Soundcheck: Crossroads, Shaggy Dog, Funky Bitch
SET 1: Chalk Dust Torture, Guelah Papyrus, Rift, Mound, Stash -> Kung -> Stash, Glide, My Friend, My Friend[1] > Reba, Satin Doll > Cavern
SET 2: David Bowie[2] -> Jessica Jam -> David Bowie[3] -> Have Mercy -> David Bowie, The Horse[4] > Silent in the Morning > It's Ice > The Squirming Coil -> Jam -> Big Ball Jam > Mike's Song -> Crossroads[5] -> Mike's Song > I Am Hydrogen > Weekapaug Groove[6], Amazing Grace > Amazing Grace Jam
ENCORE: AC/DC Bag
Trey teased Fire (Ohio Players) in Chalk Dust Torture, Stash, and Reba. Page teased Can't You Hear Me Knocking in Stash. Fish quoted Kung throughout the return to Stash. The beginning of My Friend and all of The Horse featured Trey on acoustic guitar. Page teased "Charge!" before Satin Doll while Trey was thanking the crew. The intro to Bowie included Simpsons, Random Note, Will the Circle Be Unbroken?, and Get Back signals and Jessica teases (both before and after the Jessica Jam) from Page and an Amazing Grace tease from Mike. Bowie later contained a Lazy tease from Mike. The breakdown in It’s Ice included a Manteca tease. Crossroads made its Phish debut at this show. Page teased Gimme Some Lovin' and Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 in Hydrogen. Weekapaug contained an Amazing Grace tease from Page and was unfinished. The Amazing Grace Jam was played to a Weekapaug-esque drumbeat. Trey teased Walk This Way in AC/DC Bag. This show is available as an archival release on LivePhish.com.
 With due respect to @DollarBill, whose early-Phish reviews are invaluable, I have to disagree with his review of this show and agree with, uh, the other reviews of this show. The second set, in particular, is my go-to for pre-94 Phish, even over anything in August '93 - the Mike's and Weekapaug here are short but played with so much gusto; the segues into and out of an explosive Crossroads (not bad for a debut!) are a joy; the Bowie is (to me) glorious and energetic as opposed to sloppy (where you might hear a "mea culpa for the fuckups" in Have Mercy, I hear a charming tonal shift); and the Amazing Grace jam, short though it may be, is truly uplifting once they get the Weekapaug beat synced up. Sure, there're some moments where the band could be tighter, but this is surely not the only famous show where you could say that, and the driving power of the jams overcomes those less than perfect moments (much like the Bomb Factory, which also has some fugly moments). The first set's fine (don't miss the Stash/Kung/Stash), but this second set holds together remarkably well considering how much terrain it covers and is a real must hear in my mind. If you have the LivePhish version, you also have a killer Tweezer and YEM, both of which are probably better than anything from this night. Still, this is a desert island show for me, and considering my post-96 leanings, that's saying something.
		With due respect to @DollarBill, whose early-Phish reviews are invaluable, I have to disagree with his review of this show and agree with, uh, the other reviews of this show. The second set, in particular, is my go-to for pre-94 Phish, even over anything in August '93 - the Mike's and Weekapaug here are short but played with so much gusto; the segues into and out of an explosive Crossroads (not bad for a debut!) are a joy; the Bowie is (to me) glorious and energetic as opposed to sloppy (where you might hear a "mea culpa for the fuckups" in Have Mercy, I hear a charming tonal shift); and the Amazing Grace jam, short though it may be, is truly uplifting once they get the Weekapaug beat synced up. Sure, there're some moments where the band could be tighter, but this is surely not the only famous show where you could say that, and the driving power of the jams overcomes those less than perfect moments (much like the Bomb Factory, which also has some fugly moments). The first set's fine (don't miss the Stash/Kung/Stash), but this second set holds together remarkably well considering how much terrain it covers and is a real must hear in my mind. If you have the LivePhish version, you also have a killer Tweezer and YEM, both of which are probably better than anything from this night. Still, this is a desert island show for me, and considering my post-96 leanings, that's saying something.
	 (Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)
		(Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...) I am not sure how to process that DollarBill review.  I have seen more than 300 shows since 1991, and this show is one of the very best.  The venue was small and sweltering hot.  It had pull out bleachers in the back like you probably had in your high school gym.  The energy in the room was electric.  To me, this show represented the end of an era of intimate small venue Phish.  I think the band knew it too, as they quickly vaulted into amphitheaters and arenas in the months and years that followed.  It was a special night for everyone that was there.  I don't know how you could listen to this show...particularly Set 2...and not get the chills.  To some extent, it may have some of that "you had to be there" stuff going on, but I believe the music speaks for itself, regardless.  If I could give it 6 stars I would.  I could count on one hand the other shows that rivaled this night for me in emotional significance.
		I am not sure how to process that DollarBill review.  I have seen more than 300 shows since 1991, and this show is one of the very best.  The venue was small and sweltering hot.  It had pull out bleachers in the back like you probably had in your high school gym.  The energy in the room was electric.  To me, this show represented the end of an era of intimate small venue Phish.  I think the band knew it too, as they quickly vaulted into amphitheaters and arenas in the months and years that followed.  It was a special night for everyone that was there.  I don't know how you could listen to this show...particularly Set 2...and not get the chills.  To some extent, it may have some of that "you had to be there" stuff going on, but I believe the music speaks for itself, regardless.  If I could give it 6 stars I would.  I could count on one hand the other shows that rivaled this night for me in emotional significance.
	 Another one of the first complete shows I ever received on cassette. This show was an early for good reason: it features the band performing at their highest level up to that time, with lots of musical interaction and communication during the jams. The Rift album was an early favorite of mine, so I enjoyed hearing a show that features so much of the material from that album [how times have changed, eh?].
		Another one of the first complete shows I ever received on cassette. This show was an early for good reason: it features the band performing at their highest level up to that time, with lots of musical interaction and communication during the jams. The Rift album was an early favorite of mine, so I enjoyed hearing a show that features so much of the material from that album [how times have changed, eh?].  This was my first full length show, I had seen the boys at some WBCN new music showcase with the Spin Doctors the year before. We shot down that afternoon from school armed with our tickets and a friend of a friend's phone # for a place to crash.
		This was my first full length show, I had seen the boys at some WBCN new music showcase with the Spin Doctors the year before. We shot down that afternoon from school armed with our tickets and a friend of a friend's phone # for a place to crash. Yes, the OTHER 5/8 show. This is the last show of an incredibly long spring tour and it ends the trek in fine fashion. This is also the first show I ever listened to; I picked up the LivePhish release on a whim after I started to grow tired of listening to nothing but the Dead. This show introduced me to an entirely new world of music and for that reason it holds a special place in my heart.
		Yes, the OTHER 5/8 show. This is the last show of an incredibly long spring tour and it ends the trek in fine fashion. This is also the first show I ever listened to; I picked up the LivePhish release on a whim after I started to grow tired of listening to nothing but the Dead. This show introduced me to an entirely new world of music and for that reason it holds a special place in my heart.  This is a difficult show to review because there is just too much going on to really capture it all with words. The band's playing is really tight throughout and in particular, the 2nd set is a showcase of great communication and the willingness to take cues and explore musical ideas with abandon. Highlights:
		This is a difficult show to review because there is just too much going on to really capture it all with words. The band's playing is really tight throughout and in particular, the 2nd set is a showcase of great communication and the willingness to take cues and explore musical ideas with abandon. Highlights: This show is so full of positives that it will be easier to start this review with the negatives.
		This show is so full of positives that it will be easier to start this review with the negatives.  This is an unbelievably great show. Easily top 5 contender for the best of the year.
		This is an unbelievably great show. Easily top 5 contender for the best of the year. From the first shout of "REBA" and then the show begins. Lights are probably going wild
		From the first shout of "REBA" and then the show begins. Lights are probably going wild   
  5/8/93 at the UNH Fieldhouse punches quite well in a vacuum, but becomes even more special when considering its status as a closer to the 1993 Winter/Spring Tour. This show expertly embodies the culmination of the band's growth over the previous few months and establishes a powerful momentum that carries the band on into the legendary, sound-defining summer tour.
		5/8/93 at the UNH Fieldhouse punches quite well in a vacuum, but becomes even more special when considering its status as a closer to the 1993 Winter/Spring Tour. This show expertly embodies the culmination of the band's growth over the previous few months and establishes a powerful momentum that carries the band on into the legendary, sound-defining summer tour. Reba is a beast to behold. It isn't just the fact that Trey brings everything down to a whisper and then back up to a wailing away blast off. It's that Mike's bass line underneath is a slippery funk with phased timing weirdness that holds everything together in some groovy psychedelic funk lounge manner. Wow. It was good to be young, even though we couldn't live.
		Reba is a beast to behold. It isn't just the fact that Trey brings everything down to a whisper and then back up to a wailing away blast off. It's that Mike's bass line underneath is a slippery funk with phased timing weirdness that holds everything together in some groovy psychedelic funk lounge manner. Wow. It was good to be young, even though we couldn't live.
	 This was May 8th. They started the tour on February 3rd!  At first you might think, wow, what a life.  Traveling the country, making music and new friends...and making money too. But think about the best vacation of your life. Imagine that at the end of it someone says, oh no, you're not going home yet....we're doing this for three more months.  Jeez, they went all the way down the eastern seaboard from Maine to Miami, all the way across the south to New Mexico, up to Colorado, down to So. Cal and all the way up the west coast to Vancouver. Then they meandered back through the midwest, up to Canada again for a bit, and back to the northeast for a bunch of shows there. And then on this epic tour ender,  they pull off a heroic sprint to the finish.
		This was May 8th. They started the tour on February 3rd!  At first you might think, wow, what a life.  Traveling the country, making music and new friends...and making money too. But think about the best vacation of your life. Imagine that at the end of it someone says, oh no, you're not going home yet....we're doing this for three more months.  Jeez, they went all the way down the eastern seaboard from Maine to Miami, all the way across the south to New Mexico, up to Colorado, down to So. Cal and all the way up the west coast to Vancouver. Then they meandered back through the midwest, up to Canada again for a bit, and back to the northeast for a bunch of shows there. And then on this epic tour ender,  they pull off a heroic sprint to the finish.  This is the fourth and last show at the Field House at UNH, 70th of the tour, and the last show of the tour!  I can’t believe the schedule these guys had back in 1993.  I think that was 70 shows in about 100 days all over the country!  I can only imagine how tired they were as I’ve been listening and trying to play along with any song that I could, they had to do the real work from city to city.  This unfortunately is not the best show, its sloppy and disjointed at times.  I’m not saying it wasn’t fun, just not the greatest playing I’ve heard.  The recording seemed to be from an audience source, and was pretty average for this tour.
		This is the fourth and last show at the Field House at UNH, 70th of the tour, and the last show of the tour!  I can’t believe the schedule these guys had back in 1993.  I think that was 70 shows in about 100 days all over the country!  I can only imagine how tired they were as I’ve been listening and trying to play along with any song that I could, they had to do the real work from city to city.  This unfortunately is not the best show, its sloppy and disjointed at times.  I’m not saying it wasn’t fun, just not the greatest playing I’ve heard.  The recording seemed to be from an audience source, and was pretty average for this tour.Add a Review
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Review by waxbanks