SET 1: Taste > Jam -> Cities > Horn -> Ain't Love Funny[1] -> Limb By Limb -> I Don't Care > Run Like an Antelope[2]
SET 2: David Bowie, Ghost, Bye Bye Foot > Ginseng Sullivan > Cavern > Twist, Bouncing Around the Room > Julius
ENCORE: When the Circus Comes > Rocky Top
 The Story of the Ghost
					2
					The Story of the Ghost
					2
					 Lawn Boy
					2
					Lawn Boy
					2
					 Farmhouse
					1
					Farmhouse
					1
					 Billy Breathes
					1
					Billy Breathes
					1
					 Stash
					1
					Stash
					1
					 Hoist
					1
					Hoist
					1
					 Rift
					1
					Rift
					1
					 A Picture of Nectar
					1
					A Picture of Nectar
					1
					 Junta
					1
					Junta
					1
					 The White Tape
					1
					The White Tape
					1
					 Taste rules. Taste really ruled in 1997. European Tastes from 1997? They seem to be the cream of the crop (even though Trey fucks this one up during the final build, which I hate to admit isn't out of the ordinary). Nice start to the show, and rather than jumping into another tune, they start jamming in a way that in some ways hints at the Absinthe-soaked mushroom Wormtown jamming that would come less than two weeks later in Amsterdam. Tonight it works, though apparently the green liquid got them into trouble the next time they came to Prague with that god-awful 7/5/98 show. And like Taste, Cities just seems to work so well in Europe. Obviously the London appearance was at least lyrically topical ("Think of London / small city"), but it works great here too -- this is kind of a "fast funk" version that's a lot more like than the original than other Phish renditions of the Talking Heads tune. Cities has an atypical ending before they start honking the Horn. This Horn is great, and has a nice outro that leads into the debut of Ain't Love Funny which drifts into an interesting mood before evolving into LxL, which itself devolves into a jam with a much harder edge to it, which quickly reassembles itself into I Don't Care (which was never played again). @waxbanks has it right -- this first set is sick! And it's a major departure from the previous night's going-through-the-motions first set. They meant business. RUN RUN RUN RUN RUN RUN RUN RUN! The whole set is teetering on the edge of being out of control the whole time, making Antelope a particularly apt choice for the set closer -- and to lend a bit more suspicion to my Absinthe claims, Trey says "The Jersey Drunk" instead of "Marco Esquandolas" -- perhaps it's self-referential? My guess is that "Been you to have any spiked tongue?" refers to the popularity of tongue piercings in the late '90s funk scene in Prague. Ok I just made that shit up.
		Taste rules. Taste really ruled in 1997. European Tastes from 1997? They seem to be the cream of the crop (even though Trey fucks this one up during the final build, which I hate to admit isn't out of the ordinary). Nice start to the show, and rather than jumping into another tune, they start jamming in a way that in some ways hints at the Absinthe-soaked mushroom Wormtown jamming that would come less than two weeks later in Amsterdam. Tonight it works, though apparently the green liquid got them into trouble the next time they came to Prague with that god-awful 7/5/98 show. And like Taste, Cities just seems to work so well in Europe. Obviously the London appearance was at least lyrically topical ("Think of London / small city"), but it works great here too -- this is kind of a "fast funk" version that's a lot more like than the original than other Phish renditions of the Talking Heads tune. Cities has an atypical ending before they start honking the Horn. This Horn is great, and has a nice outro that leads into the debut of Ain't Love Funny which drifts into an interesting mood before evolving into LxL, which itself devolves into a jam with a much harder edge to it, which quickly reassembles itself into I Don't Care (which was never played again). @waxbanks has it right -- this first set is sick! And it's a major departure from the previous night's going-through-the-motions first set. They meant business. RUN RUN RUN RUN RUN RUN RUN RUN! The whole set is teetering on the edge of being out of control the whole time, making Antelope a particularly apt choice for the set closer -- and to lend a bit more suspicion to my Absinthe claims, Trey says "The Jersey Drunk" instead of "Marco Esquandolas" -- perhaps it's self-referential? My guess is that "Been you to have any spiked tongue?" refers to the popularity of tongue piercings in the late '90s funk scene in Prague. Ok I just made that shit up. It's funny talking about how the *second* set is the pretty good one and the first set is the monster, but this is one of those precious few shows where that's the case, so we'll start from the 2nd frame. Bowie starts off contemplative, almost Hood-like in its jam, then gets off-kilter like it's 1994 again and crashes into a heavy-metal jam, Trey's guitar tone dark and menacing; thankfully, instead of an 11/30/97 Wolfman's metal sludgefest, the fellas wind back into the regular Bowie jam and head home. The Ghost that follows is a slow, loping funk beast  (with a ferocious ending that amusingly stops on a dime) that shows Phish still working their way through what Ghost could be, something that they'd have locked down a week later in Amsterdam and turned into a science when they got back to the States. For whatever reason, the rest of the set is "song" songs, which is perfectly fine if an odd choice, save for a Twist that rolls into a oddly minimal, Mike-heavy jam before a triumphant to the main Twist theme. It's good stuff, and quite gratifying to see Twist and Ghost in their gestation stage, but nothing particularly essential.
		It's funny talking about how the *second* set is the pretty good one and the first set is the monster, but this is one of those precious few shows where that's the case, so we'll start from the 2nd frame. Bowie starts off contemplative, almost Hood-like in its jam, then gets off-kilter like it's 1994 again and crashes into a heavy-metal jam, Trey's guitar tone dark and menacing; thankfully, instead of an 11/30/97 Wolfman's metal sludgefest, the fellas wind back into the regular Bowie jam and head home. The Ghost that follows is a slow, loping funk beast  (with a ferocious ending that amusingly stops on a dime) that shows Phish still working their way through what Ghost could be, something that they'd have locked down a week later in Amsterdam and turned into a science when they got back to the States. For whatever reason, the rest of the set is "song" songs, which is perfectly fine if an odd choice, save for a Twist that rolls into a oddly minimal, Mike-heavy jam before a triumphant to the main Twist theme. It's good stuff, and quite gratifying to see Twist and Ghost in their gestation stage, but nothing particularly essential. First of all, this show has a tremendous setlist.  You have the new songs, the classic songs, the slow songs, the fast songs, literally a great combo of everything.
		First of all, this show has a tremendous setlist.  You have the new songs, the classic songs, the slow songs, the fast songs, literally a great combo of everything.   Taste-LxL is beautiful. Those 1997 Cities had a lot of funk.
		Taste-LxL is beautiful. Those 1997 Cities had a lot of funk.
	 The best show yet of this tour!
		The best show yet of this tour! https://forum.phish.net/forum/permalink/1377909896
		https://forum.phish.net/forum/permalink/1377909896 SET 1: Taste: Trey just smokes this one! He messes up the ending a little bit but honestly who cares. You need to hear this jam! >
		SET 1: Taste: Trey just smokes this one! He messes up the ending a little bit but honestly who cares. You need to hear this jam! >  Revisiting this Euro tour after 25 years, I'm still left gobsmacked by this first set. It has a certain "je ne sais quois" immediacy to this day. The Wormtown vibe rears its funky head, and the delicacy @waxbanks references never ceases to amaze me. After the 93-96 blast off of rock weirdness, this is a nice shift. It's a remarkable advancement for a band that had already logged 14ish years. Who does that? Most outfits find a style and don't deviate, ever! All of Phish's powers are on display in one set. Too bad I didn't have the foresight to even know that this was happening at the time! Feeling FOMO from this distance in time is silly, but it's real.
		Revisiting this Euro tour after 25 years, I'm still left gobsmacked by this first set. It has a certain "je ne sais quois" immediacy to this day. The Wormtown vibe rears its funky head, and the delicacy @waxbanks references never ceases to amaze me. After the 93-96 blast off of rock weirdness, this is a nice shift. It's a remarkable advancement for a band that had already logged 14ish years. Who does that? Most outfits find a style and don't deviate, ever! All of Phish's powers are on display in one set. Too bad I didn't have the foresight to even know that this was happening at the time! Feeling FOMO from this distance in time is silly, but it's real.
	Add a Review
 Phish.net
Phish.netPhish.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
The Mockingbird FoundationThe 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 waxbanks