A First Course of Fall

10.8.10 - Austin, TX - (Graham Lucas)

Phish stepped off the grand stage of Texas and into the cozy confines of the 1st Bank Center in Broomfield, Colorado last night, kicking off their undersized Fall Tour of 2010. Coming out of the gates with a solid effort featuring a lengthy setlist and a couple stellar moments, the band opened tour with a show that will likely be long forgotten by the end of this three-night run. Punctuating the night with a knee-buckling “Slave to the Traffic Light,” the band’s finale brought their most cohesive and triumphant playing of an evening that often seemed like was about to take that next step, but never did. Also blossoming during “Ghost,” Phish wound their way through several diverse feels en route to a space-aged oasis that bridged the gap to “Weekapaug, completing another highlight “Mike’s Sandwich.” The remainder of the set suffered a bit from a lack of flow, though the band did squeeze in a clever debut in the roots, Americana piece – “My Problem Right There.” All in all, the first night of Broomfield provided a solid opening act for a three-night circus that is bound to get far crazier.

10.8.10 - (G.Lucas)

After a sluggish opening frame, Phish lit up the start of the second half with the fiery flames of “Mike’s Song.” Jumping into the heavy and ominous fray, when the band segued into “Simple,” rushes of summer memories returned and it seemed that the “Mike’s Groove” interlude would transform into a show highlight. But just as the band began to get slightly ambient, they passed into “Ghost.”

Coming at a time inΒ  when the show desperately needed a shot in the arm, the audience noticeably reacted when Phish slid into “Ghost.” Starting in a laid-back soundscape that had the makings of a stellar piece of organic improv, Trey used minimalist offerings to color the natural groove. Passing through a segment of gorgeous collaboration moving naturally at this slower pace, Trey gradually infused more forceful guitar leads into the mix, slowly pushing the band towards a peak but costing them some cohesion along the way. After playing with one wheel loose for a part of the jam, the band reconvened in the post-peak section for a more earnest experiment. Entering effect laden sequence of percussive sound, the band pieced together a psychedelic portal into a creative “Weekapaug” that favored more delicate contributions rather than its cliched, all-out, rock and roll sprint.

10.8.10 (G.Lucas)

But when “Weekapaug” ended, so did the flow to the set. While “Fee” presented the distinct possibility of psychedelic drama with its trails of musical ambrosia, the band ixnayed any of extended mid-set revelries with a turn into “Makisupa Policeman.” For the first time in ages, Trey actually made a weed reference in the song, as he passed comically passed the officer “the dank” and proceeded to crack up along the way. Abruptly ending the reggae rhythms soon after, Trey informed the crowd of a new song they had that was also about a police man, introducing the band’s newest piece, “My Problem Right There.” A humorous, lyrically-driven nod to everything that matters, Trey pokes fun his overactive mind, suggesting that we, ourselves, are are our only obstacle to our own happiness. While not necessarily jiving in in the middle of a second set, its message was delivered with a tongue-in cheek honesty that speaks to all of our paths on earth.

10.8.08 (G.Lucas)

Briefly stopping back in “Makisupa,” the band gradually built into a show-stopping “Slave” that peaked so profoundly that its notes seemed to jump from the animated pages of a Phish comic book. Setting a melodic theme early on, Trey carried his thoughts to the mountaintop in a glorious exclamation that led one of the most poignant versions in recent memory. Providing the only “no-brainer” take away from the opener, “Slave” was the brightest star in last night’s sky, standing head and shoulders above anything else played. Phish closed the set with a denouement of “Strange” Design” and “Julius” before finalizing the first night of tour with “Loving Cup.”

Starting with a show that carried less weight than previous tour openers of 2010, Phish will surely be back in hours to obliterate night one, turning the show into distant memory by this time tomorrow. That much is money in the bank. And when all three nights of Colorado conclude, “Slave” will remain the lone pillar from a fun opening night of fall.

First Set Notes: A late-set “Stash” provided the improvisational highlight of a slow-moving opening frame that read like a script of a generic first set of tour.

I: Chalk Dust Torture, Ocelot, It’s Ice, Bouncing Around the Room, Funky Bitch, AC/DC Bag, NICU, The Moma Dance, Horn, Stash, Golgi Apparatus

II: Mike’s Song > Simple > Ghost > Weekapaug Groove, Fee > Makisupa Policeman, My Problem Right There* > Makisupa Policeman > Slave to the Traffic Light, Strange Design, Julius

E: Loving Cup

*debut

881 Responses to “A First Course of Fall”

  1. SillyWilly Says:

    Wading in the Velvet Sea

  2. Moby Dick Says:

    evening pholks

    looks like a wild ride tonight!

  3. Lycanthropist Says:

    whoops forgot to change back πŸ˜‰

  4. DukeOfLizards Says:

    Twi-suto.

  5. Phamily Berzerker Says:

    LLFA
    It’s late for you guys back east.

  6. Phamily Berzerker Says:

    nice intro

  7. Lycanthropist Says:

    damn..

    was hoping for this one in Charleston

    guess I am gonna have to settle for that Charleston Birds, Split and Sand

  8. Mr. Murph Says:

    All I ask for in Charleston is Split. Please do not play it tonight or tomorrow.

  9. Lycanthropist Says:

    I am with you murph.

    that is my a number one phish song

  10. Mr. Murph Says:

    Ill tell you where I’ll be when they drop it. Im going to run back to the soundboard, bane my brains out during the lyrics, and then proceed to zombie dance.

  11. Lycanthropist Says:

    meet you there murph

  12. thedayman Says:

    twist was coolio, thought they were gonna take it out for a bigger ride tho..

  13. Lycanthropist Says:

    had to get the obligatory 3.0 Fluff in dayman

  14. thedayman Says:

    haha true true

  15. Lycanthropist Says:

    phew thought the BB was down for the night!

    was having trouble longing on.

  16. Lycanthropist Says:

    longing = logging

    whoops

  17. Mr. Murph Says:

    @Lycan
    What instrument do you play in your band? I am going to find your face during split. Ill find your answer in the morning.

    Goo nigh BB

  18. Lycanthropist Says:

    @Murph

    Keyboards..

    although good luck finding photos of me with my band ha haha..

  19. albert walker Says:

    hot one tonight kids

    just stepping back in the room for a moment

    bailed on the monkey tweeprise

    tonight was why we came out here
    jam packed 1st set. jams through both sets. a lot of songs in the 2nd but everything played well with creative jams.

    just a fun 2 set show with great playing spread throughout.

    give this one a spin

    laterz kids

  20. halcyon Says:

    Sick show! What a blast tonight was. Oh and what AW said πŸ™‚

  21. Stupendous a.k.a The Beasel Says:

    phenomenal show tonight!!!
    was a blast with halcy jdub and kwl!!
    even the halleys jam abortion didnt matter as that tweezer blew up the place
    Got my camel walk! all i need is a huge disease or soam tomorrow and ill be ok for a while!!!! nite folks

  22. Matso Says:

    That’s my kind of setlist. I love a Jim>Foam classic opener and the rest of set 1 looks impeccable. The welcome return too of Golden Age in a prime slot.

  23. BrandonKayda Says:

    Just started up set II. Interesting jam off of the tail end of Golden Age->Piper

  24. Mr.Palmer Says:

    The return of Golden Age! Glad his one has come back. Can’t wait to listen.

  25. Mr.Palmer Says:

    ^^this one

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