Page and His Piano
Along with Phish’s retro-sized Fall Tour came many strands of the band’s musical roots. Churning out tightly wound jams akin to years past, Phish honed their improvisational skills with precise interplay each and every show. The four band members often engaged in equitable excursions without a clear lead player, thus the entire quartet could shine in relation to one another. In this context, Page emerged from Trey’s eternal shadow and stepped up his game, specifically, on piano. Returning to his personal roots, Page left many of his sundry keyboards aside when Phish got into serious business. If the band dipped into psychedelic seas, odds were that Page had firmly planted himself at the piano and gushed melodic styles. This trend gave even the heaviest “Sands,” “Pipers,” “Stashes,” and “Bowies” a distinctly stripped down feel, infusing an old-school layer into this new-school mixture. The late ’90s and post-hiatus represented experimental eras for Phish, and especially for Page, as he surrounded himself with more and more instruments. In juxtaposition to those eras, The Chairman of the Boards took a step backwards down the number line during Fall 2010, as his prominent piano offerings became a defining feature of Phish jams all season long.
One example of Page’s full-throttle piano assault came in the midst of Amherst’s stellar “Stash.” Playing quietly at the onset of the jam, he dotted the background with delicate melodic runs. Page comped Trey’s leads out of the gate, providing plenty of space for Red’s audacious leads; but behind the guitar narrative, he began to loosen up by interlacing piano chords with Trey’s lines. The two locked into each other’s phrases and painted the top half with sinister co-leadership. Joining Trey in a melodic switch that reached for the heavens, Page offered lead piano lines that harmonized beautifully with Trey’s melodic geyser. Moving between block chords and dizzying melodies, Page painted the music with maniacally rolling patterns. Never stepping off the piano for a moment, Page brought creative offerings to this “Stash” from beginning to end, building the final peak step-in-step with Trey.
A second prime conversion of Page and his piano came in Manchester’s blistering tour-highlight, “Ghost.” The leadless quality of the band’s conversation defined this jam, as all four band members contributed equal parts for the duration. An example of an ego-less symbiosis, the band allowed plenty of room for all members other to speak, while complimenting each other’s ideas perfectly. Though Mike, Page, Trey and Fish were all at the top of their game during this segment, Page’s fluid piano leads stood out vibrantly. As the band settled into a groove, Page hopped right on piano adding sparse melodies to the burgeoning mixture. As Mike and Trey engaged in full, Page hung right with them – at first offering minimalist backing patterns and then flowing into complementary leads. For a short period he layered another keyboard atop his piano, lending a darker feel to the jam while still keeping the piano prominent in the upper-most layer of the music. As the jam picked up pace, so did Page’s offerings, and he stepped boldly into the thick of the band’s ascending path. He and Trey bounced melodic phrases off each other as they climbed into the most dramatic segment of the jam, and as they reached a furious peak, Mike, Trey, and Page rolled into a sonic ball of thunder far greater than the sum of their parts. Drifting into the ambient-groove, post-peak section, Page is the one that first hits the sublime melody that Trey echoes and turns into the theme of the jam’s denouement. Engaging in game of spiritual tag, Page wound his majestic piano phrases around his own melody that Trey hypnotically repeated, eventually blending into “Mango Song.” Contributing as much to the Manchester “Ghost” as anyone, Page, again, favored the piano for its entirety.
There can be no discussion of Page, piano, and Fall Tour without a mention of the band’s masterful cover of Little Feat’s Waiting For Columbus. Page’s role in the musical costume was playing the parts of Little Feat co-founder Bill Payne, considered by many contemporaries to be one of the finest rock and blues pianists of all time. And Page certainly did him justice. Anchoring many segments of Waiting For Columbus with Payne’s piano leads, Page interpreted the Americana feel of the album with authenticity. One of his personal highlights came in the piano-drenched “Dixie Chicken,” a song designed to showcase Payne’s piano chops and with an extended solo. Page seized his moment and ran with it, playing the bluesy parts with a legitimate down-home feel. The rest of the band took a back seat between verses as Page ticked the ivories like the maestro he is – and the one he was impersonating. Taking center stage, Page’s piano parts lit up the room through the middle stages of the piece, as other instruments came in with gradual support. Building from his solo into the next verse, Page slaughtered the piano parts as if they were his own. Lending a credibility to the album’s most popular song, Page stood out as the star of “Dixie Chicken.” Following the final verse, Page never missed a beat, joining the band in a seamless segue into “Tripe Face Boogie.”
These are but three examples of Page’s return to piano prominence throughout the past season, and the list could continue for quite a while. As Phish moved backwards into the future, their keyboard player did the same. Playing strong piano parts in the context of heavy improvisation, Page shied from textural backing as he jumped into the fray with his bandmates on the instrument that brought him there. Though Page certainly didn’t forget his other keyboards, the resurgence of his piano mastery provided his most significant development of a transformative tour.
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Jam of the Day:
“Light” 10.22.10 II
Another piano-centric fall highlight from Providence.
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DOWNLOAD OF THE DAY:
7.8.1999 Virginia Beach Ampitheatre, Virginia Beach, VA
Mp3 Torrent, Megaupload < Links
Somehow this Summer ’99 gem slipped by the archive. Coming hot out of the box with a twenty-plus minute “Fee” jam, this show got going early. But Phish’s most impressive playing came in the second set sequence of “Birds > If I Only Had a Brain > Caspian.” This transcendent section of music held up as a summer highlight, and a closing combo of “Tube” and “Simple” came as a pleasant and energetic surprise. Fishman’s “Terrapin” encore gave a tongue-in-cheek nod to the stunning “Terrapin Station” encore from the previous year, and everybody went home laughing. In the midst of a great summer, this show often slips through the cracks, but it has plenty to offer. This one goes out as a reader request for Luke. Enjoy!
I: Julius, Fee > Guyute, Dirt, Nellie Kane, Stash, Cavern
II: Birds of a Feather > If I Only Had a Brain > Prince Caspian, Jesus Just Left Chicago, Saw It Again, Sleep, Meatstick, Tube, Simple
E: Terrapin > Hold Your Head Up, Character Zero
Source: Unknown





wow, bingos, that’s a bit low right there.
for those of you embarking on a Phish fast:
I encourage you to hit up my mediafire and grab:
Nucleus – fusion jazz
Spiritualized – psychedelic awesomeness
MMW – got a good 96 live show
Chance Fisher – well ya know the drill
“the Irish will be back, Mr. P.”
That’s what Bengals fans have been saying since 1990.
@garretc (from last night), yes, my new gravatar is “Simple Dog”. I tried to make one of Helper Dog buried in the snow but it wouldn’t crop to anything that looked good.
My wife and I were in tears over that story. Having both moved long distances with pets probably contributed to this.
Mornin’ BB.
Morning, New Avatar Club.
Two sneaky favorite Page moments of fall: (1) Leading the charge into the “Knockin’” tease in the Manch Weekapaug, and (2) Low Rider teases towards the end of the Amherst -7. He wanted it.
At any rate, Page got his groove back for sure.
Dear Phish,
Please practice Lizards, follow this up with a playing a hot one for the good people of new york city.
Thanks,
LW
ooooh
nice selecta!
no tte’ing and we’re getting guyutibowie’d
Guyute:
To be back, you have to have been there.
Selector with the Guyute-Bowie!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY PURPLE!! OUR LITTLE BOYS ALL GROWNS UP AND HES GROWNS UP AND HES GROWNS UP!!
BEERS AT BARS!! NO MORE MISSING MIKE!!
Hey now. The Bungles were in the SB in 89. Then Icky shuffled his way out of the league.
bouncing like a new born elf – love it!!!
Avatar Change: Check
Back to Work: Double Check
Im aware.
and ND won one in 88.
and should have been given it in 89 and 93.
and probably 92.
There for ND has a little more there, there, than…well, anyone.
The NCAA does not conduct a national championship in Division I-A football and is not involved in the selection process.
Come on USA…Get that World Cup!!
anyone having trouble listening to Selector J this morning. Do I need Winamp, or a player other than wmp or itunes? This happens every week even when I try from different computers.
@halcy
I listen through quicktime. you need something that will play a .pls file
found this which seems to trick wmp into playing it
Thanks for listening guys! Thought you guys deserved the Bowie for listening all unprompted.
I put the whole Utica set II in the big iTunes play list that broadcasts online during the day when no one is here on shuffle.
I faked all the info so the hipsters don’t delete it.
Long story but I sneaked this Bowie on the FM on Thanksgiving night. The hipsters would have been horrified… had they known!
Probably won’t be around the BB much the next few weeks. Gotta really get my grind on and finish some stuff or they could kick me out of school in the spring. So, yea… back to work.
haly, i’m listening on itunes… it took a while to load for me, dunno if thats on my side or their side
No one said the ncaa does.
That’s precisely why nd does not claim the NC from those years.
But they could
The media proclaims national championships.
Nd only counts consensus national titles.
@halcyon – There’s also a way to listen via iTunes radio.
Go to
iTunes Radio
-> College Rock
—> KVRX
Might try that in the future.
@willowed
I am in full do-nothing mode until the announcement is made.
They need to announce it soon. I have so much shit to do today!
they just started the epic uplifting music, so maybe the announcement is coming
Someone tweeted that the Qatar delegates are all hugging each other. If that happens I will vomit!