Luke Sacks

Televised Tune: On the Tube This Week

It isn’t often that Comedy Central’s hit The Colbert Report is mentioned in this space as it isn’t often a musician is the featured guest. But the show will welcome reggae

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Preview: Phish Summer Tour – Leg 2

Back in early June, I centered my Phish Summer Tour Preview around a symbolic fork in the road, which is where I saw the band prior to their 19-date first leg. It wasn’t my most accurate column as I mistakenly called the cavernous Thompson Boling Arena in Knoxville small and was probably a little harsh in criticizing their playing in Hampton. But at the end of the column I laid out three options that I thought were available to the band for this summer, which was really my main point of the whole article.

[All photos by Adam Kaufman]


We all saw what went down in June and early July with Phish tearing it up on a nightly basis and surprising the hell out of fans with bust outs and new covers galore. This is what I referred to in the column as “Option A.” Every song the band had ever played was fair game. Among the most outstanding choices: Fuck Your Face was played in Charlotte after being on the shelf for over 23 years (or 1,413 shows). The Friday night Camden show opened with the first Alumni Blues in 222 shows sandwiched around the first Letter to Jimmy Page in 587 shows. Tela, which had previously appeared only five times since 1997, was played twice. In Raleigh, the show opened with the now-rare Llama and always-rare Roses are Free with Have Mercy and a scorching Light Up or Leave Me Alone in the second set.

The new covers included The Band’s Look Out, Cleveland and John Lennon’s Instant Karma! in Cuyuhoga Falls, Tom Waits’ Cold Water in Portsmouth, VA, Jumping Jack Flash in Merriweather and a heartfelt take on Neutral Milk Hotel’s In the Aeroplane Over the Sea, a gutsy choice considering the high regard in which that song is held. And in Alpharetta, on July 4, the band whipped fans into a frenzy with a Harpua featuring a cover of Rage Against the Machine’s Killing in the Name Of. That of course after already playing Colonel Forbin’s Ascent > Fly Famous Mockingbird in the first set. So far the covers have all been one-offs. Will that continue in the second leg or will we see more polished versions of some of these? I’m hoping for the latter.

READ ON for more of our Phish Summer Tour Leg 2 Preview…

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Televised Tune: On the Tube This Week

The always quirky Flaming Lips will visit the usually quirky Late Show with David Letterman on Wednesday following tonight’s show at Central Park’s Summerstage and tomorrow’s performance at NYC’s Terminal 5

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Televised Tune: On the Tube This Week

In advance of a July 22 gig at Radio City Music Hall, Widespread Panic will make their first-ever visit to Late Night with Jimmy Fallon tonight on NBC. Tuesday finds

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Televised Tune: On the Tube This Week

The Kinks, one of the most underrated and under-appreciated rock and roll bands of all time, is the subject of Biography’s BIO airing Thursday at 3PM. Tune in for a

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Televised Tune: On the Tube This Week

Ovation will air Satchmo: Louis Armstrong on Thursday at 2pm. Tune in for a profile of the legendary jazz trumpeter which includes performances of Sunny Side of the Street and Potato

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Televised Tune: On the Tube This Week

Living legend Herbie Hancock will make two late night appearances this week as he visits The Late Show with David Letterman on Monday (CBS 11:35PM) and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon

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Review: Phish @ Comcast Theatre, Night 2

Phish was all business for the first 2:45 of Friday’s show in Hartford, the second of two nights at the Comcast Theatre. But the encore, which featured a strange dedication and the same song played twice is probably what will be remembered most about this night.


Fee was an interesting choice for an opener on a Friday, when the crowd seemed ready for something with more energy. The song is fairly rare these days – it was played only once in 2009 – but doesn’t do much to get the crowd going and this version wasn’t really any exception. Rift was close and had some good moments but was not quite as tight as it should be as Trey struggled with the “darkness the light from above could not reach” lyric and several of the licks in the buildup and peak. The set got cooking briefly with a very strong Wolfman’s Brother that started funky but turned into more of a straight ahead rock and roll jam and the energy began to rise in the venue.

New Phish songs always sound strange the first time you hear them live. Everyone sort of looks around and shrugs and has that “I have no clue what this is” look on their faces. Summer of ’89 certainly drew those looks on Friday night. I can’t say I enjoyed the song all that much but I’ll reserve full judgment until it’s been worked out a bit. The beginning struck me as a Water in the Sky/Driver hybrid that tried to gain steam with a jam segment that didn’t go very far. But we’ll see how the song develops if it remains in the rotation.

READ ON for more from Luke on Night Two of Hartford…

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