Taking Care of Business

10.20.2013 “Divided Sky” (Andrea Nusinov)
In a display of musicianship rarely seen these days, Phish annihilated the Mothership proper on Sunday night, gracing the historic venue with the throwdown it’s been begging for since November 22, 1997. This was the real deal folks. This was Phish at Hampton Coliseum in all their fury and wonder. This was the stuff of legend. This was the stuff of dreams. The band hadn’t woven an indoor tale like this in quite some time, and—honestly—it was a sight to behold. Sunday’s show touched upon the very ethos of why we do what we do. The community now has a new date to go along with the many numbers we recite in our sleep—10.20.2013, welcome to our consciousness.
The band toned it down a bit from their audacious start of Saturday night, favoring standard rotation songs to which we’ve all grown accustomed. There were, however, a few talking points beyond the intense energy that the band brought to each and every selection. After the opening three songs, the guys kicked into “Roses Are Free” in what seemed like another ho-hum selection. But Trey had different ideas. Out of the ending of the song, the band moved into a dreamy, mid-tempo passage that pointed to the first “Roses” jam since Worcester last year. As the crowd’s anticipation built, however, the band couldn’t fully lock up, and but a minute or so into the jam, Trey aborted it for “Sample In a Jar.”
The show picked up in earnest with a savage version of “46 Days.” This rousing piece was the first to truly get the audience’s hearts to beat as one—a heartbeat that would pulsate throughout the intimate arena for the rest of the night. A precise “Divided Sky” gave way to an “Bold as Love” closer. The set was solid, if not a bit slow, but big things were on the horizon, and everyone in the building could feel it.
What happened after setbreak is the stuff of instant legend. Phish gave every single song in the second set the absolute full treatment, and as was said in the tale of King Midas, everything that they touched turned to gold. Spending the entire second set in improvisational space, Phish staged a musical drama for which they became famous. This was Phish—raw, unadulterated and without a net.
The set kicked off with a nod to a crew of up-fronters dressed like Waldo from the “Where’s Waldo?” books. Trey asked them before the set if they were dressed like Waldo or people from jail, and then promptly told them the band would play a “song about jail” before busting out “Paul and Silas.” But then, the moment we had all been waiting for unfolded as Trey unleashed the opening lick to “Tweezer.” This “Tweezer” was the filthiest piece of indoor arena Phish we’ve heard in this era. Hands down, bar none. Moving seamlessly from dark to sinister to outright disgusting, this jam provided the yang to the Tahoe version’s yin. A piece of music that incarnated all that is good and holy about fall Phish truly upped the bar of possibilities for the next week and a half. This is sacred ground, people—tread lightly and with no distractions. A textured voyage into groove and far beyond, this jam leapt from the stage directly into the Hall of Fame. This monumental jam ended in an stunning passage of melodic ambience that lifted us, ever so gradually, out of the deep abyss and into an uplifting conclusion. And upon the ending of the jam, Trey dropped into “Golden Age.”
Leaving jaws on the Coliseum floor from the floor up to the rafters, Phish moved into the second movement of a flowing and relentless musical stanza. The band took all of the energy they had put into “Tweezer’s” psychedelia and applied it to the funk paradigm in “Golden Age.” Launching into a groove fiesta, Trey played all sorts of choppy rhythms licks while his band mates churned out dance grooves as if it was 1997. Turning the party out like none other, the band stuck with this vibe for quite some time before bleeding into an spacey outro that highly suggested a move into “2001.” But unlike the handful of times they’ve executed that transition in the past couple years, the guys took a left turn into “Piper.”
Like several applications of “Piper” this summer, this version was utilized as a triumphant exclamation point on the opening half of the set. Trey’s guitar screamed in joy, and all could share in the exultation he expressed. This was group catharsis as it is defined in the dictionary. Energy coursed through the arena like tangible bolts of lightning as the band tore through their victory march. And then came the best moment of the night. Phish moved into a classic rock vamp, and it sounded as if they might segue into “Rock and Roll.” But out of nowhere, the band moved into an impromptu cover of Bachman, Turner, Overdrive’s “Taking Care of Business!” The venue fucking exploded. One of the more clever musical moves we’ve seen Phish pull off in a hot minute, this transition sent the crowd over the top.
The band dissolved into an ambient outro, and it became clear that we would get the “2001” that had been dangled in front of us moments ago. And the band played it like they meant it! Digging into the chunky funk grooves, they spun the Mothership into another galaxy, and just when it seemed like “You Enjoy Myself” was a forgone conclusion, the band ripped into “Sand!” Taking the road less traveled at every juncture this fall, Phish threw yet another curveball to the delight of every person in the building. As if a band possessed, the guys crushed another primary jam vehicle with a purpose. Carving out layers of snarling sound, Trey led the troops in a climactic rendition of “Sand” that saw them keep on cranking where they have so often faltered late in the second set. And then the release.
As the band drifted into “Slave,” the final chapter of our musical fairy tale had been revealed. With one more push, Phish would reach the finish line of a championship race. And what a push it was. Unfurling a delicate jam, the band spent a good amount of time in a mellow, reflective space, allowing the events of the night to catch up to every soul in the house. The entire version felt very refined, ever so gradually building momentum, as the guys wove a graceful finale. They had made it. We had made it. And it was good.
The look Page’s face as he thanked the crowd said it all. Sincerity, humility and pride spilled from his aura as he turned to each side of the arena and thanked them earnestly. It was a special night of Phish and we all knew it. The classic Beatles cover “A Day in a Life”—a track heralded for its groundbreaking nature at the time—felt incredibly appropriate for an encore. While “Tweezer Reprise” stamped the night complete and the chorus of “Step into the Freezer” echoed throughout Hampton Coliseum, I thought back over the last 18 years, and thanked the good Lord that I took that step.
I: Julius, Funky Bitch, Back on the Train, Roses Are Free > Sample in a Jar, Ginseng Sullivan, 46 Days, Divided Sky, Bold As Love
II: Paul and Silas, Tweezer > Golden Age > Piper -> Takin’ Care of Business > Also Sprach Zarathustra > Sand, Slave to the Traffic Light
E: A Day in the Life, Tweezer Reprise
Tags: 2013, Fall '13, The Moment
Laughing w/ me or laughing at me as long as you’re laughing 😆
Blue Cross! what’s it gonna be?
need more music for working here, maybe 12/7/97..
first time I’ve wanted to Webcast, wouldn’t even be watching it but would be nice to have that music flowing in.
Picked up 12er or Torpedo for $12. Helluva deal. Feelin like cast’n tmrw. Glad to you hook you w/ my info Lil Um bc well I dig your style man.
hmm, didn’t get anything with that last one huh?
yeah mang! mr.j.toews at zee Gee Mall. hit me up. If everything goes right I’ll be at Jazz Fest!
…
$$ Page Rhodes Sorcery $$
I won’t get Timber this weekend, that is a bummer. But happy for the Roc-ers.
Crosseyed to open set 2? Not streaming but following along on Twitter and here. Expecting some seminal tweets from the butt of babes to let me know if its good.
great. LU broke the BB
Chewgotitmang. Mañana amigo. & fuck yeah! Viva Festivus.
^’at zee’. that’s German for @
@voopa, no. I’m trying for a final inventory of all my missing music. I’m missing a couple DVDs too but whatever. If you can help with audio that’d be great. I think it’s basically those 3 soundtracks and Three From the Vault
my pull was too strong
Bobbie D. -Kendrick Lamar is playing Oakland tomorrow. Opening for Kanye. He was live today on 106.1 talking it up. I’m outta town working. just thought i remembered you interested in seein him.
but I’m trying to get it all nailed down once and for all. a mighty organizational effort is called for.
lol Kanye
good for him though, bringing the hottest flow in the game to open for him. not lacking in confidence that’s for sure
Loser 9-3-77
Oh that’s right. They are playing San Jose too. If it weren’t for the fact that I’m broke I still wouldn’t go. Kanye will not get my money. Will have to catch Kendrick next time.
Saw Danny brown played the festival on that fake island this weekend. Dunno how I missed that. Atoms for peace was there too. Oh yeah it’s called treasure island and I heard its man made like statan island. See also: trash.
if you put in that show and don’t play the Peggy-O I have to fly to wherever you are and slap you upside your head
hey, it’s in the rules. look it up. not up to me.
nope, interesting hearing Kendrick talk about him today. He brought it up. that people are hearin about him as some one with a voice for the people, and that Kanye is talked about as an egomaniac and all. He defended Kanye, saying he was (exactly as you just put!) confident, and exuded and distilled confidence in others. That he was a real team player.
Said when he talks to people he tries to put those notions about Yeezy to rest…
but he’s in their with the money now. we’ll see how good his next album is now that he has ‘made it’.
.
hoodstream not online?! CE&P raging. Bunky McBunkerstein!
dat’s kewl. fly over hear and we’ll kick it. a slap worthy act I agree. Luckily I’m listening to that whole set.
OH BALONEY! i don’t believe for one second that kanye isn’t a douche just like he acts. he shoulda gotten the memo a long time ago that 1. he isn’t jay z and 2. he should learn to be more professional like jay z. Wether or not you like jay z, the dude is getting shit done.
kendrick does kinda have this voice of the people thing going. telling stories like 2pac used to.
Treasure Island. Yup, used to work for A.P.E and set up the festival the first few years, didn’t go this time. Atoms could have been cool, maybe Beck…
Nice try Bingos! i see little bit of white though, try again
well that’s what Kendrick said today on the radio…