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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.
I suppose that's what draws us so deeply into the band (and, as well, the parts of the band we stump hardest for) - that deeply ingrained nostalgia, as deeply ingrained as our nostalgia for anything else (like, for me, Star Wars or Calvin & Hobbes or Picasso), and so often instilled during exceptionally meaningful times in our lives. And, I suppose, even when we argue about how our perceptions and our memories and our biases should be shaping the music that we all hear in so many different ways (Phish's live catalog is essentially a Rorschach test - I always think about someone with no affinity to the band listening to it and experiencing it in a way we would scoff at but ultimately has just as much weight as any of the ways we do), we ultimately have that pull of nostalgia that brings us together, that realization that it's memories like Fish pounding away on Mike's bass with his mallets during that Mule (or, for others, something like that dumb old giant hot dog, or "Hey Mike, stay on F", or - if you're REALLY lucky - watching the band move from Twist Jam to Walk Away in person) that bind us together. We're all in this together, as some dude once sang.