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 n00b100
Set 2: Let’s break this down into a few thoughts:
- That is straight up setlist porn.
- Disease quickly heads towards darker waters as both Trey and Mike go to their effects and Page’s synths (one of the biggest game changers of AT LEAST the modern era) meld wonderfully with them. A warmer groove emerges at Mike’s insistence (Mike has definitely been the MVP of the run, especially in the last two very-good-but-not-this-show shows), and Fish starts strutting his stuff as the jam begins to grow in power and Trey goes to the really beautiful part of his soloing range. After a brief dalliance back with the dark side, nearly Phrygian in its minor-key growliness, Trey decisively shifts into Rock God mode and Fish shifts to a new gear. And when I say new gear, I mean it - this is a glorious, almost Reading-esque jam of true joy, Trey tapping into his prodigious gifts and Page matching him on piano while Mike and Fish urge them along to a wonderful peak. They drop down to a stop-start range and goose some woos (you know, the audience participation the band asks for every 7-8 shows that everyone can’t stop grousing about), and then Trey latches onto Steam’s opening notes and we get a neat segue to finish. So yeah, between this one and the astonishing Dick’s version, to paraphrase John Wick, I’m thinking Disease is back.
- Speaking of Steam, it’s really made its bones as a Set 2 vehicle at this point, and this version might be the strongest of them all. After a powerful rendition of the song proper, a psychedelic and straight-up weird fog of noise emerges, and I started expecting some gruesome shit along the lines of the BD Caspian. But Fish decides to wander over to the Marimba Lumina instead, and what develops is a truly interesting Space straight out of a Brian Eno album, ghostly effects sliding in and out of the fray (again, gotta love Page’s synths here) and Trey adding some clanging notes. It’s not quite dark, and not quite blissful upbeat hose - in this year of deep exploration, it’s something else entirely, and I’d like some more of that, please.
- Light is a superb call, and while this Light never really quite gets going and is curtailed for Farmhouse just when they’d apparently latched onto a Mike-driven alien hip-hop groove reminiscent of 7/14/13’s standout Light, the resulting Farmhouse is a really quite strong version with a truly lovely Trey solo that works as a palate cleanser after 50-ish minutes of high-class improv. Oh, and Trey decides to stir it up with his teases at the end, cough cough.
- Antelope is like pizza for me - even if it’s “bad”, it’s still good. And this version is certainly not a bad one, a worthy capper to the 4th (!!) 5-song set of 2017.
- Sleeping Monkey > Tweezer Reprise: hey, if it’s good enough for 12/6/97 II, it’s good enough for me.
Final thoughts: every NYE run (maybe not 2011) has one absolute stone-the-crows Monster Show that we talk about in hushed tones after the fact. So here’s all I’ll say - if this one is NOT the Monster Show of 2017, then 12/31 will have blown our skulls clean out of our ears.