SET 1: Rift > Rock and Roll, Guyute, Driver, Waves > Simple, Gotta Jibboo
SET 2: Tweezer > Punch You in the Eye > Fast Enough for You > Seven Below, Pebbles and Marbles
ENCORE: Golgi Apparatus, Anything But Me > Tweezer Reprise
 What’s to be said about this show? How about 5 fucking songs clocking in at 20minutes! I think this is the first time I ever heard this show. I don’t remember it....ANYWAY, yeah, great show! I’m still digesting this, there’s A LOT to digest. Still listening too...there’s A LOT to listen to.
		What’s to be said about this show? How about 5 fucking songs clocking in at 20minutes! I think this is the first time I ever heard this show. I don’t remember it....ANYWAY, yeah, great show! I’m still digesting this, there’s A LOT to digest. Still listening too...there’s A LOT to listen to.  Phish is back! Last pre-hiatus show was 9/24/2000 in Minneapolis.  @MrsRowsdower, myself, and an old college / phish buddy jump in the car and head to Chicago in February.
		Phish is back! Last pre-hiatus show was 9/24/2000 in Minneapolis.  @MrsRowsdower, myself, and an old college / phish buddy jump in the car and head to Chicago in February. A show with epic moments, that almost hits legendary status, but not quite.
		A show with epic moments, that almost hits legendary status, but not quite. Five out of FIFTEEN TOTAL SONGS played this night exceeded 18 minutes in length. Let that sink in for a second.
		Five out of FIFTEEN TOTAL SONGS played this night exceeded 18 minutes in length. Let that sink in for a second. (Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)
		(Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...) As of this writing, I'm still fairly new to Phish. I've only been to one show in-person, but—since that transformative experience (August 1st, 2015... I was lucky to see that 26-minute "Tweezer" and I haven't looked back since!)—I've spent a number of months listening to show after show to experience their evolution. This has mostly come in the form of the LivePhish Plus catalog, as I've been listening to SBDs and studio releases in chronological order.
		As of this writing, I'm still fairly new to Phish. I've only been to one show in-person, but—since that transformative experience (August 1st, 2015... I was lucky to see that 26-minute "Tweezer" and I haven't looked back since!)—I've spent a number of months listening to show after show to experience their evolution. This has mostly come in the form of the LivePhish Plus catalog, as I've been listening to SBDs and studio releases in chronological order. My first show. Was a long time coming as I was "too young" to hit any shows in the 90s or 2000. It was a Thursday night show so I recruited a friend to make the 4 hour trip down from college to a "hometown" show, stay the night, head back north to work Friday night. We ended up making it to lot late. We walked around for a few minutes and had to head in. First memory was the heat coming out of a venue I've passed by 1000s of times. The seats I pulled were 1st row balcony, around mid court.
		My first show. Was a long time coming as I was "too young" to hit any shows in the 90s or 2000. It was a Thursday night show so I recruited a friend to make the 4 hour trip down from college to a "hometown" show, stay the night, head back north to work Friday night. We ended up making it to lot late. We walked around for a few minutes and had to head in. First memory was the heat coming out of a venue I've passed by 1000s of times. The seats I pulled were 1st row balcony, around mid court.  There are other reviews on this one so I will be brief.  I’m not a huge fan of 2003 shows so far and this one does have some warts, but there is something about this show and the jams that warmed my soul up a bit.
		There are other reviews on this one so I will be brief.  I’m not a huge fan of 2003 shows so far and this one does have some warts, but there is something about this show and the jams that warmed my soul up a bit. I only write about shows, if they move me.  The entire second set 2/20/03 is mind blowing, trippy, psychedelic deep Phish as good as it comes in 2003.  The Tweezer goes wah wah funk way out for a good infinity and when Fast Enough For You is sung, ground is lifted spirits awakened in Chicagoland.  The Sevel Below here is my favorite version ever.  The Pebbles and Marbles stopps me in my tracks to chin up, eyes wide open high at the sun and clouds luminous creatures.  Oh yes - and the Tweezer is one of the top three of 2003.  This PHISH will never die.  Thank you Jon, Page, Mike and Trey..........brand sands you, too.
		I only write about shows, if they move me.  The entire second set 2/20/03 is mind blowing, trippy, psychedelic deep Phish as good as it comes in 2003.  The Tweezer goes wah wah funk way out for a good infinity and when Fast Enough For You is sung, ground is lifted spirits awakened in Chicagoland.  The Sevel Below here is my favorite version ever.  The Pebbles and Marbles stopps me in my tracks to chin up, eyes wide open high at the sun and clouds luminous creatures.  Oh yes - and the Tweezer is one of the top three of 2003.  This PHISH will never die.  Thank you Jon, Page, Mike and Trey..........brand sands you, too.
	 Rift starts out a bit rough and doesn't really recover until half way through the song. But it's not terrible, in fact it gets pretty good after the initial shakiness. Rock and Roll comes in hot with steamy type 1 scorcher that just about feels like it's going further but Trey pulls it back to end the song. Ah well, very good none the less. Guyute is the composition heavy selection for tonight like Divided Sky and Guyute itself were at the previous two nights. Driver is next and I guess it's appropriate to get a quick breather in after the last tunes but I'm not a fan of this one. Waves begins the second half the set with some deft, artful playing from Trey during the jam. Man, I love Waves. It's my favorite 2.0 song and it fits perfectly with that sound. Fitting that Phish sounds so good among the Waves. Simple lifts off into a top tier jam that morphs and sways in the breeze. This is stuff dreams are made of. Fantastic work from the band. This Gotta Jibboo is one of the best out there. It's essentially a big fireworks display that just won't let up. Starting out as a quick type 1 jam it builds into legendary status when it peaks and instead of taking the off ramp, Phish forges ahead in to type 1.75 territory. Not fully breaking away from the song structure but an eyelash away from doing so. Once again, fantastic work from the band.
		Rift starts out a bit rough and doesn't really recover until half way through the song. But it's not terrible, in fact it gets pretty good after the initial shakiness. Rock and Roll comes in hot with steamy type 1 scorcher that just about feels like it's going further but Trey pulls it back to end the song. Ah well, very good none the less. Guyute is the composition heavy selection for tonight like Divided Sky and Guyute itself were at the previous two nights. Driver is next and I guess it's appropriate to get a quick breather in after the last tunes but I'm not a fan of this one. Waves begins the second half the set with some deft, artful playing from Trey during the jam. Man, I love Waves. It's my favorite 2.0 song and it fits perfectly with that sound. Fitting that Phish sounds so good among the Waves. Simple lifts off into a top tier jam that morphs and sways in the breeze. This is stuff dreams are made of. Fantastic work from the band. This Gotta Jibboo is one of the best out there. It's essentially a big fireworks display that just won't let up. Starting out as a quick type 1 jam it builds into legendary status when it peaks and instead of taking the off ramp, Phish forges ahead in to type 1.75 territory. Not fully breaking away from the song structure but an eyelash away from doing so. Once again, fantastic work from the band. This is a pretty representative embodiment of a strong 2.0 Phish if you ask me: compositional imprecisions are atoned for through multiple big-bodied jams which find their distinction in long, sometimes droning and dissonant, but always patient grooves. The first set takes a bit to warm up, with Rift and Guyute struggling a bit in the more technical sections. Rock and Roll allows the band to shake out some jitters with a straightforward Type I jam, but doesn't hit any particular high points (though Fishman is certainly in touch with his inner Keith Moon by the end). Things pick up a bit after a nice breath on Driver, and the band begins to sound a little more cohesive and confident on the short Waves jam.
		This is a pretty representative embodiment of a strong 2.0 Phish if you ask me: compositional imprecisions are atoned for through multiple big-bodied jams which find their distinction in long, sometimes droning and dissonant, but always patient grooves. The first set takes a bit to warm up, with Rift and Guyute struggling a bit in the more technical sections. Rock and Roll allows the band to shake out some jitters with a straightforward Type I jam, but doesn't hit any particular high points (though Fishman is certainly in touch with his inner Keith Moon by the end). Things pick up a bit after a nice breath on Driver, and the band begins to sound a little more cohesive and confident on the short Waves jam.  My first show. Rift was missed. Heard a bit of it but my buddy was tripping for his first time at phish he bailed quickly, his hand was going to explode i decided he would be fine. He was kind of a huge asshole so it was fitting in retrospect. Rift was mainly missed due to the horrible management at the venue. There was a herd of people waiting to get in. It was choatic. I met a kazoo playing dude named Matt whom i work at dominos with years later and became brief roller hockey buddies. Matt was also an ass.
		My first show. Rift was missed. Heard a bit of it but my buddy was tripping for his first time at phish he bailed quickly, his hand was going to explode i decided he would be fine. He was kind of a huge asshole so it was fitting in retrospect. Rift was mainly missed due to the horrible management at the venue. There was a herd of people waiting to get in. It was choatic. I met a kazoo playing dude named Matt whom i work at dominos with years later and became brief roller hockey buddies. Matt was also an ass.  Trey was really fascinated with an octave-down effect produced by his Digitech Whammy II unit during 2.0 (and to some extent still is.) I think it's detrimental to his strong suits as a lead guitarist, and that it is overused especially in this show, where Simple, Gotta Jibboo, and Tweezer (3 out of the 4 ~20-min. jams in the show) all get kind of muddied by its murky tones. The jams are adventurous, but Seven Below is probably the most successful and that only because of the song's relative novelty at the time. Simple is pretty but colours pretty much inside the lines, Jibboo has two distinct peaks but they meander quite a bit between them, and Tweezer is just so 2.0-sludgy with that aforementioned guitar tone that it's hard to distinguish any particular arc to the jam. I still rate this show highly on merit of the tendency towards 4 20-min. jams, but I'm very glad this Whammy thing doesn't show up as often anymore as it did throughout 2.0.
		Trey was really fascinated with an octave-down effect produced by his Digitech Whammy II unit during 2.0 (and to some extent still is.) I think it's detrimental to his strong suits as a lead guitarist, and that it is overused especially in this show, where Simple, Gotta Jibboo, and Tweezer (3 out of the 4 ~20-min. jams in the show) all get kind of muddied by its murky tones. The jams are adventurous, but Seven Below is probably the most successful and that only because of the song's relative novelty at the time. Simple is pretty but colours pretty much inside the lines, Jibboo has two distinct peaks but they meander quite a bit between them, and Tweezer is just so 2.0-sludgy with that aforementioned guitar tone that it's hard to distinguish any particular arc to the jam. I still rate this show highly on merit of the tendency towards 4 20-min. jams, but I'm very glad this Whammy thing doesn't show up as often anymore as it did throughout 2.0.
	 I remember this night being very chilly, but the excitement of having the boys back in Chicago was palpable. The first set was very good IMO. The waves through jiboo segment felt very inspired.
		I remember this night being very chilly, but the excitement of having the boys back in Chicago was palpable. The first set was very good IMO. The waves through jiboo segment felt very inspired. My first Phish show... and what a show!  Kind of hanging out in the car before the show with my friend Paul.  First time observing lot culture and all it had to offer.  Saw a bunch of people go down by having too good of a time before the show.  It was an absolute cattle call trying to get into the venue until we walked halfway around the venue to find a less crowded door.  Setlist was amazing, especially for a first show.  So many classics like Rift, Simple, Tweezer and Golgi.  Plus some new things (to me) Rock & Roll, and I LOVE the Round Room songs like Pebbles, Seven Below, Waves and Anything But Me (still do).  Great time.  Got tickets through the lotto on Mike's side stage.
		My first Phish show... and what a show!  Kind of hanging out in the car before the show with my friend Paul.  First time observing lot culture and all it had to offer.  Saw a bunch of people go down by having too good of a time before the show.  It was an absolute cattle call trying to get into the venue until we walked halfway around the venue to find a less crowded door.  Setlist was amazing, especially for a first show.  So many classics like Rift, Simple, Tweezer and Golgi.  Plus some new things (to me) Rock & Roll, and I LOVE the Round Room songs like Pebbles, Seven Below, Waves and Anything But Me (still do).  Great time.  Got tickets through the lotto on Mike's side stage.
	 PHISH, THURSDAY 02/20/2003
		PHISH, THURSDAY 02/20/2003 A really good Winter 03 show, of which there is no shortage. For me, the first set kicks into gear with Waves, and it falls into a Simple that, while I might fault it for getting just a touch too long, is nothing if not a creature of 2.0. Speaking of, the Jibboo that follows is magic. Cards on the table, I don't have a problem with Jibboo, and I love the tone and tenor of 2003, so this Jibboo is a jam I can listen to on repeat. The Tweezer that opens the second set gets deep and, though it doesn't reach the majestic peaks of its 2/28 cousin, rips really nicely for the last five minutes or so. The Seven Below doesn't do much for me, in honesty, but the Pebbles gets nasty and grinds before returning nicely at the end. A standout version.
		A really good Winter 03 show, of which there is no shortage. For me, the first set kicks into gear with Waves, and it falls into a Simple that, while I might fault it for getting just a touch too long, is nothing if not a creature of 2.0. Speaking of, the Jibboo that follows is magic. Cards on the table, I don't have a problem with Jibboo, and I love the tone and tenor of 2003, so this Jibboo is a jam I can listen to on repeat. The Tweezer that opens the second set gets deep and, though it doesn't reach the majestic peaks of its 2/28 cousin, rips really nicely for the last five minutes or so. The Seven Below doesn't do much for me, in honesty, but the Pebbles gets nasty and grinds before returning nicely at the end. A standout version. Stop #4 of the Winter Tour and show #5 overall.
		Stop #4 of the Winter Tour and show #5 overall. (Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)
		(Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)Add a Review
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Review by waxbanks
Seven Below gets an intricate funk workout that keeps referring to the song's original pulse and comes smartly back to the song after 21:00 or so. Tweezer is a monstrous roaring creature that gets as deep as 2/28 (but nowhere near as high). Simple is delicate, then spacey, and lovely throughout. And you even get canonical takes on Pebbles and (ugh) Jibboo to close the two sets!
If you don't like the 'Phish 2.0' style - those long hazy hypnagogic uptempo noise-jams, the intricate unresolved experimentation, the relative sonic homogeneity - you won't like 2/20/03. That's OK. But while this show is less of a crowd-pleaser than the 2/26 party or the 2/28 church service, it's a nocturnal preview of the chemical carousel ride that would take place in Limestone less than six months later. Well-chosen songs, shadowy ocean-floor jams, and collective creativity as yet undulled by rock'n'roll excess...what more could you want?
This one's as strong as 2/16 but in a very different register. Get it.