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Edited on Sun Jun-13-04 03:40 PM by impeachdubya
Extremely talented musicians. As an old school deadhead, I never felt the unifying sort of underlying, we-are-all-one spiritual vibe- that I used to get in certain dead shows- in Phish's music. I went through phases where I really liked their stuff, and then phases where I could take it or leave it. The first time I saw them play was at a bar in Chicago with about 200 people (Biddy Mulligan's, 1991) so it was a little difficult for me to reconcile seeing them in stadiums just a few years later. And I was getting a little old for the "scene", so it was hard for me to observe it without comparing it to the way things used to be around Dead shows in the old days.
All those boys are great, first rate musicians. Probably the first show I went to, after Jerry died, that made me feel like I was back seeing powerful, relevant psychedelic music being made, was one of those "Phil & Phrends" shows at the Warfield in 1999, where you had Trey and Page up there with Phil and Steve Kimock. Watching Kimock & Trey play off each other was truly a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
I'll probably buy the new Phish album. But I'm not as devastated by their breaking up as I might have been if I was 15 years younger and still looking for the kind of crazy road fun that I used to have going around to Dead shows..
As far as this being end of the "last" great rock and roll band. I beg to differ. (Besides the fact that there are a lot of great, undiscovered bands out there) For instance, I can think of one American band, from Athens, GA., that has been around for about 25 years, has made some of the most powerful, timeless, and subtly psychedelic albums of all time, is still making kick ass music with no signs of stopping, (including one of the only overtly political protest songs to be released last year), and has another album coming out before this fall's election...
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