June 2010

Preview: Phish at a Fork in the Road

It’s hard to believe but tomorrow Phish will take the road to launch their massive 29-date summer tour in Chicago. Summer tour has always been an important time for Phish and this year is no exception. In 2009 the band played a mostly successful run of summer shows, in two legs, after an inspired but mostly sloppy return at Hampton in March.

Phish on Jimmy Fallon – Kill Devil Falls [via theaudioperv.com]

Last summer the band conquered their usual sheds but also returned to some unique venues in St. Louis’s tiny Fox Theater and Red Rocks, a venue that finally welcomed the band back after a 13-year banishment.

This summer’s venues are mostly the standard sheds but the exceptions are glorious. The 6,500 seat, waterside Ntelos Pavilion in Norfolk, VA is a major upgrade over the Verizon Amphitheater in Virginia Beach. The Greek Theater in Berkeley is one of those venues that fans have been fantasizing about for years and Telluride Town Park is perhaps the quaintest place the band has visited since they were touring the country in a van.

While we’re on the subject of venues, I think the time has come for Phish to forsake an entirely outdoors summer tour and start working in some smaller theater and smaller arena dates as they did last summer when they played the Fox and smaller arenas in Knoxville and Asheville. The same approach needs to come to the Northeast, where chances to see this band in an intimate setting have been few and far between. There are very few people who actually enjoy sitting on the lawn at these giant venues and there just aren’t enough pavilion tickets to go around. It wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world for the band to play more places like Radio City Music Hall or Hampton Coliseum or even NBA/NHL arenas like Madison Square Garden or The Wachovia Center in the summer, and forsake a few amphitheater dates.

READ ON for more from Luke on the coming Phish tour…

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Bloggy Goodness: Bonnaroo Edition

With the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival kicking off in a just few more hours, we’ve finally got the official schedule for the fest’s YouTube webcast – which you’ll be

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Briefly: Wilby Departs Umphrey’s Crew

HT contributor Wade “Wyllys” Wilby has been given the royal sendoff from tour of duty with Umphrey’s McGee as he heads off to focus on his DJ career. Here’s the

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Widespread Panic: Dirty Side Down

Mixing up laid back southern charm (“Clinic Cynic”)  jazzy instrumentals (“St. Louis”), compositions from old friends (Jerry Joseph’s “North”) and plenty of dynamic song-writing, there’s no arguing the oxymoron that Widespead Panic is the best studio band in the jam scene.

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Gregg Allman: Hard Rock Live, Biloxi, MS 6/4/10

Gregg Allman took the stage on a Friday night to such a round of applause it would have humbled a hardened man. His congregation loves him deeply and it shows in the way they follow him around from town to town, state to sate, just to hear him sing songs that he has sung hundreds of times. It was in the air, this electricity that causes the hair on the back of your neck to stand up straight, as Gregg and his band took over that stage and held this crowd till the last note of “Statesboro Blues”.

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The Number Line: Bonnaroo 2010

Bonnaroo Week rolls on here at Hidden Track with a feature for the stat geeks everywhere. Now in its ninth year the fine folks at Superfly have again crushed it

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Review: Rich Pagano @ City Winery

Rich Pagano + the SugarCane cups @ City Winery – April 30

After years of watching Rich Pagano cover other people’s songs with quintessential Beatles cover band The Fab Faux and Fillmore East-era Tribute act Prisoners of 2nd Avenue, the singing/songwriting drummer showed he’s quite capable of lighting up a room while performing his own songs with the SugarCane cups at City Winery in New York City on April 30.

[All photos by Adam Kaufman]


The evening started with a 20-minute set of country-tinged originals by Natalie Mishell, an artist whose debut album is currently being produced by Pagano. Mishell has a voice that gets to your core pretty quickly, quivering with emotion and wide-ranging as she moves from the high register of her voice to the low within a few measures. It doesn’t hurt that she’s got a beautiful smile and seemed at ease with an audience filled with people who had probably never heard of her before.

Pagano and the SugarCane cups came on exactly at showtime and immediately got down to business with the opening track from their self-titled release, Everything’s Alright. Pretty quickly it was clear Pagano had put together an impressive group of talented musicians to bring his songs to life on stage. Besides Rich on drums, the five-piece features Andy York and Rob Bailey on guitars, John Conte on bass and Kevin Bentz on keys. Each player has honed their skills in the studio and on the road for decades backing a legendary roster of artists including Roseanne Cash, John Mellencamp and Donald Fagen. READ ON for more of Scotty’s thoughts on this show…

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MMJ To Play 5 Nights At Terminal 5

The last time folks in New York City saw the mighty My Morning Jacket performing live they were ringing in the 2009 with a now legendary show at Madison Square

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10 Years Later: Phish in Japan Pt. 2

In June 2000, Phish played their only headlining tour through Japan. A few dozen American travelers joined several hundred newly initiated Japanese phans on a phenomenal seven-night run of intimate venues, resulting in a series of fiery shows, unique cultural exchanges and the birth of the Japanese Meatstick. Longtime fan Stanch had been living and teaching English in Japan for a year when Phish arrived. In honor of the 10-year anniversary of the tour, and with help from a detailed journal and inputs from his traveling companions, he recounts his memories of the tour’s first four shows.

06/09/00 On Air East, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo (Pt. 2)

As the crowd began to pack (and I mean pack) the room, the atmosphere seemed to combine the anticipation of a typical Phish show with the feeling that we were all at some private party. There may have only been 500 people there, but they were 500 of the most jazzed people I’ve ever been around. Even the other shows in Japan paled when it came to the buzz that rippled through the crowd in the moments before the band came out that first night.

[Photo via FrankZappa.org]


Phish took the stage and unleashed a strong first set. Extremely well played, high energy, and exemplary of their many styles and moods, they introduced themselves to the crowd with an iron-clad grip. In response, a friend acknowledged their Axilla opener with a hello of his own: A few rows in front of Trey, he danced with a toy he had purchased on a whim in Shibuya earlier that day swaying high above his head – Captain Pecker the Party Wrecker – a four foot, inflatable penis with the word MEATSTICK written in large marker on its side. I have had a few people ask me along the way if I thought Trey had seen the Captain. Let me be clear: everybody saw Captain Pecker the Party Wrecker, including Brad Sands, who rushed over to tell my friend that yes, they were videotaping the show for Japanese TV, and – while hilarious – there was no room in the video for the Captain, because the cameras “couldn’t see the band.” Brad retired the rubber Captain to the side of the stage, but the Meatstick request had been delivered.

The first set continued on with solid versions of Taste, Billy Breathes, Poor Heart and a Golgi that almost blew the roof off the place. As I looked at the Japanese on all sides of me between songs, I kept seeing people with this look in their eyes. And it wasn’t the normal, “Phish rocks” look. It bordered on more of an “I just escaped Shawshank” look. These fans weren’t just having a good time. Some of them were having a transcendent time.

READ ON for more from Stanch about the first show…

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