Subject: UCLA Review 12-1 (not short) From: eric burns Well, you've all seen the setlist now. Ah, the return of Peaches. It's been long enough (since 12-31-94). Anyway, it was played very well and literally caught everyone (myself included)by surprise. And Trey mentioned the title after Zero (I think). Poor Heart-was energetic as always. Takes a back seat to Pen in my book, (especially after the Sacto version w/ McEuen on banjo). Cavern-Nice to get early on rather than as a closer. The elements of surprise remain alive. Very good version, high energy. CTB-Boy, they just kept the energy up. Way up. I'm still looking forward to the day when Trey gets a solo. Page started on the B3 and then took a long solo on the piano. Zero-This was fairly rocking. It's a good song; I was kind of sur- prised to get this AND Cavern--and neither wasa closer. Pretty similar to the others I've heard from fall. Curtain-VERY surprising. I was very much hoping to hear this, but I was figuring Curtain->Bowie to open II. Very cool...and there is the red hot bass intro: Disease-I was hoping for this, but it'd been played just a few nights ago, so my hopes were low. AND, considering they've been doing this as an opener lately (and not huge versions, either), I was quite happy: this one probably hit 13 or 14 minutes. Reminiscent of the 11-12-94 jam (w/o the Have Mercy, o' course). Jammed very hard. Trainsong-People seem to have a problem with the fact that Mike likes to write short, pretty songs. I like this song. The crowd was res- pectfully quiet and it was a nice version. Horse->Silent-Nice. Not my fave combo, but nicely done nonetheless. Sample-Ah SHIT. Set over. Well, pretty good set. Sample, like the rest of the rockers, was very energetic. Wait, though, Trey's NOT saying "We'll be back in 15 minutes"....hmmmmmm...... ANTELOPE-Alrighty then. I had seen them close the SD show last fall with Sample>Antelope, so I was silently hoping for it. It was great: a long, involved build. LONG third gear, as it were. No Marco, it was Norton Charleton Heston again. Have any Spike? Man? Set I, about 65-68 minutes. I was VERY happy with this set. Hey, 12 songs, all very high energy. The DwD made the set, as did the Antelope. Here's II: Well, let's grab the bull by the cojones: Tweezer-Very impressive. About 19 or 20 minutes. It was a crazy jam, very involved....Trey had that "yeah, I know I've got a goofy look on my face, but I'm CONCENTRATING here!" and the Tweezer kept getting further out there. The last couple minutes were hilarious: the beat was slowing down, and Trey just hung on the low E, riffing heavy metal style, VERY SILLY. VERY. Fish was very into this. Into, what else: Sparkle-This song follows me around like the plague. Heh heh. But, like a trooper, I dragged my ass outta my chair and danced. Simple-WOW. I was not expecting this at all. They'd just played this on Friday (and I was not there), but this one was BIG. Very jammed out. Again, I didn't have a time piece on me (I've learned that graduation gifts and Phish shows don't mix =^), but I would be surprised if this version was less than 11 minutes. The whole band was smiles for this version. Quiet outro, into: Day/Life-I've seen this a three of my last four shows, so this song is currently residing in my "Whatever" file. However, I was with a couple hardcore Beatle heads who'd never seen it, so that made it a lot better. Very long and loud outro cacophony. Then, the one song I was really pining for: REBA!-Help me up! Fast, but not the EXTREMELY fast version they've played occasionally over the last year. No flubs at all. I still get all tingly for the composed section of this. It still floors me ever time. The jam section was also long and slow-building. Trey stayed low on the fretboard for the first several minutes and took his sweet time moving up. But, once we got to the peak, we got to stay at the peak for a while. The whole band was just taking the care to make this gorgeous. Again, no clock, but probably 14 min or so. Swept->Steep-Again. Well, this was MY first time for this and it was cool. I just hope they are going to do a little more with this eventually. The set was just over an hour in and, UH-OH: Tweeprise-OUCH! I was surprised, especially since the Sacto set II ran 90 minutes. Well, still an enjoyable set, with Reba and Tweez being the big highlights. Whoa, Johnny B Goode! Now that was icing on the cake. It was a shade longer than others I've heard, and the place was going crazy. JBG ends, and wait: Trey's NOT saying "Thanks a lot, we had a great time" SLAVE! This is more cake on top of the icing. Wow. We were due for this, but, of course, I was not EXPECTING it, not after TWO closers. Very typical, wonderful version. Around 12 minutes long and, like the Reba, drawn out. And, what better way to go out than with Highway To Hell. Trey had this HUGE shit-eating grin on his face during the whole freaking thing. Hilarious. I've actually got to get some work done, so I'll put a cork in it right here. Just wanted to say thanks to Marc Olson, who pulled off 8th row center seats for me. Lovin' THAT. Eric "Information is not knowledge, knowledge is not wisdom, wisdom is not truth, truth is not beauty, beauty is not love, love is not music, and music is the best." -Frank Zappa ---------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: First Phish show [long] Date: 2 Dec 1996 17:50:30 -0800 From: mbstone@crl.com (Michael Stone) First Phish Concert (Pauley Pavilion -- UCLA -- 12/1/96) Apologies to any of you who find the comparison between GD/Phish a little boring by now, I am making mine for the first time having seen maybe 50 Dead shows and 1 Phish. First of all, I had given up hope of ever seeing Phish at all, let alone in a reasonably small venue. The last couple of times I thought of seeing them they were sold out by the time I forgot about the show. I had read reports of large venues being mobbed by ticketless hordes, so I figured I would get to see 'em in a stadium venue, if at all. To my surprise, the Pauley Pavilion show wasn't sold out, and my ticket was stage left about 10 rows above the stage where I could get a good look at the band and stage. Pauley Pavilion is a smallish venue (UCLA basketball games are played there) of maybe 7000 seats; I had seen the Jerry Garcia Band play there a couple of years ago. Even before one entered the venue, it was clear that Phish loves and respects its patrons in simple and obvious ways that could have, should have been addressed by the Dead years ago. I'll leave it at that except to add that those who produced Dead shows, if they were to visit a Phish venue, would recognize what I am talking about and would leave humbled. Also humbling to the Dead would be the emphasis on production values. Unlike the Dead stage, which consisted of everyone's Anvil cases parked behind three Oriental rugs, and which for a venue like this would have had little curtained-off onstage rooms for each member, Phish's stage was Spartan, consisting of a 50 by 70 foot black riser, a rectangular area mostly empty except for a stairway at one corner, and a cluster of band equipment in the middle. It was not clear to this first-time observer whether this arrangement was "normal" or was for this tour only. Phish's setup is different from nearly every other band in that the two guitarists are situated behind and in between the two other members (the drummer and keyboardist). (You can tell I am a Phish newbie because I have absolutely no idea who the members of Phish are!) In most bands, the guitarists play downstage of the other band members. One wondered whether this arrangement was designed to equalize the band members in the view of the audience and to give them all equal billing. During the concerts, the Phish guitarists never strayed from their fixed positions, and this would appear well suited for stadium gigs where the band members look like little dots from wherever one is sitting. The lighting consisted of a truss containing maybe 50 voltage- controlled Varilite spotlights, about the same as in a typical indoor Dead show. The lighting was first rate, although some of the Varilite moves, panning up and down the audience, seemed overly jerky and digital. The PA was not visually impressive, consisting of maybe a dozen flown 8" speaker cabinets per side. Noteworthy was the floor- level positioning of the bass bins, four per side, which were part of the crowd barrier and were aimed right at the front orchestra seats on the far left and right sides. (The PA turned out to be well tuned for the venue, nice considering all the new lyrics I hadn't heard before and which were heard clearly in the last row of the balcony). And then the house lights dimmed and I was left to decide whether Phish deserved the GD's three-star Michelin guidebook rating or whether they were just another bar band from Brattleboro. Forgive me for being unfamiliar with the Phish repertoire -- I can't tell you what they played! Suffice it to say they started to play real fast, and onomatopoeic, and made skillful use of neurolinguistic anchors within the lyrics. I walked back to the center of the venue behind the soundboard, in the balcony, and at a point I could not quite identify, Phish came on like liquid sunshine. It is always nice to have something happen to change 20 year habits and suffice it to say the Phish' overall approach to things was refreshing and paradigm shifting. One component of Phish that was absent from the GD was that Phish's music is full of sexual energy. Not the Rolling Stones, mind you, but still toasty hot. As a former audio tech, I observed that the richly textured sounds appeared beyond what I had thought were the capabilities of four live musicians. I wondered whether portions, or even entire segments, of the performance might have been helped along by the use of looping, sampling, or sequencing; to paraphrase the old Clairol commercial, only one's PA mixer knows for sure, and certainly nobody cared. The band played a 1-hour first set and maybe 1:40 second set and encore, some other poster will have to post the set list because, as I said, I don't know any of the material. [While the amount of "airtime" was substantially less than that typical of the later-years GD, no one was complaining.] I really liked the cover of the Beatles' "A Day In The Life," and the rest of the show as well, and Phish certainly is highly recommended fare for people who are prepared to approach rock concerts with the proper frame of mind. Whether I would travel to see Phish is another thing, not because of any shortcoming of Phish, but because of the lamer tourheads. I had been looking forward to a possible campout venue a la Eugene, but I would not wish the Phish tourheads on Eugene. I was amazed at the scams I encountered. This guy was trying to sell me VHS videotapes with "Phish New Years 95-96" scribbled on 'em -- must of been having a sale on blank tapes at the drugstore! It's hard to party with people who take and take and who are willing to lie and steal to finance their pleasure. But Phish presumably has deep thinkers working on this problem and other intractable societal problems as well. Laws are ROMs; courts are CPUs (C)'96 MS ------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: L.A. 12/1/96 Setlist (incomplete) Date: 2 Dec 1996 16:42:55 GMT From: RubberChickenJust got back from the Pauley Pavilion show as well as the California Turkey Weekend Phish Tour (I-5) style. A complete review of the the three shows (San Francisco, Sacto, and LA is forth coming, it will have to wait until after San Diego ;) ) The order is very very suspect, but these are most ,if not all the songs they played. After Character Zero Trey said "Thank you very much...uh...the first song which some of you might not recognize was Peaches En Regalia written by Frank Zappa..a hometown boy." In the famed Pauley Pavilion, which gave birth to many a concert by both the Mothers and Zappa. If Frank were there, he would have been proud. The LA show was by far the most balanced and energetic of the three this weekend, dazzling. Plus there was some Drew Barrymore look-a-like in Green Pants and Yellow t-shirt running up and down the aisles humping and kissing every man in the arena. Hmmmmmm. More on the California leg later. Charles Morogiello ------------------------------------------------------- From: smitheng@west.net (Brian Smith) Subject: RE: 12-1-96 Pauley Pavilion, LA Date: 5 May 1997 01:05:39 GMT I'd like to add a newbie's perspective to this thread. 12-1-96 was my first Phish show. I have quite a few tapes, but their rare recent appearances on the west coast haven't made it easy for me to see them. I saw The Grateful Dead over a hundred times and have a firm belief that a person's opinion of a show has a lot to do with their own likes and dislikes and their expectations when they walk in. I also think people who have seen a band lots of times tend to become a little biased towards the song list rather than the quality of the performance. I: Peaches en Regalia, Poor Heart, Cavern, Cars Trucks Buses, Character Zero, The Curtain, Down With Disease, Train Song, The Horse > Silent in the Morning, Sample in a Jar, Run Like an Antelope The first five songs seemed like they were done in about 15 minutes. I was a little dismayed with the pacing at this point, it seemed like they should be kicking back and jamming more. The Curtain and DWD made me much happier. Trainsong was a nice break in the pacing, a gave us all a chance to cool down after the DWD. SITM was pretty cool, with the band really getting into the crescendo at the end. The Sample was well done. I thought the Antelope closer was the highlight, and is probably still the best version of this song I've heard on tape (I maybe have 10). The first set was solid, and I was really pretty happy with it. II: Tweezer > Sparkle, Simple > A Day in the Life, Reba, Swept Away > Steep > Tweezer Reprise > Johnny B. Goode, Slave to the Traffic Light E: Highway to Hell I would disagree with the previous comments in this thread that said this show lacked a groundbreaking jam. The Tweezer jam at this show was totally unique and one of the best I've heard. At the end of Tweezer, the band started doing this descending melody with Fish pounding out the beat, and each time they did it, they did it slower. It was a totally spontaneous jam and the band was really into it. Sparkle was really fun, coming from someone who'd never heard it live before, and Simple was solid (but nowhere near as good as in Vegas). The entire rest of the second set was outstanding. Reba was the best I've ever heard, with the jam at the end being the best part of this show, for me. The Swept Away->Steep was really impressive, because I couldn't believe how well they pulled off the perfomance live. I left this show pretty impressed with Phish's live performance, very glad I had tickets to see them twice more that week in San Diego and Las Vegas. After seeing all three shows, my favorite was San Diego. I haven't seen much discussion on that show in this newsgroup, but I think it was by far the best of the three. The band was really hot that night, especially Trey. It was the first time I'd heard Guyute and PYITE. Vegas was a big disappointment. The phans really loved this show, and I was totally disappointed. I thought the jamming was mostly uninspired. The Mike's->Simple->Hood->Weekapaug was really long, but it lacked any really strong soloing. It was fun to dance to, because the band was just kind of working a rythym groove, but I kept waiting for Trey or Page to take off and play and they never really did. The jam at the end of Simple was the best part. The encore was pretty cool, but not enough to make this show for me. As a newbie, I couldn't really appreciate how special it was, I would have rather had better jamming like SD and LA. I've been listening to the tapes since then, and I seem to listen to the second set from LA more than any of the others. I think it's a tape I think I will listen to a lot, because the improvisation was 1st rate, a that's why I listen to Phish. | -- Brian Smith smitheng@west.net 05/04/97 18:13 | --------- Using: OUI TE 1.5 from http://www.dvorak.com -------------------------------------------------------------