TAB in KC – A Macro View
After witnessing Trey and Classic TAB in Kansas City on Sunday night, there is only one thing to say – believe the hype – the band is playing as well as all the glowing reviews have reported, and Trey has brought his own chops to another level. With childlike passion and a ear to ear smile plastered on his face, Trey played with a relaxed confidence all night long, as visibly, happy, and excited as ever. Historically a place for different types different playing, his band progressed from a showcase of guitar acrobatics to big-band percussive grooves. But Anastasio’s current incarnation of TAB may represent the most polished alternate outlet for Trey thus far, boasting the band’s tightest playing in memory, while allowing plenty of room for his own creativity. If this version of TAB could be described in a few words, they would be be fun, energetic, and infectious. With revitalized horn arrangements, directed improvisation, and an influx of new pieces, TAB is hitting on all cylinders right now, producing music on par or surpassing anything Trey’s side project has ever done.
The role of the horn section provided the first noticeable difference in the musical makeup of this band. Playing through composed sections with new arrangements, courtesy of Orchestra Nashville’s Don Hart, Jen Hartswick, Natalie Cressman, and Russell Remington blended with the music rather than sitting atop. Hartswick noted the more integrated arrangements in a recent interview, explaining how Hart “had written really beautiful, elaborate and involved horn parts that essentially was written like an orchestra, like a string section would be.” While artistically infusing the horn section into his show, Trey noticeably carved out time for “Classic TAB” to improvise as a quartet. And with Trey and Ray Paczkowski bursting with connected ideas over a creative pocket, these scorching excursions stood out as the highlights of the show.
The style of the quartet’s playing mirrored the more compact style of 2009 Phish. No longer indulging in 20 minute “Jibboos” or “Sands,” Trey led the band in more concise jamming, sparking original ideas right out of the gates in a parallel case of musical density. Looking to Ray almost immediately in every jam, the two initiated the melodic half as Tony and Russ thumped away dynamic grooves. The four-piece worked noticeably well, as the rhythm section joined in the improv more earnestly than in the past. “Push On Til the Day” and “Alive Again,” and more specifically, “Night Speaks to a Woman” and “Money, Love, and Change” featured organic first set jams built over unique themes rather than Trey merely shredding over a groove. And during the second set, the horns left during every jam, allowing the quartet to create unique music that far surpassed anything from their 2008 “Northern Exposure” mini-tour.
During some pieces, Trey kept one or more horn players out to add to the textures, and none worked better than Remington’s flute addition to “Liquid Time.” This lyrically poignant song got into one of the most cohesive jams of the show, transcending groove and bathing in melodic improv. But the obscene, guitar-annihilation crime scene of the night came during the second-set centerpiece, “Sand.” Typical of his TAB freestyling, Trey moved between rhythm chops and soaring leads as the he led the band to their highest point of the evening. By the time he brought the song’s theme back around, the band had sculpted a nasty musical segment that blew the roof off the Uptown Theatre.
The way that Trey called the horn players back to stage also brought an interesting facet to the show. Often signaling for one or two at a time, he clearly thought about where each jam had progressed and which sounds would best blend with each piece. Eventually calling all three members back by the peak of every jam, the horns built each song back to its full form before ending. The cohesion of the horn section brought a “finished” feel to many of the songs, enhancing the overall performance and never detracting from the flow. All the players got a chance to shine individually on “Mr. Completely,” as the jam vehicle doubled as a band showcase, allowing everyone to take solos as Trey comped along with signature rhythm licks.
On several newer songs, the horns stayed on throughout, bringing whole new elements to pieces like “Goodbye Head,” “Valentine,” “Shine,” and “Alaska.” In the same interview, Hartswick noted “on a lot of the new songs that Trey brought to [Hart] months and months and months ago, and he had written really…involved horn parts…The difference is that during the entire song, the horns are playing the entire time, and not just sounds at the end of the jam. It is a really, really beautiful thing, and exciting.” The balance between the septet and the quartet worked nicely, giving the show completely different feels from moment to moment.
But the overwhelming quality to the show, as has been restated by many this tour, was the genuinely obvious fun that the entire band had onstage from start to finish. Trey leapt around the stage like it was his romper room, exchanging looks and laughs, as well as musical ideas, with each and every member. One couldn’t help but soak up the excitement that radiated from the band all night long. A unique crew, from the 18-year old trombone phenom, Natalie Cressman, to the Vermonster, Ray Paczkowski, this group just seems to click in a way that no TAB arrangement has in quite some time. Integrating jazzier, big-band elements with an eclectic horn section, but staying rooted in guitar-led improv, this group succeeds where other Trey projects have fallen short. As they wind down their final week of tour, Trey and Classic TAB have left an exciting wake behind them, creating a buzz in the community with impressive nightly revelries. With more off-season touring to come later in the year, this project is just getting started – but what a start it’s been.
I: Shine, Push On, Alive Again, Birdwatcher, Mozambique, Cayman Review, Dragonfly, Night Speaks to a Woman, Valentine, Let Me Lie, Sweet Dreams Melinda, Money Love & Change, Tuesday, Backwards Down the Line*, Brian & Robert*, Back on the Train*, Sample in a Jar*, Wilson*
II: Gotta Jibboo, Liquid Time, Sand, Goodbye Head > Mr. Completely, Alaska, Sultans of Swing
E: Show of Life, First Tube
* Trey Solo Acoustic
======
Jams of the Day:
“Sand” 2.21.10 KC II
Some choice work by Trey in this Kansas City highlight.
[audio:http://phishthoughts.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/tab2010-02-21d3t02.mp3]“Free” 12.15.99 II
A highlight of today’s Download of the Day, and a favorite “Free” since the night it dropped.
[audio:http://phishthoughts.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/ph1999-12-15d2t04.mp3]======
DOWNLOAD OF THE DAY:
12.15.99 MCI Center, Washington, DC < Megaupload
My desktop computer, as they say in the Bay, is hella-infected, so no torrents today. Enjoy this gem from December ’99, going out via reader request to JerZ!
I: Down with Disease, Farmhouse, Bathtub Gin, Wolfman’s Brother, Guyute, Train Song, You Enjoy Myself
II: Sample in a Jar, Maze, Free, Dirt, Reba, Halley’s Comet >Suzy Greenberg
E: Frankenstein, Rocky Top
Source: Microtech Gefell m210 > Apogee AD-1000 > Sony D100 (@ 44.1 kHz)
Tags: 2010, Classic TAB
Headwall the face/bowl
@Halcyon
You, sir, are living the life.
well, off to the show. ‘night everyone!
im pretty baned.. enjoying some tunes and some drinks..
Cool Week thanks. He definitely rides up there. He’s fing psychotic. When he was a kid he was the youngest rider for Shut skateboards, the true og NYC skateboard company. He’s been in tahoe for a long minute. If you ever catch a trilogy arts video he’s in there riding snow and he’s bent. Have fun at all the shows. Always loved me some Greyboy.
law school has really been tough on the bane.
shame.
@silly
i imagine it has
are we the only ones up here?
btw i totally passed out last night during set 2.. my bad 🙂
@lycan, the more recent TSU show you mean? If so, I will spin it later tonight or tomorrow. I’m caught up on TAB now and not yet ready to start Jambay part 2.
@Lycan
thats cool, dude.
i was about to pass out, too. I drank two beers and ate a big dinner and was just about spent.
haha. i better get back into shape for the summer.
spring training as robear called it.
passed out during the encore here. something about being already on the couch did it to me (it couldn’t have been the drinks and smoke)
its never the drinks and smoke, joe., never.
tuesday nights are just tired nights.
wednesdays, too.
really enjoyed the show though. got to crank it on headphones for part and the full stereo for part (when the lady’s tv programs were on commercial or over)
well, Wednesday is a work night here so I have to stay up…and be sober.
i agree, the stream was really cool.
its pretty fun to be able to chat on the board during the show.
bummer, joe.
i hear ya, though, all weeknights are work nights for me, too.
no chat for me last night, just the full screen of the show.
Re: accoustic mini-set. It doesn’t bother me at all, even if it’s not my thing. If Trey likes it and a majority of the people in attendance like it AND, most importantly, it’s not really replacing any other music just taking time off of set break, then I say go for it.
Re: Trey’s playing. He really looks to be on top of his game right now. Able to access his full bag of tricks on command.
Yeah. Trey should celebrate his new life however he wants.
None of this would be possible without him.
clifford ball reba = nicely constructed. it always blows my mind to hear now what i heard in person then.
Im gonna head to bed.
i think im getting a cold.
have a good night, blackboarders!
Weird, I wake up from sleeping all evening and find there’s been a 3 hour window of no comments? Is everyone just busy tonight or something?
HELP!!
My friend is trying to go to the trey show friday night but doesnt no if he can make it before the show starts. i know the showtime says 8 but is it like phish and he will be a half hour later or has the tour so far been promptly starting. please let me know asap as the show is tommorow