This remnant will be replaced soon. The FAQ is back, with a new design!
How
did the HPB start What's its history
A few folks on the net (starting with Lee and Shelly) put together
a compilation of setlists
& other info about the band & borrowed the title of this all encompasing
book, calling the compilation the Helping Phriendly Book -- the
HPB,
not HFB
-- although it has at some times been referred to as the Helping
Friendly Book. According to strict phishlosophy, all of the know
& unknown knowledge in the relevant universe would include the Lyrics,
FAQ, Chords, etc. Eventually, the virtual HPB may indeed include
all of this; today, it is focused on setlists.
Dan Shoop posted (3-14-94) an "ophishal announcement regarding
the Helping Friendly Book Working Group and overview of what's up
with the HPB" and indicated that further reviews were underway,
but the machine that Shoop and Michael Weitzman were keeping it
on crashed, and restoration never occurred. Updates on the web then
diversified, with multiple Helping Friendly Books. But the core
and focal collection is again and remains at the Phish.Net
as the Official Helping
Friendly Book.
Offline, a book was published
using the Helping Friendly Book, in contradiction of the philosophy
behind it (as stated above as well as in the
Helping Friendly Book itself). Now in its fourth volume, that book
now acknowledges its origination from and reliance upon the Helping
Friendly Book and, to its credit, has diversified and done some
interesting work in other areas.
As a way of returning the spirit of the Helping Friendly Book to
phans, the Mockingbird
Foundation was formed.
As of May 10, 1993, the band had planned to put out their own version
of the HFB. No word on this project/intention since that date.
Related FAQ pages:
"I'm
the chooser of what we're going to play. I wonder how it got to
be that way. I guess it's just my personality. To me, it's like
composing, and I really like composing and I don't get to do it
when I'm on the road, so it's my little way of making little suites
every night. I usually plan something out before we go on stage,
and then we change it when we get on stage. It's very rare that
we stick to the whole songlist. Or any of it, for that matter.
But I choose it, partially by what we haven't played for a couple
of nights before." -- Trey Anastasio, 12/10/94 interview
with Steve Silberman; though note that setlists have not been
pre-written since prior to summer 1997
This page last updated January 26, 2007. All contents © 1992-2007 Ellis Godard. All rights reserved.
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