Date: Fri, 19 Apr 2002 13:04:54 EDT
From: Shineon2388@aol.com
To: dws@archive.phish.net
Subject: (no subject)


  Phish shows in Worcester are always great. This show is immortalized on Live Phish
Volume 6. The show opens with Funky Bitch and YaMar. Then comes a humorous Carini where
Trey keeps nearly laughing. Runaway Jim provided a nice contrast to the metal sounding
Carini.  After an amazing set opener of Buried Alive, the opening notes to...Wipeout? I
never expected Phish to play that again. Then the famous Chalkdust Torture. This is
probably the Chalkdust version of the '94 Tweezerfests. During the song, Mike starts
playing the bass line to Mirror In The Bathroom. Trey follows by singing the first two
verses of the song. After returning to the Chalkdust theme, we go into a blues version of
Dog Log. I bet Paul was happy. Then Sanity and...Wipeout again. They never gave Phans a
break because then they went into a Mike's Groove. The encore had two of my favorites.
Wading and Golgi. And then.....they took another pass at Wipeout.
             I wasn't at the show, but from the CD, I wish I was.  -Jimmy (and Poster)

Date: Wed, 9 Jun 1999 12:07:25 EDT From: Boudreau66@aol.com To: dws@protos.lifesci.ucla.edu Cc: PIP3351328@aol.com, shafty@mailcity.com, Boudreau66@aol.com Subject: FALL 98 REVIEW: 11/27/98 WORCESTER, MA This show was a blast...just want to say that right off the bat...From the eight hour drive to my bud's place to the hour drive from there to the Centrum to the bar across the street to inside the venue...This show was cool as cool can be. What a great way to burn off the Thanksgiving calories!! This is my first review, and I have read many a review to prepare myself for writing this one, which I feel totally capable of. Set I: Funky Bitch: While noone else seems to understand why this song was used as an opener, I do. It jams. That's all. This Bitch jammed fairly well, not as well as the Bitch in 12.12.97 at Albany, but she jammed quite well. Ya Mar: I couldn't understand this one. It drew comparisons to the 8.14.97 Darien Lake Show (with Ken Kesey) where They opened with Ya Mar and then went into Funky Bitch. I guess The Guys like to switch it up here and there. Carini: GREAT SONG!! I don't understand why it came right after Ya Mar...seemed like "strange placement" for this one, but it rocked nonetheless. I like the "Piece of Ass" lyrics instead of the "Naked Dude" lyrics. Runaway Jim: Like everyone else, I couldn't understand why they chose Jim for the fourth song, but They did. Who cares anyway?? Jim kicks ass!! nice and tight. Meat: Although this song is cool and funked out...well, who am I to argue?? It kicked ass. Nice pauses . Reba: Didn't need to understand why They played this...Reba is always fresh. always. My Old Home Place: I couldn't understand the placement of this song, either...why not after Carini?? Why not after Ya Mar?? Fun song though...funny to sing along with. Dogs Stole Things: Why didn't this make it onto the Ghost disc?? Vultures: Why didn't this make it onto the Ghost disc?? TOTALLY understood why Vultures came after Dogs Stole Things...*wink* Circus: My girlfriend loves this song. If They're going to do a song about the circus, I'd prefer it to be Roggae. Not this crap. It's decent, the kind of song you can play in your church...I just don't dig it as much as Trey does. And I couldn't understand it's placement, either. Birds of a Feather: What can I say?? I just don't understand. While I didn't understand why They played half the songs that They played in the first set(let's be honest...it must be "The Cool Thing" to second guess the band's choice of songs and song order, since EVERYBODY DOES IT), the intermission allowed me to realize that--HEY!! I'm Mike and They're Phish. I shelled out my money and drove nine hours to see them. Why should I try to understand why they play a song when?? Last I checked, it was THEIR songs and THEIR musical talent that I like to see and hear. Okay, Trey, Mike, Page and Jon...I understand now. Buried Alive: TOTALLY FRESH!! Good as an opener, better with Giant Country Horns, but hey...I understand now. =) Wipe Out: Now THIS I was not ready for. I was still trying to figure out if that was a Viking Hat Fish had on (my seats were WAY far away from the stage), and well...it was Wipe Out. We did the Twist. Chalkdust: I had a feeling that they'd tease Wipe Out in and out of Chalkdust...they've done it before with other songs...but I had no idea. Chalkdust kicked, of course. Mirror in The Bathroom: Never heard it before or since (except on the tape), thought Trey made the words up on the spot...but then again, I thought the same thing about Free the first time I saw it. Different. Chalkdust>Dog Gone Dog: WHY THE HELL DO YOU CALL IT DOG LOG?? Trey Introduced it all those years ago as DOG GONE DOG. The new version of the White Tape lists it as DOG GONE DOG. Where the hell did all of you get Dog Log?? Heavy, Bluesey...my favorite version. Listened to it as I searched my city's blizzard laden streets for my fiancee's dog a couple of months after the show. We eventually found the good doggie... Chalkdust>Sanity: Haven't heard from Jimmy Buffett in a loooong time...COOL! Buffalo Bill: Quite the welcome surprise...Bill was cool...almost burst my vocal chords trying to keep up. Mike's>Hydrogen: Pretty cool, yes indeed. Such a beautiful harmonic little ditty...I've always been a big fan. Mike's>Weekapaug: There was once a time when I wondered exactly what this was. Now, I have heard them all. Antelope: This song and Rift get my vote for most frequently played. ENCORE: Wading: What the hell is this?? This is another crap song. This makes Bouncing and Sparkle just about the best songs on Earth. I really do enjoy Bouncing and Sparkle is a good song deep down inside, but WADING JUST PLAIN SUCKS! It's the ONLY Phish song that I don't like and I really can't stand it!! Golgi: Classic, just classic. Wipe Out: At the time, the funniest thing I'd ever heard. Great show...don't try to understand. Just be. Peace
Date: Fri, 11 Dec 1998 08:51:34 -0600 From: pzerbo@aol.com Subject: 11.27 & 28.98, Worcester Centrum, Worcester, MA: PZ Review, Pt. 1 Pt. 1: 11.27.98 Standard disclaimer: I have been for the most part thrilled with '98 Phish to this point, and while I have my pet peaves, I am far from jaded. For context these were shows #46 and #47, and I've heard most Phish tapes that circulate with any regularity. My reviews are long-ish and narrative of what was up overall, so if that isn't your bag, bail! These being the only shows I was to catch between Vegas and MSG, two big events, my expectations were in check for a low-key weekend, and I was more psyched to have quality time with good friends than anything. For the most part, the shows exceeded my expectations. :-) Crew & Setup: my core Phishy travel companions Ken, Ann, and Lilly, and at different times Eroica, Patrick, Ed, Marco, Pete & Tim. Wed. night picked up Lilly and Ann in Providence en route from NYC to the Cape. Kiler Thanksgiving day & dinner in Barnstable with the Mortons, including a little late-night "loop" action, always a treat. After a lazy Cape Friday (I could sure get used to having more shows where I can wake up on Cape Cod!), made tracks to Boston, from where I would commute for the weekend, then off to Worcester. I'm afraid to give away our "secret spot," but given the collective retention of the group, The Brew City Grill and Brew Pub right across I-290 (15 minte walk to venue) served as an excellent venue for pre-show grub, brew, meeting place, and free parking for each of the nights. Friendly staff, great microbrew selection, good food, not packed, Friday night was a Magic Hat glass and t-shirt giveaway, I'm not sure what more you could ask from a pre-show meeting spot. Marco and I busted a move early toward the venue Friday night, visited the guest list window, then made rounds around the scant-n-sketchy lot scene. Nothing much shaking, so inside to meet up with friends. So, it turned out I had pulled a bone-head maneuver and walked from the bar with a friend's keys. Crisis narrowly averted, temporary stress situation, but all worked out as groovy as can be expected, mostly due to beyond-the-call chill factor exercised on the part of my friend Pete. Ken, Lilly, Patrick, Ed and I settled in to our section 124 seats (Fishman side, back by Kuroda's rig, about halfway up the first section), ready to boogie. 11.27.98 I: Funky Bitch, Ya Mar, Carini, Runaway Jim, Meat, Reba, My Old Home Place, Dogs Stole Things, Vultures, Circus, BOAF. (note: contrary to assertions made elsewhere, to my recollection there was not a single segue in this set) I'll state from the outset that I am not a huge fan of this set. It doesn't qualify as a stinker by any means, but neither does it have many highlights, or any particular flow. Funky Bitch was a fine opener, band looked to me mellow but happy, possibly excepting Trey who seemed a little more pumped up. CK obliged their desire to get a look at the assembled crowd by sheding a lot of light on the situation. Nothing especially noteworthy about the Bitch or Ya Mar, though you will never see me complain in the face of two of anything from Mike. I was a little surprised at how pumped I was to hear Carini (first since 12.30.97 for me). It wasn't tight by any stretch, in fact it was borderline convoluted and had a tough time coming together. Fortunately for us listeners, the resolution of the tension was through pure energy, they really fought through it with some gusto! Clearly the highlight of the set for me. After the last appearance of Runaway Jim in this venue, we all know that anything can happen, but this is a down-to-earth Jim. Coincidence or no I'm not to say, but once the glowsticks got any momentum, the band and CK come down on a hard jam, and -bright- white lights! To me it was hysterically well-timed, as it wasn't out of the ordinary as far as a lighting maneuver at that point in the tune, but that extra shot of bright white to say "not now!" just had me chuckling. Meat. I'm still on the fence here. I didn't groove to it in Vegas, and I didn't groove on it here. It is a fine tune and all, it just doesn't seem to have enough substance to stand on its own. Almost like the essence of the song could be summed up more concisely, perhaps as part of another tune. Or something could be built around it... or something. Reba follows, and while others I spoke with whose opinions I respect found a good deal of merit in this version, it didn't catch a spark with me. It just came across as forced, certainly nothing approaching the wonderfully lyrical Lemonwheel version (or dozens of other versions recent and otherwise). My Old Home Place was a suprise, and not an unpleasant one, and even if you don't like it, at least it is over in short order :-). I'll be extremely brief in my comments on the rest of the set. Clearly the most dissapointing half hour of Phish music I have heard this year (10 shows). It isn't that I have anything against any of the tunes (Dogs Stole Things, Vultures, Circus, BOAF), but I just couldn't develop any flow, almost to the point of slight impatience for a tune (and the set) to end. Section 124 was a bit boisterous for my liking, nothing too obtrusive or out of the ordinary really, but just a ton more noticeable when the set is dragging. While I really do like BOAF (really!), I bailed for the can, it had to happen at some point. I'm told it was better than average, but I feel no great sense of loss :-). It's really not that the set was all that bad. It reminded me in spirit of 11.29.97 I, which had some highlights, very diverse and extensive song selection, but just no flow, no juice. I proceded to made tracks downstairs to the Clinic in hopes of finding a friend. OK, OK, so I wanted to grab a cold one or two, taboot. Almost subdued compared to my last Clinic visit on Halloween, but those were extraordinary party circumstances :-), and the room did have extremely positive, chill energy. I was 1 for 2 on my missions (I got the beer), but after a few minutes there wasn't any band or anyone I particuarly knew well in the room, so I bailed in favor of hanging with my friends back in the seats. A good move, as I got to see a bunch of folks there and in transit I hadn't seen in a number of gigs. A reasonable (40 minute?) break, and we are off for set II. 11.27.98 II: Buried Alive, Wipe Out -> Chalk Dust -> Mirror in the Bathroom -> Chalk Dust -> Dog Log -> Chalk Dust, Sanity, Buffalo Bill, Mike's -> Hydrogen -> Groove -> Wipe Out -> Groove -> "Groove Do-Over" -> Antelope. E: Wading in the Velvet Sea -> Golgi -> Wipe Out Hmmmmm, good! I adore this set. Whatever halftime attitude adjustments made were at every turn for the better! Buried Alive hits the ground running, very spirited, definitely establishing a more energetic vibe. Wipe Out was bust-a-nut funny, but no token either, especially from our man Mr. Fishman, yowza. If you didn't immediately think Hawaii, you haven't been paying proper attention! Two images flashed in my head during this: the "picture" of Trey "surfin' gnarley tubes, dude" on the below-the-fold cover of the November/December '94 Schvice, and that of me sipping a fruity drink with a paper umbrella under a palm tree on 12.31.99! :-) I don't recall specifically anything about the transition to Chalk Dust, only that I was a bit taken by surprise that they would play this twice in the same show (BOAF set 1 closer), albeit with the alternate lyrics. The transition to Mirror in the Bathroom found me in joyous stitches, a genuine LOL, get-psyched moment! Back when we listened to music on vinyl, the English Beat was in solid rotation among my friends. When MTV first came out, I seem to recall English Beat getting a lot of play time, or maybe I'm off by a year or two. I know there are a large number of young folks with wide-ranging musical knowledge, but I coudn't resist a chuckle in the crowd reaction, going from "can't I live while I'm young?" to a kinda bewildered WTF? for a large percentage during MITB, back to a frenzied state on the return to Chalk Dust. Being a tad illiterate to much current popular music these days, it was a nice reminder that the band members and many folks their age share an eerily similar musical background. The Chalk Dust continued to smoke along, with consistent Wipe Out themes woven throughout, breaking down into the up-beat, bluesy (some have said almost My Soul-ish, though I didn't pick that up) groove that would set the stage for a strange Dog Log. A foreshadowing of Paul's oddly-infamous place in the weekends events perhaps! I'm a sucker for Dog Log, they can really play it any way they see fit and I'll be happy, but this one was especially entertaining. Back into the Chalk Dust ending, someone will be sure to correct me if I missed this, but there were no additional vocals/chorus on the last return visit to Chalk Dust? Anyway, swiftly into Sanity, what a fabulous call! A physical, tempo breather after a taxing opening run of tunes, but without any letdown in vibe; I couldn't have crafted a list any better! I got into this Sanity a little more than I did at the Wheel; it isn't that it was especialy better, in fact in many ways they were interchangeable. I just really need a good visual fix on Trey to get into this song, I need to get a good vibe on the delivery, attitude, inflexion and such. Dug it, great version. Bufallo Bill is great from a standpoint of rarities (though not that terribly rare, I caught the 8.17.97 and 11.29.97 versions). I can't say that I groove to the tune especially, but Fishman seems to like it and it is nice and short. Hmmm, Mike's. I'll need to hear the tapes, but was this -eerily- similar to the Vegas version? That is -not- registered as a complaint, just an observation. To me the defining characteristic of both versions is how much they "stay inside the theme" so to speak. Hard driving, very powerful with clear intent and precise delivery, but not ever straying too far from a primary theme. Good, very good even, just not terribly exploratory. How can one not be psyched for Hydrogen? :-) My first (the first?) since 11.22.97, just glorious, save for some elements of the crowd who were under the mistaken impression I'd rather hear them yell than Trey play. Again, the crowd wasn't horribly obnoxious, but enough to distract from quiet moments that should be enjoyed with the ears, not the mouth. But I digress, constantly. The Weekapaug will take a while to digest on tape, it takes quite a number of twists and turns! It begins without any particular fanfare, but then after a chorus (or two or three?), it breaks down into alternating tight and loose grooves around Wipe Out. When it finds its way back to the Weekapaug chorus again, it is -fast-. Any faster it would be 78/chipmunk styled, almost like a "gag" rendition, just really silly and frenzied. Trey leads everyone into an abrubt but full ending, talks to first Mike, then Page (via grand-top "cup") as if to indicate another tune. Instead, we enter what Ken and I immediately dubbed Weekapaug "do-over" or "alternate version." Or, "what Weekapaug Groove could have been like with a 10 minute space break-down ending!" It was cool! I may not be in the majority, but I -love- 10.31.98 III, and this break-down of Weekapaug is very much in the mode of the early grooves out of Wolfman's from that set. I was sensing a walk-off-to-feedback ending, but to all of our benefit, Trey makes the calls, not me :-) so we are treated to Antelope. Good but not great version, a lot of unresolved musical tension, certainly nothing aproaching Vegas (or even Lemonwheel, or Va Beach, or any number of recent versions), but great energy nonetheless. Quick break, and back for Wading in the Velvet Sea. I love the tune, I thought the positioning was fine, but I just can't groove when the crowd noise level competes with that of the band. Folks, please, there is a time to chat, and there is a time to chill; the slightest bit of attention to the vibe of the room should indicate which is which. Golgi -> Wipe Out was groovy... again, not quite the equal of Vegas on the Golgi, but solid, and the "let's give Fishman one more moment in the sun the 10th time around the Wipe Out theme" was a fitting ending to a solid show. Too uneven in the first set to immediately qualify as "great" in my book, but the 2nd set was extremely good, and tapes and time will tell the story, as always. After assembling folks and connecting on post-show activities, I bolted downstairs to again try to visit a friend. All band members around this time... Trey with his black leather jacket, Sierra Nevada Pale Ale, and extremely happy disposition was hanging in the hallway holding court with (I presume) friends and crew. I passed Page on my way in/his way out, he looked in good spirits, while Mike & Fishman were chilling inside the small-ish room allocated for Clinic purposes. Not that I've really ever seen him otherwise disposed, but I've been really struck lately by how healthy and happy Fishman seems 'up close'... I guess it is just the difference between the image I've always had of him with stringy hair, drenched in sweat in a frock (and viking horns or other bizarre objects) versus him in decent-to-nice clothes, nice haircut, lookin' sharp and just chill and cheerful as all heck. Anyway, my mission was still to find my friend, but unfortunately no dice. Had a quick beer and settled in with the group of 4 or 5 folks chatting with Mike and chilled for a while. I don't know whether it is a pet name or what, but FWIW I can report the Hawaii thing being jokingly refered to as "The Big Kahuna." I like it! I had friends waiting at the aftershow, so temporarily bailing on my mission I made way to the service elevator, only to find myself followed close behind by Mike, Bart Butler (if you are ever looking for Bart for any reason, just find the nearest elevator!) and a number of other folks with similar aftershow destination. The aftershow itself wasn't especially interesting, but the beer was free and had someone actually dedicated to serving it (and checking IDs, providing for comic relief to some of us), a nice treat, and the room was decent, overlooked the outside goings-on, if a little crowded. Nothing really happening here, so we bailed back to Boston after a short stay. In order to party a bit, and get some sleep and rest up to repeat the process the next day. Which will be the subject of Part II, to be posted, er, sometime tonight or tomorrow or whenever I finish. Cheers, -Phillip ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 Nov 1998 02:40:23 -0500 From: Frank and Earnest Subject: Worcester 11/27 review Just got home from Worcester a little while ago. I still can't get over the second set. Absolutely phenomenal. Easily the best set of Phish I've seen live - maybe the best I've heard (20 shows ~500 hours). Funky Bitch opener was solid. I'm a little bummed they're playing it on such a regular basis but since I hadn't seen it yet this tour it was nice to hear. Ya Mar was standard. Carini got the place rocking and a ten minute Jim hit the spot. Meat is not one of my favorites but this was a decent version. I was unexcited to hear Reba at first but the jam was great. I mentioned to my tourmate that I could use a blue grass tune after that and they started up My Old Home Place. Dog Stole Things continued the dog theme started in Jim and Vultures was cool - my first time seeing it live. When the Circus Comes was very chill and Birds of a Feather was very standard and was a decent set closer. The first set was your average great phish. Maybe a 5.0 on the SJCRS. Second Set blew me away. Like I said, this was the best set of Phish I have heard. After a 40 minutes set break the boys came back on and Fishman and Mike started up Buried Alive. I was pleasantly surprised (shocked even) to hear Wipeout next. After a couple of minutes wipeout led to a chalkdust. At first I was a little bummed to get another chalkdust so soon after New haven, but oh how wrong I was. Chalkdust had teases of wipeout all the way through and after two verses Trey sang a snippet of a song I was unfamiliar with - which later turned out to be an English Beat song called Mirror in the Bathroom. After going back into chalkdust they went into a bluesy version of Dog Log which lasted a couple of minutes. After that it was back into Chalkdust. I have to be honest I was thinking of the Bomb Factory show and I honestly thought we might get a whole set of segues in and out of Chalkdust. Silly wishful me. This was by far the most experimental/coolest/best chalkdust I have ever heard. Chalkdust finally segued into Sanity and then that was it for Chalkdust for the night. Sanity was standard, but still a treat because of its scarcity. Buffalo Bill was a welcome tune and it led into an inspired Mike's. Mike's was a great ten minute version with some great ambient jamming. It really lost the Mike's theme after only three or four minutes but the Jam was unreal. After a simple tease (I swear I heard Trey play the lick once) they went into Hydrogen. Hydrogen was beautiful and led right into Weekapaug. Weekapaug was excellently jammed with a segue into wipeout and back into weekapaug. I can't even remember the last time I heard a true old school Mike's Groove without stuff in th middle. This was a truly fantastic Mike's Groove with great jams in both Mike's and Weekapaug. A hot Antelope finished off the set. Maybe the best Antelope I've heard. When Page hit the first note of the Wading in the Velvet Sea encore, I thought it was going to be Coil and was a little bummed but I was pleasantly surprised to hear WITVS even though it is being played so much. Golgi was a standard version but it was great. Yet another Wipeout finshed off the night with a bang. I haven't seen so much energy on stage in a long time. I was in awe. The second set definitely gets a 10.0 as far as I'm concerned. Good night to all and see you in Worcester the next couple of nights. Sharin' the Groove, Dan Rubin ----------- ------------------------------ From KAZDEYNA@aol.com Sat Dec 12 16:21:26 1998 Date: Wed, 2 Dec 1998 09:05:29 EST From: KAZDEYNA@aol.com To: dan@archive.phish.net Subject: Worcster Reviews first two nights (long) ------------- ***Set II was one of the best Phish sets I've seen*** Phish - Friday, November 27, 1998 The Centrum, Worcester, MA Set 1: Funky Bitch 8:00pm Ya Mar -> 8:07pm Carini Had a Lumpy Head 8:17pm Runaway Jim 8:24pm Meat 8:33pm Reba 8:37pm Plow 8:53pm Dogs Stole Things Vultures When the Circus Comes 9:10pm Birds of a Feather 9:15pm 9:24pm Set 2: Buried Alive 10:05pm Wipe Out -> Chalk Dust Torture* -> Mirror in the Bathroom** -> Chalk Dust Torture Jam -> Dog Log -> 10:20pm Chalk Dust Torture Jam Sanity 10:22pm Buffalo Bill -> Mike's Song -> 10:30pm I am Hydrogen -> Weekapaug Groove -> Jam/Wipe Out -> Weekapaug Groove -> Weekapaug Groove Reprise -> R2D2 Jam -> Run Like an Antelope 11:10pm 11:24 pm Encore: Wading in the Velvet Sea -> 11:26pm Golgi Apparatus -> Wipe Out 11:40pm *Wipe Out theme throughout song and jams **The English Beat cover (1st time played?) The energy in the now 15 year old Centrum was high! The place was very excited and thanks to Phish Tickets By Mail, I had a nice floor seat (with some nice folks around me ) to observe it all. The ride to the show with Rob Hoffman, and a pleasant converstion at set break with Dan Gardner made the whole evening even that more enjoyable. Set I: Trey came out on stage excited as well, smiling and pumping his fist, quickly glancing throughout the front rows to see the fans, already making eye contact with most. He was all fired up to play! Mike took some quick peeks but mostly played with his bass and amp, Fish still wearing the Viking Hat (he must've lost a bet somewhere along the tour and is now relegated to wearing this hat for the remainder of the tour) also checked out those on his side. Page was ready to play, but once he saw what the slight delay in the start was by Trey checking out the crowd he too glanced us over. Throughout the night the band kept in close contact with each other with various glances and hand gestures, very much in sync (unlike the second night, but more on that in the review of Worcester night II). Funky Bitch to start was a nice standard beginning. Mike doing well with the vocals therefore probably getting himself another song that being Ya Mar. Trey tries to tap but pops a big "Peaches" request balloon with the neck of his guitar. Ya Mar contained a nice Hammond organ "Play It Leo" solo from Page with the remaining jam building off of Trey's picking through out it. The jam began to blend into the first chords to Carini. Carini had a Lumpy Head was strange. It sounded good and strong from where I was sitting but Trey seemed a little upset. He kept glancing over at Fish either asking for help with the lyrics, in which Fish began singing it together with Trey, or maybe Fish was playing it to fast or whatever, either one Trey seemed a little irked, however somewhere in the middle of the song the band began to arrive at what Trey was looking for with Mike pounding on the bass, and Trey's solo ripped through this song and a very worthy version was manufactured. Trey ended the song with a shrug of the shoulders suggesting "at least we finished it off well" and also exchanging small miniature "thank yous" with Fish (something similar to Weir's small "thank yous" but even smaller). Weird?!? Definitely an inside joke. Runaway Jim was good, very rock and rollish, with the jam containing the Runaway Jim throughout the whole song. Trey contributed many 'high', 'tense' notes all along the solo/jam. Mike glanced up in the middle of one of the jams (just before the "by the time he came home he was 17" part) to see an oncoming glowstick headed for him, he was able to manage to get his head out of the way, with the glowstick bouncing off his right shoulder. Mike smiled and slightly shook his head, as if to say "you got me". Meat followed, and since I have never seen them play this song when I was up close (except for Prague but it was a first for me then and too new to appreciate and understand) I was really never able to follow what goes on. This song is definitely not an arena song, it's more like a jazz club song. It is amazingly intricate with all four members singing different parts, and playing different complex structures. They are all doing their own thing and at the same time all looking at the others for cues. Amazing!!!!!! This is not an arena song, since the people in the 300 sections probably cannot see the interplay and therefore don't get the song's concept. Trey is constantly looking at Fish. (BTW - Trey has a crush on Fish ;) After tonight you can really tell why Fish was Trey's best man, these two guys really are close friends and Trey definitely gets off on Fish and Fish's antics). A nice job with Meat! Reba's solo started off as a nice three-beat experiment by Trey which the band quickly picked up and abandoned and then just soared as most good Reba jams do. Excellent version! Plow aka My Old Home Place was well done and contained some nice piano work form Page. Dogs Stole and Vultures were normal, after the show a friend thought he heard different lyrics in Vultures, if they were there I missed them. My first When the Circus Comes and I really enjoyed it. I am a fan of the Los Lobos and like this song. A nice break in the mood and also well done, however Albuquerque the next night had a similar placement and was played better and probably is an overall better selection then Circus for this spot in the setlist and for this band to play. Birds ended the solid, straight foward set with Trey's solo trying to create one sustaining "bending" note which the rest of the band could jam around. Highlights of set 1 were Ya Mar -> Carini, Runaway Jim, Meat, Reba. Set II: However now comes the ****MONSTER that was SET II****. It's been a while since I have seen a more energetic, jammed out, well played, all out set!!!!!!! Maybe never!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ****IT WAS AMAZING!!!!**** To put it mildly they tore the house down! I never say this in my reviews, but EVERY FAN MUST GET THE TAPES of THIS SET!!!! Once I get them you will see an offer! This historic set opens with Buried Alive, which took this person a while to figure out since it didn't start out as I remember most Buried Alive's to start, with Trey and Page tapping around the intro layed down by Mike and Fish, this one was one of those blended, scratchy introductions. Mike was on! Then comes Wipe Out, allowing for Fish to solo, and for an introduction of "John Fishman" at the end. The energy that this Wipe Out created moved into... Chalk Dust Torture! I was thinking, wow we already heard BOAF tonight, after it I was left just thinking WOW! Chalk Dust started out amazingly strong! Not as strong or with the reckless rockstar abandon as Nassau 4/2/98, but a more cultivated, controlled energy which the crowd quickly picked up on (this controlled energetic vibe lasted the whole night). The Wipe Out theme was poking it's head in and out throughout the beginning of this song. The strong jam then blended into a quick two verse version of The English Beat's (or is it just The Beat) Mirror in the Bathroom, it blended in without a hitch. Out of this Mirror in the Bathroom came one of the band's MOST INCREDIBLE JAMS I HAVE EVER DANCED TO! :) It just didn't stop, it was motoring, it sounded like an express train chugging at a million miles per hour down the track. They just kept aggressively hammering ^Eon this "pounding" theme. That's all I can say, you will have to listen for yourself. Plus I don't recall them ever going back and singing Chalk Dust Torture after Mirror, just jamming it, but they may have sung it as well, however in my notes I only have written "Chalk Dust Jam" after this point. But mind you I was more concentrated on dancing then writing at this point. It definitely lost it's CDT theme (or maybe I just got lost into the whole thing since I find it difficult to review only thinking man was that great!) and continued with this motoring theme and then found it's way into an aggressive quick version of Dog Log and then boom back into the CDT jam as if Dog Log wasn't even there. Sanity was good. The stage was mainly lit up in an evil red for a majority portion of the song, the song's ending jam did a quick stop-start that ended up going into Buffalo Bill (which a good portion of the older more experienced New England crowd [more on this in the review for Saturday night] picked up on). Buffalo Bill was rough but a well accepted first timer for this reviewer, and a nice appropriate fit into this special set. I kept thinking of the irony of the "request ballons" floating around the house all night, none of which had this one on them. The ending tapping jam segued into the first notes of Mike's Song. Once again this Mike's and Weekapaug was not of the reckless energy one hears in say the 10/31/98 Vegas version, it was again a harnessed energy. Mike's was very similar to that heard on 10/31 with the Simple theme jam of old (old as in the days before the actual song Simple evolved out of it). In the middle of the jam Chris lit up the entire rear seating section producing that wonderful open space effect of the people behind the jamming band. Eventually ending up as a throbbing jam and what I can best describe as an "underwater (Mike, Page, Fish) dolphin (Trey) sound" jam which obviously segued beautifully into I am Hydrogen! I checked my personal show files and couldn't believe to see that I hadn't seen I am Hydrogen since the 10/8/94 Patriot Center show. This makes it even that much better! The solo was perfect, sweet, so soothing! As with the solos in Lizards at 10/31/98 and Tela 8/8/98 this solo takes you back (to '94 at least for me ;), and lets the nostalgia flow with it. Then Weekapaug! 10/31/98 may have been better with regards to "experimentation" but this one was better with regards to groove, man did it groove. It was fast and groovin'. My last two shows and two amazing (in their own ways) Weekapaug Grooves! The Wipe Out teases in this jam went into a Wipe Out frenzy with Fish speeding up the tempo with every solo, thus finishing this already fast Weekapaug Groove 2-3X's the speed it should be. This segued into a blend of noise with Trey even rubbing his guitar on the mic stand and then....boom back into the Weekapaug theme, or a Weekapaug Reprise. This theme lasted about a minute and then went into an all out experimental jam, which mostly consisted of Trey scratching his guitar while Mike continued the Weekapaug notes the longest of the four, once Mike abandoned the Weekapaug theme, the band played an ambient sounding jam for the majority of which consisted of Trey making sounds extremely similar to the sounds of the Star Wars character R2-D2. At one point Fish just rolled his drums once or twice that jolted this soft jam with the continuing energy it needed, he is really great with adding tempo, he knows how to pick his spots!! After all this, and it being 11:10pm we get a 15 minute Antelope which was very reminiscent to the Antelope (don't remember the date) that conatined the Spiderman theme back in the early 90's. That type of steady beat was present in the whole song. Page also had a nice piano part that sounded very similar to something on the Loaded album or in that style, but I am bad at identifying teases, however it was in that vein. Wading showcased Page with his singing and with a nice piano intro, it was actually very well done, especially after the preceding set a nice cool down. Golgi and a "one last time" for energy sake Wipe Out capped it all nicely off. It really is dificult to describe this set for me. Maybe it was just my experience at the show, or maybe it was just the energy achieved between the band and the crowd throughout the night (especially set 2), but the least I can say is that the second set definitely TORE the HOUSE DOWN! The rest is up to the other reviews, the tapes, and time! Thanks for the time, Peace, Kaz Kazdeyna@aol.com P.S. Finally Jerry was in the building, a little Jerry doll was sitting on the back of the soundboard throughout the night. ------------ Date: Mon, 30 Nov 1998 21:30:03 -0500 From: Dan Mielcarz Subject: Worcester - Friday, 11/27/98 Review (long) If you want context, this show was my 26th, and I have a lot of hours of tapes. The scene: Not nearly as many ticketless as New Haven. We found a great bar/restaurant called The Irish Times. Jake, Doug and I ran up an obscene bar tab considering that there were only three of us. Headed into the show around 7:15, pretty minimal pat down. The setlist (courtesy www.phish.net, as I didn't have pen nor paper that night): 11/27/98 The Centrum - Worcester, Massachusetts I (1:23): Funky Bitch, Ya Mar -> Carini, Runaway Jim, Meat, Reba*, My Old Home Place, Dogs Stole Things, Vultures, When the Circus Comes, Birds of a Feather II (1:18): Buried Alive, Wipe Out**, Chalk Dust Torture*** -> Mirror in the Bathroom -> Chalk Dust Torture -> Dog Log^ -> Chalk Dust Torture > Sanity, Buffalo Bill -> Mike's Song^^ -> I Am Hydrogen -> Weekapaug Groove^^^ > Jam^^^^ -> Run Like an Antelope E (0:13): Wading in the Velvet Sea, Golgi Apparatus -> Wipe Out+ * - with whistling ** - Fishman introduced by Trey *** - with Wipe Out teases **** - The Beat (later known as The English Beat) cover from their debut LP, I Just Can't Stop It and the greatest hits album What is Beat?; 2 verses played; first time played ^ - possibly inspired by a dog show taking place next door to the Centrum; very bluesy ^^ - with spacy, ambient jamming ^^^ - with recurring Wipe Out jamming and spacy jam ^^^^ - spacy jamming, basically they stopped the jam out of Weekapaug Groove and restarted Weekapaug and its jam; about 9 minutes long + - with Fishman drum solo before being introduced by Trey again and finishing Wipe Out Set I FUNKY BITCH was a rocking opener, got everyone dancing and YA MAR followed suit. I don't necessarily remember a segue into CARINI, but it's entirely possible that there was one. Carini was great, with the typical heavy metal riffing by Trey. It's one of my favorite songs. I have seen it posted that this Carini included the lyrics about the naked person...I didn't notice this, but there was a part of the lyrics that I thought was flubbed, so this may have been the changed part. The energy was very high up to this point, and the crowd was really psyched. RUNAWAY JIM evoked memories of last year, and I was hoping for a repeat performance of last year's odyssey. Alas, it was not to be and we were treated to a relatively straight-up, Trey-led jam, which was not very experimental at all (although still quite good). At this point, after New Haven and the first few songs of this set, I felt that the band was heading in a 94-ish Machine-gun Trey direction, and getting away from the funk and whole-band exploratory jams. As if responding to my concerns, the band brought out MEAT which was a welcome return to the sparse funk. Similar to what you hear on the album, but with either 1 or 2 more false endings, and probably a bit slower. Definitely better than any ballad which they might put after a high energy opening; and very much a *whole band* effort. Mike was *much* louder tonight than at New Haven, possibly because of the weird shape of that crappy New Haven venue. It added considerably to my enjoyment to be able to really hear Mike spanking the bass. Next up was REBA, and a nice Reba it was, too. This song and me have a strange history...it started out as one of the songs that got me into Phish, moved on to a song that I didn't really like at all, and now is a song that consistently gives me a transcendent experience. This version was no exception, and contained some great tension-filled guitar work by Trey. Not the "best" Reba, but I have a hard time comparing Rebas in much the same way I can't really compare Hoods. MY OLD HOME PLACE pleased me in that it wasn't Ginseng, which I've heard a lot of lately. DOG STOLE THINGS at least doesn't have the Mound drumbeat at the beginning anymore to piss me off, but still doesn't excite me at all. VULTURES is one of my favorite of the 97 crop of songs, and I was glad to hear it. This version was rearranged, but without a tape of both of them next to me, I can't really say how, since it's been 4 days since the show. WHEN THE CIRCUS COMES I could really do without, and would rather hear any number of Phish-authored ballads (FEFY in paricular!) before it. I guess it kind of means something when they start a multi-night run in a city but I just get bored with it. BIRD OF A FEATHER was nowhere near as good as the Providence version from earlier this year and I've heard this song on the radio a few too many times to really get into it if they aren't going to take the jam places. I figured Birds would be the set closer, and I was right. Set I recap: Carini was great, Meat funky and fun and Reba transcendent. Not much to say about the rest of the set, and overall, I give it a 4 on the SJCRS. Set II BURIED ALIVE is one of the greatest set openers, IMO, and was great to hear at the Centrum since it was the location of my only other Buried on 12/28/95. Really a great song, and it shows off Trey's chops big time. MIke's bassline during this is nice too. Not very different from the versions you've heard on tape, however. WIPE OUT was such a complete and total surprise that it took me longer to recognize than it should have. Fishman was great with the drum solos and yells; Trey introduced him as Bob Weaver at one point during the song, but it wasn't very clear what exactly he was saying. After the amazing debut of Wipe Out, I didn't mind hearing my second CHALKDUST TORTURE in one week. As soon as I heard the Wipe Out teases by Trey in the beginning and nearly every break between the lyrics, I REALLY didn't mind. Then the jam segued into MIRROR IN THE BATHROOM, which sounded very familiar but is a song that I don't really know at all. I could place the decade, but beyond that, my mind was drawing a blank. This is something I'll want to hear on tape. They sang a couple of verses of Mirror and went back into Chalkdust. Then what I would describe as a hard blues jam evolved and the band started singing..."Walking cross the lawn lawn lawn lawn lawn..." Whoohoo! My third DOG LOG! (I was at the Dog Log show :) This was much different from the straight up white album version or the slow lounge lizard version. I'm not entirely certain that they got all the way through the lyrics, I was too excited to file these things away in my head, but the music was soon headed back into CHALKDUST. By this point the audience was nuts, and nearly everyone joined in the "Can't I live while I'm young?" singing. The segue into SANITY was definitely of the start-stop variety, and thus I wouldn't even call it a segue, but that's the way notation works on Phish.Net (and in the Mockingbird Book as I understand it, so get used to it!). Sanity was classic, as always, with unbelievable energy from the band during the "Boom....boom...." part at the end. They were screaming like the world was exploding! Fishman's favorite song, BUFFALO BILL, started up next. Looking for owls? I certainly was, and it was at this point that I realized the set had entered the realm of the Old School. The jam kind of slowed to a stop and Trey played (and flubbed a bit) the guitar opening to MIKE'S SONG. The jam started out normally enough, but then entered a somewhat spacey territory. It continued like this and I was praying for a Hydrogen, which was the song I was least likely to have not seen, according to ZZYZX. Not to disappoint, Fishman started the drumbeat to I AM HYDROGEN. The Mike's hadn't ended with the driving bass/guitar like Mike's of old, but Fishman was playing Hydrogen anyway. The rest of the band layed down some space on Fish's beat which bore no resemblence to any Hydrogen I've ever heard. After at least 3 minutes of spacey jamming, they started to actually play the song, which seemed a bit rusty, but was beautiful as always. I think it just may be the prettiest Phish song. Anyone want to argue? Pretty standard segue (which isn't that standard anymore, now is it?) into WEEKAPAUG GROOVE. Mike spanked out a solo and they were off. I would say that they segued into WIPE OUT completely during this tune, rather than just jamming on it, but that's a matter of opinion. The jam got a bit spacey and then sort of died out. Trey then walked around to the rest of the band and they started up the jam again, leading off with the main Weekapaug riff and then quickly heading into some space, and this was by far the most experimental thing I've heard out of Phish this fall. Very cool, and a great contrast to the machine gun Trey jamming of the first set and New Haven. If I was writing the setlist I would have called this WEEKAPAUG REPRISE, but it probably would screw up ZZYZX that way, so I won't. This is the sort of thing that I hadn't seen too much of this year at all, and it's glad to know they still have some Type II up their sleeves! RUN LIKE AN ANTELOPE came next, and I was shaking my head in disbelief as it was already 10 past 11. This set just doesn't quit, folks! The energy was so high at the end of this set that the Antelope blew everyone away. I would rate this above 5/4/94 New Orleans, the Antelope dedicated to the baby of Trey's friend that was being born during the show. And I had never heard a better Antelope than that one. Set II recap: One of the best Phish sets I have ever heard. Almost as if they transported 2/20/93 to 1998 and kept all the improvement they've made as musicians. Without a doubt, a perfect 10 on the SJCRS. A "must have" set, without question. Encore My friends and I were really expecting to hear Destiny. If there ever was a time where I thought they would play it, it was tonight. The crowd was EXTREMELY loud during the wait for the encore; when the band did come out, the crowd was the loudest I have ever heard anywhere. It was almost painful! You could tell what everyone thought of that amazing second set. So, when Page started playing WADING IN THE VELVET SEA, I was a bit disappointed since I just heard it at New Haven. I really like it as a song and all, but I expected something special. GOLGI APPARATUS followed, and is a song that I really enjoy in spite of the lack of jamming/short length. The segue into WIPE OUT was a perfect way to end the evening, and was by far the best of the three Wipe Outs played. What a great show! Full show recap: First set started off with a lot of energy, cooled down some. Second set left me speechless and was among the best ever! Encore great on balance, would have enjoyed it more if I hadn't gone to New Haven. I give this show a 9.25 on the SJCRS. (I know the average doesn't work, but if you felt the way I did after the show, you would give it the same grade.) -Dan (I told you it was long) -- Dan.Mielcarz@dartmouth.edu "If all the hippies cut off all their hair... I don't care. I don't care." -Jimi Hendrix --------------- ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 4 Dec 1998 08:45:03 -0800 From: Michael Cohen Subject: Phish for Thanksgiving - 11/27 Rvw - LONG! Wow. Where oh where should I start? Thanksgiving in Massachusetts these days seems to mean two things: Mom's cooking and Phish will be cooking. Neither disappointed during this trip. Mom opened up Thanksgiving dinner with a veggie/cheese plate and some drinks that really set the tone for the evening. Some mixed nuts segued nicely into a dinner that saw Turkey segue right into Stuffing where, out of nowhere, surfaced that sweet potato mix and cranberry sauce. Truly an epic evening that saw the beautiful segues mom has become known for, with none of them tasting rushed or forced. A brilliant performance. The encore was pumpkin cheesecake, chocolate cake and a second encore of a box of chocolates to round out the evening. Phish served up an equally memorable performance just 24 hours later: ** 11/27/98 The Centrum - Worcester, MA I: Funky Bitch, Ya Mar -> Carini, Runaway Jim, Meat, Reba*, My Old Home Place, Dogs Stole Things, Vultures, When the Circus Comes, Birds of a Feather II: Buried Alive, Wipe Out**, Chalk Dust Torture*** > Mirror in the Bathroom > Chalk Dust Torture > Dog Log^ > Chalkdust Torture > Sanity, Buffalo Bill > Mike's Song^^ > I Am Hydrogen > Weekapaug Groove^^^, Weekapaug Groove Reprise^^^^ Run Like An Antelope E: Wading in the Velvet Sea, Golgi Apparatus -> Wipe Out+ * - with whistling ** - Fishman introduced by Trey *** - with Wipe Out teases mirror in the bathroom originally appreared on the album "just can't stop it" by the english beat. it is *not* a "special beat" song. it may have appeared on a special beat album (since they were formed from the english beat) but the song was written before that happened. -nate ^ - possibly inspired by a dog show taking place next door to the Centrum; very bluesy ^^ - with spacy, ambient jamming ^^^ - with recurring Wipe Out jamming and spacy jam ^^^^ - spacy jamming, basically they stopped the jam out of Weekapaug Groove and restarted Weekapaug and its jam; about 9 minutes long + - with Fishman drum solo before being introduced by Trey again and finishing Wipe Out ** Pre-show festivities included drinks and dinner with Mitch and Janet. It was great to share a show with you guys! Hopefully we'll repeat the scene a few more times this coming up year! The level of excitement in the Centrum Friday night was *VERY* high, even higher than that of Halloween, but Vegas has a way of depleteing one's energy reserves. Nonetheless, the crowd was cool, security was nonexistant, the lights were dim, and expectations were running full tilt. The band hit the stage at a relatively early few minutes before 8, and slid right into a nice slinky FUNKY BITCH. The blues/funk was evident from the onset of this great song, as the tempo was slowed, and the blues were allowed to flourish. A nice solo by Page, some key long notes by Mike, and we were on our way. YA MAR started up right where FB had let off, and we were treated to our second vocal appearance by Mike. Page again led the charge in this tune that was noted more for it's outro jam than any crazy jamming within the song itself. As YM died down, we were led into our first (of many) surprises of the night as the raging chords of CARINI forced their ways into the mellow vibe that the first two tunes had set. I was *SUPER PSYCHED* to hear this as I've been craving it ever since it had premiered a mere year and a half ago. This song is just crazy, and borders on violent as the chords crunch and the lyrics offend. I loved it! I imagine there have been more raging versions, but this one -- my virgin flight -- suited me just fine. What a great tune!! RUNAWAY JIM was up next, and I'm sure I wasn't the only person in the building thinking back to last year's epic hour long version of the tune. Even though I have yet to hear that one, I was hoping we'd get something more akin to the early nineties versions of this song that just had the smoking solo that continuously came back to the Runaway theme. It was to be! Albeit with a bit of a bluegrass tinge to it. Complaint level of the author.....0!! Clocking in at somewhere around 10 minutes, this Jim was very satisfying! MEAT next, and I was theirs. Sell the house, give the dog to the inlaws, I'm doing whatever this band says! As we waited for our Airport Shuttle to pick us up only a day prior, I had Meat on the mind, in the ears, and was serenading my lady to this wistful little tune at 5 am. I REALLY WANTED TO HEAR THIS SONG, and it was my most-wanted tune of the night. This version was sick as Page gave up the MMW sounding keyboard solo to allow for a full-on Mike rap. The rap was low and slow, and it was tough to figure out just what it was that he was saying, but it was right on the money, and had me beaming! Two endings later, and we continued with Annie's most-wanted tune of the night: REBA. Words can never really do justice to a great Reba, but suffice to say that the jam had three distinct peaks, all different, but all true to the tune. With whistling to finish it up, my wife had a look on her face that -- alas -- only Phish can provide. She's right there selling the house with me! MY OLD HOME PLACE was done with precision and perfection and gave Mike yet another chance to stretch the vocal chords. Four Mike tunes already? Sheesh....I wonder if we'll get a Mike's Song tonight ; ) DOGS STOLE THINGS was sweet, as I've always been a fan of this tune, and it gave Page another opportunity to open up on the ivories. I'm glad this tune is back in the rotation, and hope that it stays in the lineup. Out of the DST dust comes a familiar sounding song.......what is that..... I *KNOW* I know that tune........oh man that drives me nuts when I know it but can't name it.........what is this song.......... VULTURES! YES!! Too long no hear the Vulture! And wait......they've reworked it taboot! A raging Trey solo (accompanied by a toy bird flying low over the crowd) and the signature Fishman drumming (although the madness of the outro drum solo seems to be missing..........), and we've got another rager, and what a great way to end the set....... wait........there's more???!!!!!!???? A mellow CIRCUS COMES TO TOWN just didn't have the power that it possessed a year ago, as Trey flubbed the guitar line quite a few times during the first half, and Mike wasn't dropping the bombs that he usually does during the second half. Nonetheless, they hadn't left the stage yet, so I was psyched! A crazy BIRDS OF A FEATHER followed, and this had to be -- hands down -- the best I've seen. They really opened up the solo portion to give us all a tiny peek into the potential that everyone knows this tune has. Trey was outta control the entire first set, and has reclaimed his position of Set Director. I think that last year's focus on cohesive band jamming has really allowed the band to reach a new plateau where Trey can now just go NUTS, and then come back into a song that the rest of the band has progressed rather than having the rest of the band keep the song at the same place it was when he left to do his thing. Does this make any sense? SET BREAK: short, 35 minutes, HECTIC as all hell hallway situation, cool tunes by Paul, phone call to the Tevil, Mitch didn't know it was the answering machine...hee...hee...hee...heee...more time with good friends! The lights go down, the place explodes, the band comes back out, and as they're walking to their places on stage, Fish pretends to push Page off the stage. Page musta just sewn up the chess championship of the tour during the break or something. Anyway, Fish starts in on a drumbeat, and before you know it, we're into BURIED ALIVE. Great choice guys! Long time no hear! What an insane version too! Gone was the composed Trey section, and he just let loose with some out-of-this world, psychedelia meets heavy metal jamming for the entire song. Someone had an espresso or two during the set break.... And then, the shit came down: WIPEOUT! The place went nuts! Trey was dancing around, Fishman was beating the hell outta his drums, and the tune never seemed to end. Every time they hit the place it shoulda ended, they went around one more time. 14,505 people eating out of the palms of their hands, this was crazy! CHALKDUST started up, and -- forgive me -- but my first thought was: another Chalkdust? This was my like my fourth or fifth this year. But Phish again taught me to never doubt. The jam screeched and careened into places hereto forth unknown to your humbled author, and just when I thought I was sick of this tune, they showed me the potential that lies in places you'd never think to look. What was that that Jerry once said "Sometimes you get shown the light......". Besides absolutely smoking, this Chalkdust was saturated with Wipeout, as Trey filled it in almost anywhere he could, and every time he did, the place went absolutely crazy! The jam at one point started to meander, and my lovely wife tried to convey something to me, but I couldn't understand exactly what it was she was saying, and the best I could manage as far as a reply goes was: "I don't hear it..." Thirty seconds later she's screaming "I called it! I knew it! I told you!!!", and Trey was singing MIRROR IN THE BATHROOM. I was so damn proud of her!! I had no idea it was coming -- and I think she picked it up just as the band did!!! The MIRROR lasted for maybe two minutes as it was quite evident Trey didn't know the lyrics (he half laughed, half sang the words he did know), and before we knew it, we're back into WIPEOUT TORTURE. The jam then took a decidedly familiar turn, and it was evident that MY SOUL was next. Trey walked up to the mic, but when he started singing, it wasn't MY SOUL, but instead it was the chorus to DOG LOG! He sang this maybe four times, and then it was back into WIPEOUT TORTURE. The craziness then began to die down.........or did it.......for up next, was the/my second SANITY of the year!! A very nice, very straightforward version of this classic Phish tune. 14,505 people were now a collective, and I know that we all would have done whatever the band wanted at that moment. Good thing the only thing they wanted us to do was to enjoy the first BUFFALO BILL in almost a year. Are you freakin' kidding me?? I had never even heard this rarity of rarities, and had no idea it was BB until the chorus. This is a very cool tune and should be played more often! They were thoroughly enjoying themselves as much on stage as we were in the audience. Where the band ended and the audience began was anyone's guess at that point, and we had all entered one of those rare and special places that the great shows go to. Transcendence. So that's why what happened next was greeted with not a deafening cheer, but more of a knowing nod: MIKE'S SONG. Of course. It just had to be. I gotta say, that as I remember it, this was the mellowest phan reactions to a Mike's Song I can recall. Everyone just knew that there was nothing else that could have been played at that moment. Just thinking of it again gives me the chills. Mike's rocked, there was a bit of ambient jamming before a very deliberate I AM HYDROGEN emerged, which was followed by one of the best WEEKAPAUG GROOVES I've seen in recent years. The ending here was kinda crazy though. They did the big show, big arena, big rock kind of ending thing, and as I was expecting them to bow and leave they stage, they morphed into the now familiar AMBIENT JAMMING, and kept it up for almost 10 minutes. This died down, where then emerged the WEEKAPAUG REPRISE. This was by far the fastest version of WEEKAPAUG (complete with lyrics) that I've ever seen, and then, the big show, big arena, big rock kind of ending thing take two, but as before, more music where I expect bows........what.......c'mon guys, gimmie a break, I'm exhausted! ANTELOPE! And a ranging version at that! This was the kind of Antelope, that, if you're not careful, will put you on your ass, as the combo of lights and music made me dizzy beyond belief. Thanks guys!! ENCORES: VELVET SEA was superbly done, and was another song that I desperately wanted to hear. Trey's solo was incredibly passion filled, and it was great to finally hear Page sing. GOLGI was fun, but after seeing it in Vegas (for the first time in years), I was Golgi satisfied. Yet there's always something very cool about 14,505 people singing the chorus to that song in unison. By this point in the evening, I should have expected WIPEOUT to reemerge, but when it did, I was completely taken by surprise, and was left wondering if the show was ever going to end. Was it possible that I was in heaven, and they'd never stop?? The triple encore left many a pholk just shaking their head in disbelief and the outro music of Rocketman spurned a sweet, mellow, sing-a-long as we all waded out into the unseasonable warm Worcester air. A great show, great company, and overall, a great trip back East. Kamp Krusty Lemon-Krew was missed, but there in spirit(s)....... ...mmmmmmmm............. ................Lemon Citron Vodka.................................. waiting for the next round of mail order to start-up, Mike ------ 11/27/98 - The Centrum, Worcester, MA Date: Mon, 30 Nov 1998 18:34:29 -0500 From: Joel Lichtenstein Lictotrane@worldnet.att.net To: dws@protos.lifesci.ucla.edu Subject: FALL98_REVIEW Worcester 11-27-98 After seeing 12-30-97 last year, i didn't think i would see a better show anytime soon. But Friday night's show was mind boggling. The sets were very different from each other. The first set was rockin. This was my third time seeing Carini, but i don't mind at all. It is just a hard rockin tune that i always get pumped for and i didn't expect them to play it at all. i thought the Ya Mar was also sweet. I just remember being very wrapped up in it. Meat had the crowd so into it. Since this song was on the new album, i asssumed the majority of the people there knew it. Everybody was feeling the funky beat. they slowed it down and dragged it out, and that was a good thing.The Vultures was the other highlight of the first set. I saw this last year in Albany, and even though i liked the Albany one better, it was amazing. The new arrangement is a positive change and it certainly takes nothing away from the song's power. i loved it. i wish the band would just stop playing Circus. I know that they need to slow it down and catch their breath at least once every set, but this song is awful. it took all the power away from the first set. i would describe the set closer, Birds, as exciting. and it was. Kuroda really showed off in this one. His light show was eye pleasing, and it aided the song in what it lacks. I am surely convinced that they will never play Birds the way the played it in Providence on 4-4-98. That version was so sweet, that all others don't really compare. The second set was one of my favorite sets of all time. hearing buried alive was just pure sweetness. They were so on. Now, this whole wipeout business will be annoying after awhile of listening to it on a tape, but while i was there, it was dope. They played it 3 times, and it really hadn't lost it's energy. The Chalkdust, in my opinion, is the greatest Chalkdust ever. It was very un-Chalkdust. All the other times i've heard or seen this, it is usually the same. it's a fun song to hear, and it gets the crowd moving. This version was just whacked out. When they went into Dog Log, i was psyched. This short Dog Log was heavy duty, not my favorite style of Dog Log, but mixed in with this new Chalkdust, it fit right. Then they finished Chalkdust, and i said "wow". And then Sanity, which was very, very good. The Buffalo Bill was even a bigger surprise to me than the Carini in the first set. And this Bill was great. I enjoyed it almost as much as any song in the set. Now, i wasn't too excited to see a Mike's, since it seems every show i see, they play it. but thank icculus they did. for without the mike's there wouldn't have been either a Hydrogen, or the 2 jams that came out of Weekapaug. The jam that came just before Antelope, a sort of ambient jam, (that's what they are calling them these days)was my favorite part of the show. the jam was spacey and a little bit scary. I was totally taken in by this jam. i can't truly describe it, but i was just so into it. I knew they would play Antelope, and i knew it would be then, but that didn't take anything away from it for me. It's just a great song. And every time i hear Trey say "Marco esquandolas", i am deep into the Antelope. The encore was so weak, i was pissed. i feel the same way about Wading as i do about Circus. I just think these songs suck. and it truly enfuriates me at the amount of people selling shirt for that song. Golgi always gets the crowd into it, but they had just played it in Albany, so i felt it was totally unnesacery. And the wipeout ending was alright with me. While this wasn't a perfect show, it was the best one I've ever seen. Date: Fri, 4 Dec 1998 10:57:13 EST From: Mingus160@aol.com To: dws@protos.lifesci.ucla.edu Subject: FALL98_REVIEW 11-27-98 Worcester Centrum: Almost done near tore the roof off during their second set. Date: Sun, 29 Nov 1998 21:04:24 EST From: Ender10446@aol.com To: dws@protos.lifesci.ucla.edu Subject: FALL98_REVIEW Alright, since I just got back from the first two Worcester shows, I feel obligated to right reviews on two of the best shows I have ever seen. So... here we go. Funky Bitch~ Given any other show, if asked, I would not want this to open. However, this version was so strong and rockin' with Page really ripping it up on his organ, and a strong groove as support that it really pumped the crowd up for a great show. Ya Mar~ Quite an interesting version. It didn't seem to veer off to far, but just enough so that we heard some interesting themes and a quite sparse jam. I actually really liked this version a lot. Carini~ I hadn't gotten this live before, and I went nuts when they started playing it. It was so harsh and scary, but just so good. Trey seemed to have a great time on this one, really putting everything he had into those frenzied chords. Runaway Jim~ A solid version (about 12 min)... Obviously not as good as lastyear's Jim in worcester but strong enough so that fans didn't complain or compare the two pieces. Meat~ This was so awesome. The phunk was so slow and deep that it was hard to dance to. After about the third time through, they just stopped with a little bit of spacy ambience jamming before they went right back into it. Incredible. Reba~ I was always a big fan of this tune, but had heard so much of it preceding this show. The jam was really intense though, and Kuroda's light work on this version was great. He really knows how to get the crowd involved... (with whistling) Old Home Place~ Standard, as always. A good dance tune. Dogs Stole Things~ When I heard this song live, I realized how much better it is then when it is on tape. It's really bluesy with some great solos. Great Job. Vultures~ This was great. I really love the new version of this song, as they move to that deceitful chord for the jam. A really solid version. Fish really seemed to stand out hear with his fills at the end. Circus Comes~ Trey seems in to be in love with this song. Every time I hear it, he seems really emotional. Very standard though, but a very good song to hear. Birds~ Not what I wanted for a closer. It rocked although it was very short. Although after seeing the 15 min. version from 4-4-98, I can't seem to bring any version of this song to that level of excellence. Very solid though. Buried Alive~ When was the last time they played this on US soil (probably very recently, just overlooking it). Trey was just wailing on that theme, and then the quick jam was just raging. This seemed to go by quite quickly as always. Wipeout~ This seemed to be the song that the whole second set revolved around. They haven't played this in forever, and was really a historical moment. Very cool. Chalkdust Mirror Chalkdust This was very interesting. The Chalkdust definitely got me pumped, and the jam definitely took a twisted turn into a strange funky beat that picked up into Mirror in the Bathroom. I had never heard this tune, but really liked it even though it lasted only for about 2 minutes, they swerved quickly back into Chalkdust before into... Dog Log Chalkdust DOG LOG. Definitely inspired by the dog show going on in another part of the Centrum, this was no normal Dog Log. It seemed much bluesier than the darker original and was much faster. They seemed to want to get out of it quickly but did play it in its entirety. I am glad I got to see that. They took us backinto Chalkdust and they into... Sanity~ This version must of been the slowest version I have ever seen. They really seemed to take their time with everything on this song as they stopped and Trey pointed towards the ceiling during "The stars in the sky are very bright" part. The heavy metal jams after the verses were insane. Buffalo Bill~ What a sick show. This came out of the circus ending to Sanity and was really really phunky, (just wanted to take this oppurtunity to say that Phish is indeed the best band ever), and Gordon was just slapping away very impressively. They wove this into a sparse phunk jam before they brought us to... Mike's Hydrogen Weekapaug I just have to talk about this as a whole. This was so insane. The Mike's jam just took off for about 10 minutes into this very spacey (which defintiely seemed to be the style of jamming for them that night) jam. I was somesmerized be Trey's effects and everything that the whole band was doing, as they spaced it out. I was so glad that they didn't go into Simple, but HYDROGEN... I don't think that they have played that since 12-9-97. Anyway, Kuroda was working with some awesome blue circles during this song, as Trey just fiddled around before he worked his way into the melody. The energy was so intense as they built up to Weekapaug. Gordon just slapped away some more, one of the more impressive Weekapaug intros that I have seen or heard, and really intense. They jammed forever and again went into a spacey ambient jam. As they wound up the song with outro vocals and ended it, I thought the show was over, but with Phish you must expect the unexpected because sure enough, they started up a Weekapaug- oriented style jam, that seemed to space out for a few minutes, and went into none other than the Wipeout theme... and as they started to wind that down, out came the most incredible version of... Antelope~ ANTELOPE!!!! Incredible is all I have to say, other than that this song was so raging and....... loud. However, they once again speced things outfor a while, before Trey started to wail into what formed to be a most amazing jam preceding the Marco section. They are so good, and I was so tired when they were done. Velvet Sea~ Very nice. Trey seemed really into this version as he played the most peaceful and beautiful solo. A really solid version. Golgi Wipeout Reprise Golgi was standard, but the instrumental section in the middle was great. It seemed to be very enjoyable for the boys, and very unpredictable as they had played in the previous show in Albany. They ended the tune, and Trey said the usual, "We had a great time" but they quickly went into Wipeout once more for the grand finale. Great Show. I've been writing forever, so I just wanted to say that it was a great show, and I will post 11-28's review later. Peace, Aaron~ <"))