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What
is Phish?
In Brief: Phish is a Burlington, VT-based quartet (guitar,
bass, keys, drums)
known for intensive composition (in over 200 original
tunes) and extensive improvisation (also including some 250
or more cover songs, and through over 1000 live performances). The
band has been around since October
1983, having met in college
in Vermont, and has attracted a cultish
following of phans.
Genre? New! Their style
is eclectic,
with originals covering every base
-- fusion-funk-blues-and-classical-inspired psychedelic
rock, swing
and jazz
(from covers such as "The 'A' Train" to originals such
as "Magilla"),
rock (from covers such as "Highway to Hell" to originals
like "Lucy
with a Lumpy Face"), bluegrass (from traditionals such
as "Paul
and Silas" to originals such as "Poor Heart",
to the 10-31-94 cover of "Don't
Pass Me By"), showtunes (including "Somewhere Over the
Rainbow", both with the Dave Matthews
Band and with Page on the theremin),
odd 1980s pop (like "Melt the Guns"), crooners (from the
original "Lawnboy" to the 12/31/97
cover of Sinatra's "New York, New York"), punk ("Anarchy"),
hardcore ("BBFCFM",
or listen to the 5/8/89 "I
Didn't Know"), heavy-metal (e.g. 2-21-97
Wilson), reggae ("Makisupa
Policeman", "Yamar",
and the 4-16-92
NICU or 11-19-92
"Lengthwise"), fugues,
and more -- and boldly crossing the lines between them, creating
a new genre: Phish! Live
performances are known
for quick song shifts, extended jams,
beautiful solos, fabulous orchestration, eye-popping improvisation,
& surprise
fun galore for
all.
Well, the funny thing about
styles is that we used to dabble in a lot of different bags. I
think as we matured a bit, there was an effort to try to be a
rock band and not be something we're not. We wanted to get better
at one thing rather than trying to do a million different things,
like jazz, or bluegrass, or other things we have tackled.
- Mike, in Billboard, 12/21/02
Who's Who? If you're trying to figure out which is which
(e.g. in a photo),
think about Jim Henson's (may he rest in peace) Muppets: Trey
has been likened to Kermit (though oft with facial hair), Page
to Fozzie (go figger), Jon
to Animal (for hair, drums, voice, etc), and Mike
to Sam the Eagle (various reasons, none clear.) There have even
been (unauthorized, uncondoned; potentially illegal) t-shirts with
their four faces presented as those four Muppets.
Others, too? There have been irregular additions of horn
players (individually, as a trio, and in larger groups) as
well as the Dude
of Life, Tom
Marshall, Sofi Dillof (now Sofi D. McConnell), relatives
(esp. parents & grandparents) of the band, and other
guests. (See also HPB
and the
stories File.) Additionally, Phish has appeared on gig billings
with
other acts on a number of occasions, and the individual members
of Phish have appeared as
guests with other acts. Moreover, the band members have a number
of side projects, both musical
and nonmusical.
See also: interviews,
history.
And, if you've time to spend, Shawn McKenzie presented a talk,
"Something Phishy in Popular Music", at the 5th annual
meeting of the Far West and American Popular Culture associations
on 1/23/93 in Las Vegas Nevada that may be helpful.
"Phish
offers something rare in pop: a long,
complex, and completely different
show every night. Musically competent
without fetishizing technique, Phish
embraces a broad spectrum of rock, jazz,
bluegrass, twentieth century compositional techniques, blissful
extended jams, African groove experiments,
psychedelic game playing, and absolutely
Dionysian moments of free-form
guitar ecstasy." -- Richard Gehr,
Village Voice, 5/16/95