear the joy in the crescendo of Fluffhead?
The hardest part of this show was the Hood into Reprise. Reprise was so short that I was not out of my shock of wondering if they were trying to make Harry Hood radio-length-worthy.
I guess I was still so myphed that I hardly indulged in Walrus.
Hard to end on those many notes.
I will close by stating that the second set woke me up. I am on tour from a long way away (Slovenia). I am ever so grateful, but ready for the gentlemen to spend some more time in the tour bus doing whatever they do to indulge in each others' presence and share in the groove!
Maybe its time to play a venue that they know well. Settle in. Camel Walk!