SET 1: You Enjoy Myself > Clone[1], Roggae, Drifting[1], Blue Skies[1], The Moma Dance, Final Flight[1] > Maze
SET 2: Stash, Ghost -> Low Rider -> Makisupa Policeman[2] -> Ya Mar, Guyute, Waves > Prince Caspian -> Frankenstein > Golgi Apparatus
ENCORE: Loving Cup
 This is one my favorite shows of 2.0 Phish, and just as great overall in my opinion as the next night on Long Island (I caught 2/24 ->2/28 on this tour).
		This is one my favorite shows of 2.0 Phish, and just as great overall in my opinion as the next night on Long Island (I caught 2/24 ->2/28 on this tour). Nice show. One of the best post-hiatus versions of Stash, in a style of jamming we didn't hear enough of, and the rest of Set II goes deep (Ghost > etc. > Ya Mar, Waves(!!)) then gets silly (Caspian > Frank > Golgi(!)). The first set is a neat alternate-universe vision of Phish covering each band member's solo stuff, with the Page and Trey tunes showing real potential. Much broader than 2/28 and more sing-songy than 2/16; a wholly justifiable purchase or download, even if (like me) you're still mad that Moma killed Black-Eyed Katy.
		Nice show. One of the best post-hiatus versions of Stash, in a style of jamming we didn't hear enough of, and the rest of Set II goes deep (Ghost > etc. > Ya Mar, Waves(!!)) then gets silly (Caspian > Frank > Golgi(!)). The first set is a neat alternate-universe vision of Phish covering each band member's solo stuff, with the Page and Trey tunes showing real potential. Much broader than 2/28 and more sing-songy than 2/16; a wholly justifiable purchase or download, even if (like me) you're still mad that Moma killed Black-Eyed Katy.
	 This review was originally written shortly after the show. It is lengthy. I tried to capture the angst and excitement one feels when a goal is achieved. Enjoy!
		This review was originally written shortly after the show. It is lengthy. I tried to capture the angst and excitement one feels when a goal is achieved. Enjoy!  I attended this show and loved every minute, but this review will be based of a current re-listen.
		I attended this show and loved every minute, but this review will be based of a current re-listen. (Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)
		(Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...) (Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)
		(Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...) (Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)
		(Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...) Pretty strong and inspired show.
		Pretty strong and inspired show. Just a damn great show. Perhaps my only critique is the heavy concentration of solo-project debuts in the first set, none of which ever really took off as crowd favorites. But recognizing that each is selected to showcase an individual band member's work...you gotta respect the sentiment. Aside from that, this show is pretty much nothing but hitters. Set I boasts one my favorite versions of YEM, a beautifully rumbling Roggae, the wettest funkiest Moma (GOAT status), and a long-running freight-train Maze that is paradigmatic of 2.0 Phish. Set 2 continues with a super fun walk around Stash and a great party-style Ghost (almost reaches a laidback First Tube sort of energy) that transitions awesomely into Low Rider...into Makisupa...and into Ya Mar. Fantastic segment right there. A well-placed (and all things considered, fairly well-executed) Guyute continues the energy, and Waves ain't half bad either. I really love this Prince Caspian's placement in the set. I think it's played excellently, and the segue into Frankenstein is an awesome surprise. Top it off with a Golgi (featuring Frankenstein tease) and a killer Loving Cup encore...the band is hot. And it shows even more a couple nights later.
		Just a damn great show. Perhaps my only critique is the heavy concentration of solo-project debuts in the first set, none of which ever really took off as crowd favorites. But recognizing that each is selected to showcase an individual band member's work...you gotta respect the sentiment. Aside from that, this show is pretty much nothing but hitters. Set I boasts one my favorite versions of YEM, a beautifully rumbling Roggae, the wettest funkiest Moma (GOAT status), and a long-running freight-train Maze that is paradigmatic of 2.0 Phish. Set 2 continues with a super fun walk around Stash and a great party-style Ghost (almost reaches a laidback First Tube sort of energy) that transitions awesomely into Low Rider...into Makisupa...and into Ya Mar. Fantastic segment right there. A well-placed (and all things considered, fairly well-executed) Guyute continues the energy, and Waves ain't half bad either. I really love this Prince Caspian's placement in the set. I think it's played excellently, and the segue into Frankenstein is an awesome surprise. Top it off with a Golgi (featuring Frankenstein tease) and a killer Loving Cup encore...the band is hot. And it shows even more a couple nights later.
	 Holy shit bro this set is so good omfg how have I never listened to it before
		Holy shit bro this set is so good omfg how have I never listened to it before Alright got some thoughts on this one sooooo lets see how it goes. 20th anniversary first listen!
		Alright got some thoughts on this one sooooo lets see how it goes. 20th anniversary first listen! 2.26.03
		2.26.03 I was at this show and it was a burner.  We drove up from the Philly show into the Arctic ice bowl of Worcester (check out the Theme from Philly, unreal).  Worcester was one of my favorite first sets ever.  Getting into the warmth after slinging warm noodles in the parking garage was just the beginning of our joy for the night.  The YEM energy as an opener blew us away, totally not expecting that.  I really love Clone.  I didn't know this song at all, but mid-song the groove just hit me.  Amazing hook.  The Drifting is really great too going pretty far out considering it was a "cover."  I really just came in to talk about this Moma since I just had a flashback to that night some 19 years ago now.  The pocket they hit mid-jam is so tight and is just so Phish to me. I remember being in the back of the arena, in the stands, in the tunnel with a bunch of kind sisters and brothers and we just all grooved HARD.  Sweating, vibing, in the moment, in that trance.  Very '97 and just amazing.  I miss those moments these days where we all rise and fall as one unit.  After three northeast winter shows (BB King show also) we were good, and drove back home. Little did we know we would miss the show of the year in Nassau.  Always chased Destiny Unbound in those early days and thought its was shelved permanently.  Still kicking myself to this day about missing that one (and the rest of the show).  Don't sleep on 2003.  It was a really, really good year!  Miami!!!
		I was at this show and it was a burner.  We drove up from the Philly show into the Arctic ice bowl of Worcester (check out the Theme from Philly, unreal).  Worcester was one of my favorite first sets ever.  Getting into the warmth after slinging warm noodles in the parking garage was just the beginning of our joy for the night.  The YEM energy as an opener blew us away, totally not expecting that.  I really love Clone.  I didn't know this song at all, but mid-song the groove just hit me.  Amazing hook.  The Drifting is really great too going pretty far out considering it was a "cover."  I really just came in to talk about this Moma since I just had a flashback to that night some 19 years ago now.  The pocket they hit mid-jam is so tight and is just so Phish to me. I remember being in the back of the arena, in the stands, in the tunnel with a bunch of kind sisters and brothers and we just all grooved HARD.  Sweating, vibing, in the moment, in that trance.  Very '97 and just amazing.  I miss those moments these days where we all rise and fall as one unit.  After three northeast winter shows (BB King show also) we were good, and drove back home. Little did we know we would miss the show of the year in Nassau.  Always chased Destiny Unbound in those early days and thought its was shelved permanently.  Still kicking myself to this day about missing that one (and the rest of the show).  Don't sleep on 2003.  It was a really, really good year!  Miami!!!
	 I honestly don't get the hype about this show--I mean sure, on paper the setlist is a monster, but to me it just doesn't deliver.  Set 2 sounds like it's being played under water, or possibly from beneath a deep pool of Nyquil.  Have you ever drank a bottle of Robotussin just to see what would happen?  That's what this Stash sounds like to me.  Fuzzy, dragging, sleepy (tipsy, fuddled, boozy, groggy).
		I honestly don't get the hype about this show--I mean sure, on paper the setlist is a monster, but to me it just doesn't deliver.  Set 2 sounds like it's being played under water, or possibly from beneath a deep pool of Nyquil.  Have you ever drank a bottle of Robotussin just to see what would happen?  That's what this Stash sounds like to me.  Fuzzy, dragging, sleepy (tipsy, fuddled, boozy, groggy).  Add a Review
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Review by FunkyCFunkyDo
That's how happy I am to review this show. Maybe more happy. Because this show is A+, 10/10, cowabunga Bonzai Pipeline, and I would have probably been thrown in jail if I attended -- that's how controversial my dance moves would have been.
The Call to the Post riff before the first actual song... man, I just got goosebumps thinking about it. Like a thoroughbred at the Kentucky Derby, You Enjoy Myself blasts out of the gates with focus and energy so amplified, so electric, that Phish could have made this concert 100% eco-friendly by producing all of their own power to run the amps, lights, and assorted concession stands throughout the venue. I have NO shame in saying this is my favorite version of YEM, ever. ::cue eye rolls from Red Rocks 94, Albany 95, Vegas 96, ect ect...:: This version, with how hot it is, could melt the sun. I could breakdown each minute of the song, but that wouldn't be nearly as fun as listening to it yourself. From Trey scratching back and forth with Page, to the three independent, orbit-changing peaks, to Fish and Mike's pure-sex Bass and Drums, to the Clone vocal jam... man, wow. AND THIS OPENS THE SHOW!!! If that opened a show I had attended, I would have looked around after its conclusion and asked, with all sincerity, "Am I die?" Clone sneaks in via the vocal jam and what a tune this is. It has Mike written all over it with its swanky bassline and problematic vocal story telling. It swings and grooves and should be in Phish's repertoire with more regulatory... said EVERYONE EVER who has listened to this song. Come on, Trey! A mesmerizing Roggae comes next and at this point, the deal was sealed that this show was going to be special. Not just Phish special, but all time special. Swirling, swooping, and gliding through a soft mist, this Roggae is as delicate as it is determined. A full band focused composition, this piece of music is the perfect yin to the fire of the YEM's yang. The next song, Drifting, is also another one of these solo songs that *needs* to be in the repertoire. Since it's a Trey song, I personally blame Page for it not being in rotation. Anyways, Drifting makes me feel like laying in a meadow on a warm summer day - looking at clouds as the scoot by, wondering what it might feel like to be a cloud. Trey takes the lead, as it is his song, and hits a beautifully melodic peak. Blue Skies is okay, but at this point, I don't really care if an "okay" song is thrown into the mix. The set is already so good. This Fishman "bluegrass folk" song feels a little slapdash, but whatever because do you know what comes next... Uh oh. Uhhh ohhhh. Do you see what's happening? Someone alerted the authorities because Funky has official unleashed his most controversial dance move "Walking Through Unseen Spiderweb at Night." If this Moma Dance doesn't lube your loins, you might be dead. Sassy, sexy, filthy, and steamy, this Moma Dance is without a doubt the best they've ever played. Sexy. If your dance moves are anything less than Controversy Level Three: Naked Soul Train, you're doing it wrong. Grooooooooove city. Final Flight is kinda a crappy Page ballad, sorry Page, but is instantly redeemed by a smoldering, psychedelic-laced Maze. Slash-and-burning through all sorts of effects from both Page and Trey, anchored by an even-more-heavy-than-usual Mike line, this Maze leaves nothing but ashes and dust in its wake. Really, type-face reviews like this one don't do proper justice to how good this set was. It's the weekend. I urge you to go home, find this set, this show, and listen to it with focus from start to finish. You will be a better person for it.
Although I have never seen a Stash set 2 opener, I think it is one of three or four "perfect" ways to start set two because of how far it can reach. Know you might say, "Well hold on Funky, Phish can take *any* song for a ride, especially when it opens set 2." True enough, but Stash is one of those classics that can reach any multitude of musical excursion. Check out 6.11.94 for white-hot peaks. Check out 7.2.97 for the MOST BLISSFUL 8 minutes of music Phish has EVER performed. Check out 11.14.95 for pure terror. Check out 12.31.03 for some Hubble-esq deep field plating (teaser). And check out this version for some downright playful breakdowns, builds, and wavelength patterns of musical crests and troughs. This Stash has it all, and has it all in spades. My favorite segment is nearing the end, maybe 14 minutes in when it breaks down and Fish on the woodblocks and Mike is just plain dirty on his "picking." Ohhh soooo gooood. Then the jam explodes back into Stash jam proper and winds down to its normal end, with a punctuation mark. Now, before we get into the next song, I suggest you remove your pants. Pants off? Okay let's do this thing. Michael "Gacktoidler" Gordon. Are you familiar? Yes. Good. Are your pants still off? Yes. Good. Now, when I say a jam is slinky, this is what I am thinking of. This Ghost is a slinky jam. It is the Mike Gordon All-Star game. It is, if there ever was, the musical reincarnation of what a ghost would be. Ecto-9 all the way. Some people say Trey just kinda drops out and it lazy in this jam. Not me. Even though Mike is the #1 in this entire rendition, Trey's layering and incredibly nimble playing is downright goosebump-enducing. The jams seeps through all sorts of moods, each amazing, before culminating in a subdued yet celebratory, cohesive peak that blends right into Low Rider. The crowd goes bananas as the Low Rider theme permeates the building and the level of Dance Controversy has reached Four: Naughty Shower Lufa. An equally amazing -> Makisupa keeps the jaw-dropping-ness of this set going. A playful version akin to 2.16.03's this on has some splashy cymbal work and sultry Mike accomplishments. Then add on a third consecutive, cleeeeaaaaan -> Ya Mar and holy crap, this set is even better than the first!!! Ya Mar is playful and just great. It stays within its framework but it honestly doesn't need any fancy treatment with how awesome and well-constructed this set, and show, has been. Just great, happy music. Wasting NO time after the Ya mar winds down, you can hear Trey yell GUYUTE! GUYUTE! And with gusto, the band bursts into the ugly pig. I am not usually a fan of Guyute, but this one works. It fits a perfect niche, fraught with energy and zeal, complimenting a perfect show up to this point. Phish continues their giggle-inducing playing with a late set WAVES!!! Played with a half-step more OOMPH, this waves, like the Stash before it, hits musical crests and troughs, barrels over itself, and billows beautifully with some crowd-made off-shore winds (I just went type 2 on my review, whoa). Waves settles peacefully, and appropriately, into the nautical Prince Caspian. Phish can do no wrong. Even if you're not a Caspian fan, there's no denying how well this pairing worked in the set. Just great. Caspain features more truly inspired playing from Trey and, believe it or not, has a true -> into Frankenstein of all songs!!! Hahahaha!!! Can't help but laugh at how this worked out! Wow! Frankenstein nearly implodes the venue and where it failed, Golgi completely razes what is left of Woostah. A SMOKING Loving Cup with extended jam close the show with a billion exclamation points. This is not a normal Loving Cup, this one, like this entire show, deserves your attention. Holy crap what a show!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Must-hear jams: You Enjoy Myself, Drifting, Moma Dance, Maze, Stash, Ghost -> Makisupa -> Ya Mar, Loving Cup
Probably-should-listen-to jams: Roggae, Ya Mar, Waves > Prince Caspian -> Frankenstein > Golgi Apparatus