January 26, 2012 in 09, 10, 11, 12, 2, 25, 29, 2b, 3, 30, 50, 9, a, access, age, all, Also, am, an, and, Are, around, as, at, away, Awesome, ban, band, bands, Bass, big, book, boot, Bridge, Burn, but, by, ca, can, cat, cats, center, City, color, colorado, COMPLETE, concert, Crazy, Crowd, dancing, Day, down, Drop, Drums, Dust, en, end, Enjoy, eq, Eve, fall, FEAT, fee, festival, fi, fire, First, FOR, four, Free, From, front, Funk, Funny, get, gin, give, Good, great, ground, Guitar, guitarist, hampton, hi, home, How, in, into, intro, is, IT, jam, jam band, jazz, Joy, key, Keyboard, Keyboards, Keys, kids, King, know, las, Last, late, Laugh, leave, let, light, lights, Like, live, live music, lot, love, MA, Main, MD, MI, mod, mouth, Much, Music, My, name, Nat, nc, New, News, night, NJ, no, nothing, ny, of, on, one, op, Open, opening, out, PA, Part, Phish, Piano, play, player, post, Pot, pro, producer, production, Pt, rad, radio, random, raz, read, return, rock, row, rs, Sand, Say, SC, show, Shows, So, software, solo, Something, song, Soul, sound, SPAC, St, stage, start, street, studio, style, tab, talk, Talking, That, the, theatre, to, tone, Too, tour, trey, tub, Tube, two, uic, us, USA, va, Video, videos, WA, Walk, war, Way, we, with, years, You, Your, youtube |
By: Dennis Cook
Big Gigantic is currently on tour behind their new album, Nocturnal. The duo plays for the next five days at Mayan Holidaze and then return to U.S. on February 2nd in Tallahassee, FL. Find full tour schedule here.
Download the new album for FREE over here!
Big Gigantic |
Big Gigantic is a great band name. It could be any kind of music, and it strikes one as funny and lucky for Dominic Lalli (keys, programming, sax, production) and Jeremy Salken (drums, programming, production) that no one got to it first.
I was walking down the street in Boulder [Colorado] and I thought, Big Gigantic. Thats a good name. No, thats a GREAT name! When I started on a side project [from his gig in The Motet] I was going to call it Dominic Lallis Big Gigantic, but as I thought about it I found it a bit weird and decided to leave my name out of it, says Lalli. I was pretty into Karl [Denson] and dug the Tiny Universe, so that may be why I wanted to put my name in front of it, but it didnt work out [laughs].
A lot of faceless music abounds in the electronica realm but Big Gigantic has quickly differentiated themselves from the sea of homogenous assholes with Abelton software and an 808, something abundantly clear on their brightly shimmering, booty activating new album, Nocturnal (released January 11 and available for free download here).
Big Gigantic by Brad Hodge |
Thats the key to anything being successful, says Lalli. It just needs to be its own thing.
One of the big things about why we wanted to do this project was the two of us seeing all this live electronic music coming around four or five years ago. I was an intern at the Fox Theatre in Boulder, and I played music around town in random jazz and funk bands with Dom and different Motet guys, says Salken. We kept talking about the electronic scene and how nobody seemed to know how to play an instrument. It was all producers without the musical background of knowing melodies, chord structures, different modes, etc. and how that could elevate the music if they knew those things.
Theres so much we can do, remarks Lalli. Theres a production side of it EQing and trying to get the kick drum sound just right that Id never dealt with before, and just crafting the sounds themselves is like learning a new instrument. The music part, the piano parts is easy because I played keyboards all through music school. But in terms of creating synthesizer sounds and bass tones, thats a learning process every day, which is really exciting. I love to learn and grow.
Dominic Lalli by Chad Smith |
One aspect of Big Gigantic thats become more surefire as theyve evolved is their understanding of electronic/DJ cultures obsession with build and release dynamics.
Thats also whats so appealing about the jam band world. Musicians and fans love when bands build and build. This is a different kind of build and drop, but were working hard to refine that. Its such an important part of the music, says Lalli. In terms of production stuff, it goes back to reading and watching videos on YouTube every day I cant believe how much stuff I learn on there all the time. Were working on getting the music to sound professional and to flow in our own way. With the new album, I tried to represent a whole bunch of electronic music styles, but perhaps put into a different tempo than normal so it feels like Big Gigantic.
[A lot of] electronic music is extremely repetitive. Theres a lot of tension and release with the builds, which is why a lot of jam band kids like it. Thats what they dig in Phish, where they do that on top of the songwriting, says Salken. In the 90s, younger people were really into the jam band scene and it was growing strong with Phish, Cheese and lots of band on the rise. In the later 90s, it was Karl D, Soulive and all those bands kicking ass and selling out multiple nights everywhere. Then the electronic thing came around and theres a new generation thats excited about this new kind of music. But somehow it got more mainstream [than the jam scene] with people like Skrillex and Pretty Lights.
New Album |
I think having access to music everywhere is making a difference. Before, you had to buy a CD, or hear just part of an album on the radio, or trade with blanks & postage. Now, you can go online and get almost anything. It makes it easier to get music around to people, says Salken. Facebook is a huge tool for spreading music and giving it to people, and just for publicity and hyping stuff.
The generation thats most taken to electronic music is also a generation thats grown very comfortable not paying for albums, downloading most of their music for free, whether authorized or otherwise. This is a problem to some but Big Gigantic has some insights into this situation.
Because we have computers in our homes now, you can make an album for practically nothing, remarks Salken. Before youd have to go into the studio and spend 10, 20, 30 thousand dollars making an album. Now, its almost free except for your time. You can buy $600 of software or get it for free, so thats one of the reasons electronic artists can give albums away for free because were not going into debt. Its like a side bet to the live show. Its a bonus and an underlying thing that makes this whole scene happen. We just want to get it into the hands of everyone we can so that they come see us. The real thing is the live show.
As true as that may be, Nocturnal is still more musical than much of whats out there in this field, an album one can listen to and enjoy without the huge amplifiers and crazy light show of a concert.
Big Gigantic Audience by Brad Hodge |
Dom definitely approaches each piece as a song with choruses, intros and bridges of traditional songwriting, says Salken. But he also likes using different techniques he finds in all kinds of music as well stuff in electronic music we find that works. Theres definitely stuff those guys do that works and people love and we love and it makes a song cool and interesting.
One of the elements that makes Big Gigantic stand out from the pack of DJs and electronica bands today is Lallis saxophone, which often emerges as a warming blast, a descendent of 70s FM radio redolent of Steely Dan, Gerry Rafferty and the like.
When I have a horn in my mouth and Im trying to do lead/solo stuff, my head is completely in jam band world. Im thinking of guitarists what would Trey do? As a saxophone player, my natural inclination is move like I do in the jam or jazz world, thinking about what I can do to kick it up a notch, says Lalli, spotlighting how the horn helps cut through some of the ADD stroking tendencies of most electronica. Its a different thing but its still music. Everyone is dancing but its a whole different mentality. The crowds are SO awesome. Im speechless about them. Our whole fall was basically spent opening up for Bassnectar and Pretty Lights, and even at those shows people came at 7 at night and were right up front ready to go. Very colorful audiences [laughs].
Big Gigantic by Brad Hodge |
Theres a fear with younger kids that theyll get bored, but we like playing a show thats action packed all the way through anyway, says Salken. We like to go full force for two hours wear everyone out, wear ourselves out so it feels like a workout by the end. But we still want a flow to the evening. We used to dip down more into the mellow but kids get bored really quick. The bigger we get, the more we know that people are there to see us and we can take more liberties.
The evolution of the band has taken them from being an electro rarity in jam scene to a slot at Ultra, the worlds biggest electronic music festival, this March.
The music industry and music itself is changing. Everyone can see it, says Lalli. So, we dont want to count ourselves out of anything. The point for me doing this project was to get the music out to as many people as we can. So, were really trying to get it to the jam band people. Were really trying to get it to the electronic cats. Were really trying to reach a younger audience AND an older audience bridge a bunch of gaps. Thats why were really excited to reach people who dont know who we are, to get to them with some music they might really like.
Big Gigantic Tour Dates :: Big Gigantic News
JamBase | Gargantuan
Go See Live Music!



Tags: cat, dancing, dominic-lalli, gin, laugh, let, light, lights, opening, song, soul
January 7, 2012 in 09, 10, 11, 12, 12-29, 2, 2001, 2011, 25, 28, 29, 3, 30, 31, 50, 9, 99, a, acoustic, after, age, Alive, all, Also, am, an, and, another, Antelope, Are, around, Artie, as, at, away, Back on the Train, Backstage, Bad, Ball, ban, band, bands, Beer, beginning, big, Bill, blue, Bluegrass, blues, book, Bowie, Burn, but, by, ca, can, cat, center, Chalk, chalkdust, Chalkdust Torture, City, classic, close, Coliseum, COMPLETE, Crosseyed, Crosseyed and Painless, Crowd, cup, cute, dance, dave, David, Day, dead, December, didn't, distract, Divided, dog, down, Dust, en, Encore, end, Enjoy, enjoy myself, Eve, Eyed, fall, Famous, FEAT, fee, fi, finish, First, fish, fishman, flubs, FOR, four, frank, Free, Friend, From, Funk, game, garden, Genre, get, gin, give, Good, Good Times Bad Times, Gorge, grateful, great, Groove, Guitar, hall, hampton, hi, hiatus, high, hoist, Hope, How, hydrogen, ice, improvisation, in, inspired, into, intro, is, IT, jam, jam band, jammin, jamming, Joy, Julius, key, King, know, lang, Lange, las, Last, late, Led, let, life, Lifeboy, Like, LITTLE, live, live music, log, long, loose, lot, love, MA, madison, madison square garden, Main, maze, Meat, MI, mike, Mike's, Mike's Song, mod, msg, Much, Music, My, Myself, Nat, nate, nc, New, New Year's, new york, News, NH, night, NJ, no, NV, ny, NYE, of, on, one, op, Open, opener, out, PA, page, Painless, Part, party, Phish, Phish Tour, Piano, piper, play, Pop, pro, Pt, rad, rain, rare, reggae, return, rift, Road, rock, roll, room, row, rs, run, Sand, Say, SC, sci, second, seconds, set, show, Shows, Simple, Sky, So, solo, song, sound, SPAC, square, St, stage, start, state, station, step, story, street, Summer, Summer Tour, tab, talk, Talking, Taste, That, the, times, to, tone, Too, torture, tour, Train, trey, Twist, two, uic, us, va, van, venue, vocal, WA, war, Way, ways, we, Weekapaug, Weekapaug Groove, Ween, Wilson, with, words, years, yem, york, You, You Enjoy Myself, Your |
Words by: Garrin Benfield | Images by: Dave Vann
Phish :: 12.29.11-12.30.11 :: Madison Square Garden :: New York, NY
12.29.11
Phish – 12-29-11- Photo by Dave Vann Phish 2011 |
Depending on your perspective, Phish either took over midtown Manhattan for their 2011 holiday run at Madison Square Garden, or were barely even noticed by commuters descending beneath the venue to Penn Station. Though the band has been playing the world’s most famous venue since 1994, it still strikes me how the lot scene is completely absorbed by the streets outside the venue, which appear only moderately busier because of the band’s presence. This year’s frigid temperatures sent everyone inside nice and early for the second of the four sold out shows.
It’s always a bit disorienting entering the flow of a special stand-alone run like this one on the second night, but everyone I spoke with had positive things to say about night one, and a general air of gratitude billowed through the crowd that the band was even able to schedule these dates amongst a short family oriented hiatus. My concerns over whether the band would be rusty and unrehearsed were temporarily put at bay by the metrically challenging “Sloth” opener, which like the “You Enjoy Myself” that followed, was executed near perfectly and took me completely off guard. I can’t remember ever seeing “YEM” placed so early in a show and it came across as an undeniable statement of confidence. The room erupted and even accommodated the strange feeling of hearing an a cappella vocal jam before some people had settled into their seats.
As if to temper any expectations that this would be a night of unpredictable left turns (as the recently released ’97 box set was fresh on everyone’s minds), Trey slid right into an expected but crackling “Back on the Train”. This version, though, also included a valiant effort at a brief free form jam when Mike abandoned the blues chord change and instead rested on the one. “Moma Dance” and “Funky Bitch”, both heavily played last Summer Tour, still worked well because they allow this era of Phish to indulge in their essential strength of grooving while tempting tastefully the outer edges of melodic interplay. Page really stepped up his B-3 solo on “Funky Bitch” and was happily cranked in the PA, which sounded both crisp and warm all night. The rest of the set wrapped up unremarkably but with great panache. A typically dark and climactic “Maze” and a fully pumped “Antelope” brought the first set to a crashing conclusion.
Phish – 12-29-11- Photo by Dave Vann Phish 2011 |
The second set began with great promise as the band leaned into the Talking Head’s “Crosseyed and Painless”, but after only a few minutes of future funk, bled seamlessly into “Simple”. The jam out of “Simple” featured some beautifully cascading runs from Trey before the whole band began dissolving in a more pointilistic direction. I think it’s safe to say no one called “Lifeboy” (the gauzy acoustic ballad from Hoist) next, but I was fascinated by the choice and eager to see how it went down. Well, this was New York City after all, so predictably the band lost some folks to the beer lines, and frankly, to my ears the tune could have used a few more run-throughs in soundcheck. “Lifeboy” also illustrated one of my recurring frustrations with some Phish songs where the piece feels like it’s so close to working on a profound level but one line or odd musical choice derails its chances of joining some elusive outside pop music pantheon. For me, on this evening, the line “You don’t get a refund if you overpray” was the stumbling block that distracted me from the otherwise gorgeous cadence of the chorus and the brilliantly understated guitar figure that runs underneath the intro and turnaround sections. However, the band deserves much admiration for continuing to mine its back catalog for left field material.
“Guyute” came next, and though heralded as one of Trey’s last great Fugue-inspired pieces, is still a very divisive tune that did little to reignite the room. “Mike’s Song”, of course, did just that, and also included the second biggest surprise of the night when, after a searing jam, instead of “Hydrogen” the band slid into “Chalkdust Torture” as if they had discussed it backstage (Who knows? Stranger things have happened). Trey created quite a challenge for himself in how to return to “I Am Hydrogen” at the breakneck clip of “Chalkdust”, but pulled it off with the rest of the band gamely falling into place. An incendiary, generously jammed “Weekapaug Groove” followed, featuring more than a few tantalizing plateaus of piano and guitar interplay. This thick and involving section of the second set is what lingered as the sold out room slowly exited and tried to pace itself for the next two nights at MSG.
12.30.11
Phish – 12-30-11- Photo by Dave Vann Phish 2011 |
December 30 has achieved a folkloric importance in the jam band universe as the night to see in an end of the year run, a theory that has its roots in the Grateful Dead’s mostly left coast series of shows at the Kaiser Auditorium or, later, the Oakland Coliseum. The idea is that the band is warmed up from the previous night or two of shows but not yet exhausted, over-partied, or overwhelmed by the ballyhoo of New Year’s Eve. The energy inside Phish’s penultimate show of 2011 indicated this theory is alive and well. With expectations running unfairly high, the band delivered a maddeningly inconsistent show that contained truly beautiful and innovative explorations amidst some rough or seemingly uninspired patches.
Things got off to a snappy start when Trey counted off “Punch You in the Eye” with his thick, flange drenched tone. Though not stop-on-a-dime perfect, I’m always blown away that the band considers this tune a good way to warm up! Trey then slid into a completely unexpected “Prince Caspian”, which like the previous night’s “You Enjoy Myself,” has rarely occupied such an early set position. The move was partially successful. On the one hand, I felt very deeply that this choice was an indication that Trey wanted to make this a special night, as “Caspian” has always seemed to me to be a song about Phish music itself as much as anything else. On the other, tempo-wise, the room was thrown from fifth gear into second quite abruptly. I thought it ended up working well, as the band was fresh and committed. After droning for a few seconds at the song’s conclusion, Fishman played that fluttering snare intro to “Backwards Down the Number Line,” which felt like a new, old friend entering the room that I hadn’t thought about in a while. “Number Line” reached a nice, simmering, first set boil with just the right amount of good natured, gurgling Trey lines. A very intriguing three song beginning that could probably only result from not planning.
Phish – 12-30-11- Photo by Dave Vann Phish 2011 |
The bluegrass ditty “Nellie Kane”, though flawless, reminded me that I don’t feel a great need to hear Phish play bluegrass anymore. At one time, one of the most novel genre surprises of the jam scene, it has been so co-opted as to be clich. “Divided Sky” continued what was shaping up to be a very diverse set, and was pretty much note-perfect. As many times as I have heard this song, there are still passages that can stir tears and the now-traditional long silence in the heart of the tune always feels like an opportunity for the whole audience to come together. The band played every passage like they meant it. “Sand”, though one of the juiciest funk grooves Phish ever devised, seemed premature at this point in the set, like it had been chosen in haste as sometimes happens when there is no setlist. And the jam itself suffered as a result, never really achieving liftoff, but instead remaining a crunchy rock excursion. “Vultures”, a classic Phish prog-oddity, seemed like a bit of red meat tossed to the confused crowd who were beginning to wilt under the expectations of so much eclecticism. But with its few obvious flubs, even it didn’t achieve the hoped for result. Trey instantly took off into a brisk “Rift” that suffered from the rust of months off the road. Playing such a demanding tune without rehearsal is either hubris or an unfortunate aspect of Phish’s dedicated improvisational ethic. Following “Rift” with “Joy” didn’t improve the situation. “Joy” is a well intentioned, heartfelt song about unexpected loss and living life fully, but so out of the vocal range of both Trey and Page, and also under-rehearsed, that all of its power seemed deflated. Not surprisingly, the set closing “Quinn the Eskimo” had the desired galvanizing effect on the room, with its easy groove and multiple reference points, from Dylan to the Dead to the many Phish versions of years past. It also set up the rest of the night for possible transcendence, though the vibe was decidedly unsure.
Phish – 12-30-11- Photo by Dave Vann Phish 2011 |
Though Phish has successfully resisted the categorization of their repertoire into stifling first and second set categories, there are still some songs that to me belong earlier in the show, and some that should be broken out later in the night. So, when Trey busted into that familiar crunchy E chord of “Wilson” and then followed that with a very confused “Axilla,” wherein half the band didn’t appear to know what key they were in, my heart sank a bit. Even the beginning of “Piper”, a tune I really think should be reserved for especially inspired evenings, did little to assuage my anxiety, as Trey rushed the vocal entrance and then quickly reached for the low hanging fruit of all the rock riffage at his disposal. But a cool breeze came over the proceedings and the whole band suddenly began listening to one another in a much deeper way. A fractured, dark funk groove with amphetamine tom rolls and moist synth washes emerged and became the launching pad for 10 or so minutes of fascinating, roiling weirdness. Trey began playing thematically, enabling Mike to compliment his repeated lines, until a minimalist tangle was achieved, suggesting Reich and King Crimson as only Phish can. As things began to settle, Trey let loose cries that seemed part bird, part anguished dog; a true cooperative improvisation from which a slinky “Twist” emerged. A newly inspired Trey played his sexiest, snakiest leads of the night, and the whole band seemed newly minted, given a fresh set of capabilities to finish off the show.
After “Julius” and “Golgi Apparatus”, two more songs that, though well played, seemed somehow to be crashing a party in progress, the crowd exhaled with a joyous “2001″. Looking around me, I could feel that beautiful symbiotic relationship between the band and the inhabitants of this round room start to flourish. It wasn’t a “2001″ for the ages, but I would argue it was unique in its warmth. In either case, it was definitely the right choice to begin to tell the story of the last part of this show. A “David Bowie” that provided all one could ask for in terms of execution and dissonance fueled jamming appeared to end the set. Then, suprisingly,Trey began “Squirming Coil”, not because the show needed one more tune – in fact it seemed almost tacked on at the time – but because he wanted Page to wrap up the night with his lovely piano interlude. A generous and rocking two song/two cover encore of “Boogie on Reggae Woman” and “Good Times Bad Times” concluded what could only be called another diverse and generous show from the only musicians playing at this scale who continue to risk so much.
Phish Tour Dates :: Phish News
JamBase | Gardening
Go See Live Music!



Tags: bad, bluegrass, chalkdust, chalkdust-torture, images, meat, music news, play, step, torture
January 7, 2012 in 09, 10, 11, 12, 12-29, 2, 2001, 2011, 25, 28, 29, 3, 30, 31, 50, 9, 99, a, acoustic, after, age, Alive, all, Also, am, an, and, another, Antelope, Are, around, Artie, as, at, away, Back on the Train, Backstage, Bad, Ball, ban, band, bands, Beer, beginning, big, Bill, blue, Bluegrass, blues, book, Bowie, Burn, but, by, ca, can, cat, center, Chalk, chalkdust, Chalkdust Torture, City, classic, close, Coliseum, COMPLETE, Crosseyed, Crosseyed and Painless, Crowd, cup, cute, dance, dave, David, Day, dead, December, didn't, distract, Divided, dog, down, Dust, en, Encore, end, Enjoy, enjoy myself, Eve, Eyed, fall, Famous, FEAT, fee, fi, finish, First, fish, fishman, flubs, FOR, four, frank, Free, Friend, From, Funk, game, garden, Genre, get, gin, give, Good, Good Times Bad Times, Gorge, grateful, great, Groove, Guitar, hall, hampton, hi, hiatus, high, hoist, Hope, How, hydrogen, ice, improvisation, in, inspired, into, intro, is, IT, jam, jam band, jammin, jamming, Joy, Julius, key, King, know, lang, Lange, las, Last, late, Led, let, life, Lifeboy, Like, LITTLE, live, live music, log, long, loose, lot, love, MA, madison, madison square garden, Main, maze, Meat, MI, mike, Mike's, Mike's Song, mod, msg, Much, Music, My, Myself, Nat, nate, nc, New, New Year's, new york, News, NH, night, NJ, no, NV, ny, NYE, of, on, one, op, Open, opener, out, PA, page, Painless, Part, party, Phish, Phish Tour, Piano, piper, play, Pop, pro, Pt, rad, rain, rare, reggae, return, rift, Road, rock, roll, room, row, rs, run, Sand, Say, SC, sci, second, seconds, set, show, Shows, Simple, Sky, So, solo, song, sound, SPAC, square, St, stage, start, state, station, step, story, street, Summer, Summer Tour, tab, talk, Talking, Taste, That, the, times, to, tone, Too, torture, tour, Train, trey, Twist, two, uic, us, va, van, venue, vocal, WA, war, Way, ways, we, Weekapaug, Weekapaug Groove, Ween, Wilson, with, words, years, yem, york, You, You Enjoy Myself, Your |
Words by: Garrin Benfield | Images by: Dave Vann
Phish :: 12.29.11-12.30.11 :: Madison Square Garden :: New York, NY
12.29.11
Phish – 12-29-11- Photo by Dave Vann Phish 2011 |
Depending on your perspective, Phish either took over midtown Manhattan for their 2011 holiday run at Madison Square Garden, or were barely even noticed by commuters descending beneath the venue to Penn Station. Though the band has been playing the world’s most famous venue since 1994, it still strikes me how the lot scene is completely absorbed by the streets outside the venue, which appear only moderately busier because of the band’s presence. This year’s frigid temperatures sent everyone inside nice and early for the second of the four sold out shows.
It’s always a bit disorienting entering the flow of a special stand-alone run like this one on the second night, but everyone I spoke with had positive things to say about night one, and a general air of gratitude billowed through the crowd that the band was even able to schedule these dates amongst a short family oriented hiatus. My concerns over whether the band would be rusty and unrehearsed were temporarily put at bay by the metrically challenging “Sloth” opener, which like the “You Enjoy Myself” that followed, was executed near perfectly and took me completely off guard. I can’t remember ever seeing “YEM” placed so early in a show and it came across as an undeniable statement of confidence. The room erupted and even accommodated the strange feeling of hearing an a cappella vocal jam before some people had settled into their seats.
As if to temper any expectations that this would be a night of unpredictable left turns (as the recently released ’97 box set was fresh on everyone’s minds), Trey slid right into an expected but crackling “Back on the Train”. This version, though, also included a valiant effort at a brief free form jam when Mike abandoned the blues chord change and instead rested on the one. “Moma Dance” and “Funky Bitch”, both heavily played last Summer Tour, still worked well because they allow this era of Phish to indulge in their essential strength of grooving while tempting tastefully the outer edges of melodic interplay. Page really stepped up his B-3 solo on “Funky Bitch” and was happily cranked in the PA, which sounded both crisp and warm all night. The rest of the set wrapped up unremarkably but with great panache. A typically dark and climactic “Maze” and a fully pumped “Antelope” brought the first set to a crashing conclusion.
Phish – 12-29-11- Photo by Dave Vann Phish 2011 |
The second set began with great promise as the band leaned into the Talking Head’s “Crosseyed and Painless”, but after only a few minutes of future funk, bled seamlessly into “Simple”. The jam out of “Simple” featured some beautifully cascading runs from Trey before the whole band began dissolving in a more pointilistic direction. I think it’s safe to say no one called “Lifeboy” (the gauzy acoustic ballad from Hoist) next, but I was fascinated by the choice and eager to see how it went down. Well, this was New York City after all, so predictably the band lost some folks to the beer lines, and frankly, to my ears the tune could have used a few more run-throughs in soundcheck. “Lifeboy” also illustrated one of my recurring frustrations with some Phish songs where the piece feels like it’s so close to working on a profound level but one line or odd musical choice derails its chances of joining some elusive outside pop music pantheon. For me, on this evening, the line “You don’t get a refund if you overpray” was the stumbling block that distracted me from the otherwise gorgeous cadence of the chorus and the brilliantly understated guitar figure that runs underneath the intro and turnaround sections. However, the band deserves much admiration for continuing to mine its back catalog for left field material.
“Guyute” came next, and though heralded as one of Trey’s last great Fugue-inspired pieces, is still a very divisive tune that did little to reignite the room. “Mike’s Song”, of course, did just that, and also included the second biggest surprise of the night when, after a searing jam, instead of “Hydrogen” the band slid into “Chalkdust Torture” as if they had discussed it backstage (Who knows? Stranger things have happened). Trey created quite a challenge for himself in how to return to “I Am Hydrogen” at the breakneck clip of “Chalkdust”, but pulled it off with the rest of the band gamely falling into place. An incendiary, generously jammed “Weekapaug Groove” followed, featuring more than a few tantalizing plateaus of piano and guitar interplay. This thick and involving section of the second set is what lingered as the sold out room slowly exited and tried to pace itself for the next two nights at MSG.
12.30.11
Phish – 12-30-11- Photo by Dave Vann Phish 2011 |
December 30 has achieved a folkloric importance in the jam band universe as the night to see in an end of the year run, a theory that has its roots in the Grateful Dead’s mostly left coast series of shows at the Kaiser Auditorium or, later, the Oakland Coliseum. The idea is that the band is warmed up from the previous night or two of shows but not yet exhausted, over-partied, or overwhelmed by the ballyhoo of New Year’s Eve. The energy inside Phish’s penultimate show of 2011 indicated this theory is alive and well. With expectations running unfairly high, the band delivered a maddeningly inconsistent show that contained truly beautiful and innovative explorations amidst some rough or seemingly uninspired patches.
Things got off to a snappy start when Trey counted off “Punch You in the Eye” with his thick, flange drenched tone. Though not stop-on-a-dime perfect, I’m always blown away that the band considers this tune a good way to warm up! Trey then slid into a completely unexpected “Prince Caspian”, which like the previous night’s “You Enjoy Myself,” has rarely occupied such an early set position. The move was partially successful. On the one hand, I felt very deeply that this choice was an indication that Trey wanted to make this a special night, as “Caspian” has always seemed to me to be a song about Phish music itself as much as anything else. On the other, tempo-wise, the room was thrown from fifth gear into second quite abruptly. I thought it ended up working well, as the band was fresh and committed. After droning for a few seconds at the song’s conclusion, Fishman played that fluttering snare intro to “Backwards Down the Number Line,” which felt like a new, old friend entering the room that I hadn’t thought about in a while. “Number Line” reached a nice, simmering, first set boil with just the right amount of good natured, gurgling Trey lines. A very intriguing three song beginning that could probably only result from not planning.
Phish – 12-30-11- Photo by Dave Vann Phish 2011 |
The bluegrass ditty “Nellie Kane”, though flawless, reminded me that I don’t feel a great need to hear Phish play bluegrass anymore. At one time, one of the most novel genre surprises of the jam scene, it has been so co-opted as to be clich. “Divided Sky” continued what was shaping up to be a very diverse set, and was pretty much note-perfect. As many times as I have heard this song, there are still passages that can stir tears and the now-traditional long silence in the heart of the tune always feels like an opportunity for the whole audience to come together. The band played every passage like they meant it. “Sand”, though one of the juiciest funk grooves Phish ever devised, seemed premature at this point in the set, like it had been chosen in haste as sometimes happens when there is no setlist. And the jam itself suffered as a result, never really achieving liftoff, but instead remaining a crunchy rock excursion. “Vultures”, a classic Phish prog-oddity, seemed like a bit of red meat tossed to the confused crowd who were beginning to wilt under the expectations of so much eclecticism. But with its few obvious flubs, even it didn’t achieve the hoped for result. Trey instantly took off into a brisk “Rift” that suffered from the rust of months off the road. Playing such a demanding tune without rehearsal is either hubris or an unfortunate aspect of Phish’s dedicated improvisational ethic. Following “Rift” with “Joy” didn’t improve the situation. “Joy” is a well intentioned, heartfelt song about unexpected loss and living life fully, but so out of the vocal range of both Trey and Page, and also under-rehearsed, that all of its power seemed deflated. Not surprisingly, the set closing “Quinn the Eskimo” had the desired galvanizing effect on the room, with its easy groove and multiple reference points, from Dylan to the Dead to the many Phish versions of years past. It also set up the rest of the night for possible transcendence, though the vibe was decidedly unsure.
Phish – 12-30-11- Photo by Dave Vann Phish 2011 |
Though Phish has successfully resisted the categorization of their repertoire into stifling first and second set categories, there are still some songs that to me belong earlier in the show, and some that should be broken out later in the night. So, when Trey busted into that familiar crunchy E chord of “Wilson” and then followed that with a very confused “Axilla,” wherein half the band didn’t appear to know what key they were in, my heart sank a bit. Even the beginning of “Piper”, a tune I really think should be reserved for especially inspired evenings, did little to assuage my anxiety, as Trey rushed the vocal entrance and then quickly reached for the low hanging fruit of all the rock riffage at his disposal. But a cool breeze came over the proceedings and the whole band suddenly began listening to one another in a much deeper way. A fractured, dark funk groove with amphetamine tom rolls and moist synth washes emerged and became the launching pad for 10 or so minutes of fascinating, roiling weirdness. Trey began playing thematically, enabling Mike to compliment his repeated lines, until a minimalist tangle was achieved, suggesting Reich and King Crimson as only Phish can. As things began to settle, Trey let loose cries that seemed part bird, part anguished dog; a true cooperative improvisation from which a slinky “Twist” emerged. A newly inspired Trey played his sexiest, snakiest leads of the night, and the whole band seemed newly minted, given a fresh set of capabilities to finish off the show.
After “Julius” and “Golgi Apparatus”, two more songs that, though well played, seemed somehow to be crashing a party in progress, the crowd exhaled with a joyous “2001″. Looking around me, I could feel that beautiful symbiotic relationship between the band and the inhabitants of this round room start to flourish. It wasn’t a “2001″ for the ages, but I would argue it was unique in its warmth. In either case, it was definitely the right choice to begin to tell the story of the last part of this show. A “David Bowie” that provided all one could ask for in terms of execution and dissonance fueled jamming appeared to end the set. Then, suprisingly,Trey began “Squirming Coil”, not because the show needed one more tune – in fact it seemed almost tacked on at the time – but because he wanted Page to wrap up the night with his lovely piano interlude. A generous and rocking two song/two cover encore of “Boogie on Reggae Woman” and “Good Times Bad Times” concluded what could only be called another diverse and generous show from the only musicians playing at this scale who continue to risk so much.
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