Soundcheck: Dogs Stole Things, My Soul
SET 1: Slave to the Traffic Light, Down with Disease, What's the Use? > Maze, Farmhouse, 555, Wolfman's Brother, Divided Sky > Rock and Roll
SET 2: Fuego > Sand > Blaze On -> Simple[1] > Twist > Theme From the Bottom > Also Sprach Zarathustra > Harry Hood
ENCORE: The Squirming Coil[2]
Simple featured Trey on Marimba Lumina. Squirming Coil ended with Trey, Fish, and finally Page walking off, leaving Mike to take a bass solo to finish the song for the first time in Phish history.
 
			Photo by Yaron Marcus
 Farmhouse
					3
					Farmhouse
					3
					 Fuego
					2
					Fuego
					2
					 Stash
					2
					Stash
					2
					 Hoist
					2
					Hoist
					2
					 The White Tape
					2
					The White Tape
					2
					 Big Boat
					1
					Big Boat
					1
					 The Siket Disc
					1
					The Siket Disc
					1
					 Billy Breathes
					1
					Billy Breathes
					1
					 Rift
					1
					Rift
					1
					 Lawn Boy
					1
					Lawn Boy
					1
					 Junta
					1
					Junta
					1
					 The continuing swinging of Dick's... what a feeling! Slave to the Traffic Light opener gives a good-time cast to the show from the get-go, with its beatific opening phrase. I love the song proper, but Slave jams don't usually do terrifically much for me. Call me a relic, call me what you will! Say I'm old-fashioned, say I'm over the hill, I suppose! Another finished DWD follows, with Fishman in particular calling some impressive shots and the last minute or so of the jam taking a somewhat dark turn. Maybe inspiring the WTU? that follows. What's the Use? is truly a beautiful song, if you're in the right state of mind for it. I love hearing Page use a more varied synthesizer palette than just relying on his Yamaha; it's something that I've clamored for quite a while now. Maze is tight as clockwork, maybe not an all-time version but you win some, you win some. "Still waiting" for 555 to get its long-overdue jam segment, but that's neither here nor there (though it will be soon... I can feel it in dem bones!) Echoplex-enhanced Wolfman's follows the Farmhouse, 555 sequence, and it's an average-great version, to be sure. I think Trey was waiting to Echoplex.
		The continuing swinging of Dick's... what a feeling! Slave to the Traffic Light opener gives a good-time cast to the show from the get-go, with its beatific opening phrase. I love the song proper, but Slave jams don't usually do terrifically much for me. Call me a relic, call me what you will! Say I'm old-fashioned, say I'm over the hill, I suppose! Another finished DWD follows, with Fishman in particular calling some impressive shots and the last minute or so of the jam taking a somewhat dark turn. Maybe inspiring the WTU? that follows. What's the Use? is truly a beautiful song, if you're in the right state of mind for it. I love hearing Page use a more varied synthesizer palette than just relying on his Yamaha; it's something that I've clamored for quite a while now. Maze is tight as clockwork, maybe not an all-time version but you win some, you win some. "Still waiting" for 555 to get its long-overdue jam segment, but that's neither here nor there (though it will be soon... I can feel it in dem bones!) Echoplex-enhanced Wolfman's follows the Farmhouse, 555 sequence, and it's an average-great version, to be sure. I think Trey was waiting to Echoplex.   I would've preferred a huge jam to close Set I rather than D. Sky, Rock and Roll, but I'm not complaining with the song selection, if it had to be a songy conclusion to the set.
  I would've preferred a huge jam to close Set I rather than D. Sky, Rock and Roll, but I'm not complaining with the song selection, if it had to be a songy conclusion to the set. Like I said, these were supposed to be my first shows, so it was almost a bit like seeing what could have been, if you will.
		Like I said, these were supposed to be my first shows, so it was almost a bit like seeing what could have been, if you will. Set 1: Slave as the opener??!? Yep, Slave as the opener, and the rest of the set keeps up with that very cool start, peaking with a propulsive DWD (that finishes!) and Page ripping up shit on the clavinet in Wolfman's before Trey takes over and leads the band to a pretty sweet little peak. Nothing quite at the level of the previous night's NMINML, but there's no shame in that game, and it's clear that the musical strength of the previous night is still carrying over.
		Set 1: Slave as the opener??!? Yep, Slave as the opener, and the rest of the set keeps up with that very cool start, peaking with a propulsive DWD (that finishes!) and Page ripping up shit on the clavinet in Wolfman's before Trey takes over and leads the band to a pretty sweet little peak. Nothing quite at the level of the previous night's NMINML, but there's no shame in that game, and it's clear that the musical strength of the previous night is still carrying over. I've listened to this show more in the last month than just about any other show of 3.0 so far.  There's just something about it.  The setlist is playing whack-a-mole with my favorite Phish songs.  If they've have played SOAMelt it'd be about my dream setlist.
		I've listened to this show more in the last month than just about any other show of 3.0 so far.  There's just something about it.  The setlist is playing whack-a-mole with my favorite Phish songs.  If they've have played SOAMelt it'd be about my dream setlist. I thought the Slave opener here was absolutely perfect for this night. Phish captured the vibe of the audience SO well and this was the result. The best evidence I can find to prove that we are a crowd that truly gets back what it puts in.  I would not have imagined Slave as an opener in a million years, and I consider myself lucky to have witnessed it. Just perfect.
		I thought the Slave opener here was absolutely perfect for this night. Phish captured the vibe of the audience SO well and this was the result. The best evidence I can find to prove that we are a crowd that truly gets back what it puts in.  I would not have imagined Slave as an opener in a million years, and I consider myself lucky to have witnessed it. Just perfect. Last time I spoke up in the comments (re: BGCA 7/18), it was to excoriate the band I love for yet another lackluster show. The thrust of my frustration was not that they were playing poorly, it's that they didn't even seem interested in trying to play well the entire tour. This was in the midst of a guaranteed 12-13 song first set and a perfunctory jam on the same 4-5 songs that get them going in the third quarter followed by a bullshit 4th quarter.
		Last time I spoke up in the comments (re: BGCA 7/18), it was to excoriate the band I love for yet another lackluster show. The thrust of my frustration was not that they were playing poorly, it's that they didn't even seem interested in trying to play well the entire tour. This was in the midst of a guaranteed 12-13 song first set and a perfunctory jam on the same 4-5 songs that get them going in the third quarter followed by a bullshit 4th quarter. There are shows you absolutely love. There are historical shows. And then there are “set aside shows”. These are shows that stand out as different from most other.
		There are shows you absolutely love. There are historical shows. And then there are “set aside shows”. These are shows that stand out as different from most other.  I'm still on my tour of outstanding runs from 2016, and Dick's certainly qualifies (in the second spot according to my notes... behind MGM). While this show statistically runs in the second spot, I personally think that it is the least great (no such thing as worst in this run) of the three. The sets are less consistent than the other shows, but still chock full of goodness.
		I'm still on my tour of outstanding runs from 2016, and Dick's certainly qualifies (in the second spot according to my notes... behind MGM). While this show statistically runs in the second spot, I personally think that it is the least great (no such thing as worst in this run) of the three. The sets are less consistent than the other shows, but still chock full of goodness.Add a Review
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Review by Walter_Peck
It was one of those "moments" that I think other Phish fans understand. When the music becomes more than music...