The Top Ten of 2010: Part II
Picking up right where we left off yesterday, here are my top five shows of the year.
****
5. 10.31.2010 Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey
Phish’s second Halloween cover set since they’ve comeback turned into one of their best. Transforming Atlantic City’s historic Boardwalk Hall into a retro-’70s dance party, Phish nailed Little Feat’s Waiting For Columbus, in a selection that few saw coming. For the first time ever, Phish interpreted a live album, a choice that provided a more upbeat and engaging feel to the Halloween set than some of the former studio albums. With a guest horn section and virtuoso percussionist, Giovanni Hidalgo, Phish recreated the music of a Little Feat, one of the band’s primary influences with blues-based funk grooves and quick-witted musical exchanges. One of the experiential highlights of 2010 for almost all who were there, this set could land this show on this list by itself, but there was more! The most impressive “Stash” of 2010 and a holiday-themed combo of “Ghost > Spooky” highlighted the first set, while a celebratory third frame centered on a smoking “Jibboo” that segued into “Camel Walk,” and included several Phish anthems. All in all, this three-set fall finale delivered in full.
I: Frankenstein, Big Black Furry Creature from Mars, Ghost > Spooky, The Divided Sky, Roses Are Free, Funky Bitch, Boogie On Reggae Woman, Stash, Character Zero
II: Fat Man in the Bathtub, All That You Dream, Oh Atlanta, Old Folks Boogie, Time Loves a Hero > Day or Night, Mercenary Territory, Spanish Moon, Dixie Chicken > Tripe Face Boogie, Rocket in My Pocket, Willin’, Don’t Bogart That Joint, A Apolitical Blues, Sailin’ Shoes, Feats Don’t Fail Me Now
III: Down with Disease > Back on the Train, Gotta Jibboo > Camel Walk, Suzy Greenberg, Wilson > Harry Hood, The Horse > Silent in the Morning, You Enjoy Myself
E: Julius
****
4. 8.14.2010 Alpine Valley, East Troy, Wisconsin
This flowing two-setter featured sharp whole band jamming, blistering work by Trey, and one of the jams of the year in “Disease > What’s The Use?” In this show that never stopped, Phish brought huge doses of fire-laced playing, particularly in the second set, while also including a swank mid-“Mike’s Groove” stop in “Sneakin’ Sally.” The entire band clicked from the get go on this night, and never stumbled en route a classic Alpine show that brought summer tour to a final peak. “Tube” opened up and strong versions of “Reba”‘ and “Antelope” popped within a first frame with no real lulls. Transformed to DVD in record time, Phish, themselves, have already given a nod to this night as one of their favorites.
I: Tube, The Oh Kee Pa Ceremony > Suzy Greenberg, Funky Bitch, Reba >Fuck Your Face, Alaska, Back on the Train, Taste, When the Circus Comes, Lawn Boy, Sparkle, Gumbo, Run Like an Antelope
II: The Sloth, Down with Disease > What’s the Use?, Scent of a Mule, Mike’s Song > Dirt, Sneakin’ Sally through the Alley, Weekapaug Groove, Bug
E: Quinn the Eskimo
****
3. 8.7.2010 The Greek Theatre, Berkeley, California
If the Alpine’s summer showcase represented a top-shelf Phish rock concert, The Greek’s third night was akin to a symphony. Peaking their three-show stand with delicate and inspired creativity, Phish capped the run with, in my opinion, the best set of summer. Kicking off with “Wilson” and fusing into my pick for jam of the summer–an exploratory “Light” that found pure gold—the band then came back from the stratosphere via “Twenty Years Later.” Phish showcased an impeccable mid-set “Harry Hood” and closed the show with the combination of “2001,” a rendition of “Suzy” that actually packed a punch with a smoking reprise jam, and a patiently sculpted “Slave” that fit congruently with its surroundings. Playing more fluidly than they had all summer, this show was underlined by the band’s ego-less interplay. Daytime high-points came in soaring versions of “Jibboo” and “Reba,” and a “46 Days > Tube” combo that lit up the end of the first set.
I: AC/DC Bag, Foam, Gotta Jibboo, Reba > Sleep Again, Army of One, Poor Heart, 46 Days > Tube, Character Zero
II: Wilson > Light > Twenty Years Later, Harry Hood, Theme From the Bottom, Also Sprach Zarathustra > Suzy Greenberg*, Slave to the Traffic Light
E: The Lizards, First Tube (*w/ reprise jam)
****
2. 10.26.2010 Verizon Wireless, Manchester, New Hampshire
Right before Phish’s three-night Halloween weekend in Atlantic City, they dropped a mid-week bomb in New Hampshire that trumped any one of them. Comprising the first set entirely of songs unplayed on fall tour (other than “Curtain (With)” and “It’s Ice”), Phish brought out “After Midnight” for the first time since Big Cypress, “Alumni Blues,” “A Song I Heard the Ocean Sing,” and “Walls of the Cave,” among others. And after setbreak, the band played one of their most impressive top-to-bottom stanzas of the year. After a bizarrely-placed “Possum” opened up, Phish dove into one of the elite “Lights” of fall. Illustrating the late-year, groove-based direction of the song, this tightly-woven excursion found its way back through “Alumni’s” funk patterns en route to one of fall’s brightest highlights. And as soon as “Light’s” psychedelic roller coaster ended, perhaps, the “Mike’s Groove” of the year began. With the reggae stylings of “Makisupa > Night Nurse > Makisupa” sliding out of “Simple,” and the best “Ghost” of fall dripping artistically into “Mango Song,” this musical sequence had a little bit of everything. Bringing the set to a head in a wild “Weekapaug” that included a staple jam on The Rolling Stones’ “Can’t You Hear Me Knockin,” Trey lyrically reprised several of the set’s songs over the break-neck music. Almost bursting at the seams, Phish flew from “Weekapaug” into a “Llama Reprise” to end the set in shredding and energetic fashion.
I: After Midnight, The Sloth, Alumni Blues > Letter to Jimmy Page > Alumni Blues, Mellow Mood, Access Me, Llama, All of These Dreams, The Curtain (With), Scent of a Mule, A Song I Heard the Ocean Sing, It’s Ice, Walls of the Cave
II: Possum, Light, Mike’s Song > Simple > Makisupa Policeman > Night Nurse* > Makisupa Policeman, The Wedge, Ghost > The Mango Song, Weekapaug Groove > Llama Reprise
E: Show of Life (*debut, Gregory Isaacs)
****
1. 10.20.2010 Memorial Auditorium, Utica, New York
On October 20, in Utica, New York, Phish played their best two set show of this era—plain and simple. In recent times, a show with one outstanding set can be a tour highlight, and Phish’s mid-week stop in Utica featured two jaw-dropping halves of music. Fusing their improvisational playfulness of old with their musicianship of now, Phish twisted and turned through two frames of musical adventure. After taking part in a rite firmly planted in the moment, while looking towards both the past and the future, when the lights came on after this one, everyone stood wide-eyed and disoriented as if waking from a dream. You could tell from the looks on people’s faces that Phish had just played the show of the year.
As soon as the band tore apart a third-song “Vultures,” the dial was set for eleven and was never turned down. “Wolfman’s > Cities,” “David Bowie,” “McGrupp,” “Saw It Again,” and the best “Anetlope” in eons—all laced with the theme of “Guyute”—quickly turned into a face-melting first set. The energy in the building was abuzz, and everyone seemed to be aware that we sat amidst a retro-throw down like none other. Everything the band touched turned to gold on this night, and the second set peaked with one of the most sublime sequences of 2010—”Split > Have Mercy > Piper > Split—with a “Birds” reprise in “Piper.” Flowing organically and with top-shelf communication, Phish darted and dashed their way around a show laced with their signature wizardry. Throw in one of the most blissful open jams of the year out of “Have Mercy” and you’ve got the recipe for the best Phish show of 2010.
I: My Soul, Stealing Time From the Faulty Plan, Vultures, Wolfman’s Brother > Cities, Guyute, David Bowie, Wilson, McGrupp and the Watchful Hosemasters > Saw It Again > Run Like an Antelope
II: Drowned > Sand > Theme From the Bottom, Axilla, Birds of a Feather, Tela, Split Open and Melt > Have Mercy > Piper > Split Open and Melt, Slave to the Traffic Light
E: Good Times Bad Times
****
Honorable Mention (in no particular order):
10.19, Augusta, ME: Though boasting two of fall tour’s top-tier jams in “Light” and an off-the-charts “Reba” for the ages, the entire show didn’t have enough consistency or flow to make the top ten.
8.6, The Greek: Though each set featured two outstanding in jams (“Bathtub Gin” / “Cities” and “Rock and Roll” / “Simple”) the band had yet to put it all together like the did the following night.
10.22, Providence, RI: A strong second set kicked off with one of fall’s best jam sequences in “Rock and Roll > Carini,” but there wasn’t much to speak of in the first.
6.25, Camden, NJ: A legitimate June contender for the number ten position, the second set alone brings the heat with “Chalkdust > Caspian” and the Michael Jackson-inspired “2001 > Light.”
10.30 Atlantic City, NJ: I’m only putting this here because I’ll get too much flak if I don’t. “Tweezer > Led Zeppelin > Whatever.” But “2001 > Bowie” contains some of the most scintillating playing of the season. Tack on a strong first set and a fun-filled rock show emerges.
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Jam of the Day:
“Jibboo” 7.4.10 II
A taste of the just-released Kevorkian remasters courtesy of Live Phish.
[audio:http://phishthoughts.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/Gotta-Jibboo-promo-edit.mp3]=====
DOWNLOAD OF THE DAY: Will be back tomorrow!
I myself think of 2009 and 2010 as one in the respect that there needed to be time to relearn, jell, develop, and mature. Obviously 2009 was the infancy, but I think you know what I’m jiving at
when they do funk in 3.0 shit gets dirty
the last few minutes of that MSG Sally gets ridiculous
I too am all for more dirty funk, bring it on
ask the prez how the Nobel Peace Prize winner is doing… 😉
Ooops, got bottom’d–from previous page:
“El Dude – agreed. when they broke into that extended Cities funk at the Greek i thought it was going to be a turning point and they would start mixing in the many styles of old as we simultaneously pushed into the future. but so far there hasn’t been much looking back. however, i do sometimes hear the style of jamming from the Cypress “Sand>Quad Topplings” rearing it’s head in these new procussive style 3.0 jams that begun with the Greek Simple and peaked at MSG (i.e., MSG Tweezer, Sand and Simple).”
Instead of a more washy sound of that era, this new sound system would put that funk into pure adrenaline overdrive naughty, wanna get down and dirty right there on the floor kinda gooey groove man
on the topic of funk, i gave the manchester light another spin this afternoon and damn does that get funky
why the MSG Sand gets so much love
3-4 minutes of straight full band funk before Trey rolls into his solo which he also kills
hopefully Sand continues in that direction
@poop goblin, that staccato playing that trey does for the first couple minutes in the sand is what i’ve been waiting for and hoping he would do for sooooo long, it’s very reminiscent of the island tour roses
Now WSP is doing the same kinda simulcast for their Classic Theater shows coming this spring in Athens, GA.
I’m in for more of whatever mike was doing during makisupa.
dude- no taping at those shows i heard.
@ Palmer
Wow… Didn’t hear that…
not really sure why restricting tapers for those two shows would do anything to the simulcast $$$
I thought i saw that somewhere earlier. Can’t find it now.
I believe you… 🙂
I think its just audio. No taping or outside recording
http://www.widespreadpanic.com/ontour.php
@gus – Manch Light is $$$
forgot how hot this Daktaris – Soul Explosion record is
for hipsters from Brooklyn that’s some authentic old school afro-beat
awesome
also speaking of newschool 3.0 funk fantasia–MSG Tube is out of this world… 5-8 more minutes of that jam and it might have rivaled MSG Tube from 97 😉
You know what excites me?
Imagining a massive staccato funk jam booming across Watkins Glen…
I’d hit a NY festi this summer, no doubter
@oneshowatatime – that show was my first experience being on the floor of a show. me and my buddy were able to get up to the railing for the majority of the second set, and it blew my mind…everything was perfect. that light was unbelievable, and to date is the best jam i’ve seen. my only regret is not knowing night nurse, that would have made it more enjoyable. but i still dug it so much, and love the song now
Purdue putting the hurt on Penn State! Boiler Up!
gus have you shown the board your hood vid? if not, stop being so modest! haha.
justin said “this is crazy. why is he not in our band” haha
here is the video purple is referring to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5uxFN1mOJY
enjoy