SET 1: Julius > Roses Are Free > AC/DC Bag > Glide, Anything But Me, David Bowie, Wolfman's Brother, Golgi Apparatus
SET 2: Seven Below -> Buffalo Bill > Lawn Boy > Mike's Song > I Am Hydrogen > Weekapaug Groove, You Enjoy Myself > Also Sprach Zarathustra -> You Enjoy Myself[1]
ENCORE: Sample in a Jar
 A brief meditation on the ninth anniversary of my first show seems in order.
		A brief meditation on the ninth anniversary of my first show seems in order.  Seven Below and Wolfman's are the clear highlights, but don't skip the Mike's Groove. This is a solid, rocking version. YEM->2001->YEM is also worth hearing. All in all, this show is right there with 6/23/04 Deer Creek in quality.
		Seven Below and Wolfman's are the clear highlights, but don't skip the Mike's Groove. This is a solid, rocking version. YEM->2001->YEM is also worth hearing. All in all, this show is right there with 6/23/04 Deer Creek in quality.
	 An above average show.
		An above average show. When I'm at a Phish show, almost invariably, I'm loving it.  Every one I've walked away from was some shit no other band could do.  But I definitely had blinders on at this one.  And even given that, I'd hate to have seen the look on my face during "Glide".  It wasn't until I saw Trey walk onstage with a big smile at Deer Creek in '09 that it hit me like a ton of bricks how wasted he looked throughout basically all of 2.0; that humorless, slack-jawed, dead-eyed gaze translated to either an inability or a lack of care as to playing his compositions on guitar, much less bothering to sing them properly.  In the moment, I could look past it all in light of the "Wolfman's" and "7 Below", the latter being my fave of the new crop and getting its due without a doubt in this "final" Alpine stand.  At the time I even dug the notion of sticking "2001" into "YEM" because the fucking song obviously meant so little to them now--they couldn't play it and wouldn't jam it so what was the point?  But the awkward playing by Trey was a little too much even for me once "Buffalo Bill" was done, and I'm grateful that I wasn't obliged to write a review of the show at the time because I'd be ashamed of it now.  The sad part is how much worse so many shows on the rest of this tour were.  We made the most of this weekend and had a blast, but thank God this era ended when it did.
		When I'm at a Phish show, almost invariably, I'm loving it.  Every one I've walked away from was some shit no other band could do.  But I definitely had blinders on at this one.  And even given that, I'd hate to have seen the look on my face during "Glide".  It wasn't until I saw Trey walk onstage with a big smile at Deer Creek in '09 that it hit me like a ton of bricks how wasted he looked throughout basically all of 2.0; that humorless, slack-jawed, dead-eyed gaze translated to either an inability or a lack of care as to playing his compositions on guitar, much less bothering to sing them properly.  In the moment, I could look past it all in light of the "Wolfman's" and "7 Below", the latter being my fave of the new crop and getting its due without a doubt in this "final" Alpine stand.  At the time I even dug the notion of sticking "2001" into "YEM" because the fucking song obviously meant so little to them now--they couldn't play it and wouldn't jam it so what was the point?  But the awkward playing by Trey was a little too much even for me once "Buffalo Bill" was done, and I'm grateful that I wasn't obliged to write a review of the show at the time because I'd be ashamed of it now.  The sad part is how much worse so many shows on the rest of this tour were.  We made the most of this weekend and had a blast, but thank God this era ended when it did.
	 show starts off pretty bad, but the Bowie, Wolfman's, Golgi is really well played and ends the first set with some strength.
		show starts off pretty bad, but the Bowie, Wolfman's, Golgi is really well played and ends the first set with some strength. I really kind of "accidently" went to this alpine run.  i lost my cell phone at deer creek, which in turned caused me to lose my ride.  well, the only people i knew that could take me home were going to alpine first, and so it was...
		I really kind of "accidently" went to this alpine run.  i lost my cell phone at deer creek, which in turned caused me to lose my ride.  well, the only people i knew that could take me home were going to alpine first, and so it was... Get this show exclusively for the Wolfman's, where Mike drops certified bombs before the jam embarks on a rollercoaster-ride into dark, unchartered, Santana-esque territory. Seven Below>Buffalo Bill kindly revisits this strange land of eccentric improv, ala Mike Gordon.
		Get this show exclusively for the Wolfman's, where Mike drops certified bombs before the jam embarks on a rollercoaster-ride into dark, unchartered, Santana-esque territory. Seven Below>Buffalo Bill kindly revisits this strange land of eccentric improv, ala Mike Gordon.
	 I like this show a lot more than I thought I would, which is possible because I skipped 2.0 almost entirely, only occasionally keeping tabs on what was going on with Phish from 2002-2004. Which is why I have yet to make conclusive strides in finding my own rhythm with 2.0, whereas many phans view it disfavorably in hindsight, for reasons. Anyway, I've heard far less tidy shows from 2.0--or "sloppier," though I don't like to be that mean--but there is a fair amount of looseness here, i.e., the compositions are not delivered with much of the white light and white heat which one could expect in the 90s. In fact, a lot of 2.0 sounds to me like the band is kind of winging it, but in a way that fortuitously and serendipitously comes together into something very distinctive.
		I like this show a lot more than I thought I would, which is possible because I skipped 2.0 almost entirely, only occasionally keeping tabs on what was going on with Phish from 2002-2004. Which is why I have yet to make conclusive strides in finding my own rhythm with 2.0, whereas many phans view it disfavorably in hindsight, for reasons. Anyway, I've heard far less tidy shows from 2.0--or "sloppier," though I don't like to be that mean--but there is a fair amount of looseness here, i.e., the compositions are not delivered with much of the white light and white heat which one could expect in the 90s. In fact, a lot of 2.0 sounds to me like the band is kind of winging it, but in a way that fortuitously and serendipitously comes together into something very distinctive.Add a Review
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Review by waxbanks