SET 1: My Soul > Bathtub Gin, 555, Pebbles and Marbles, The Line, Vultures, Fast Enough for You, Back on the Train > Taste, Gumbo, Halfway to the Moon, Stealing Time From the Faulty Plan, Suzy Greenberg
SET 2: Chalk Dust Torture[1] -> Scents and Subtle Sounds[2] > Twist > Fuego > The Wedge > Light > Harry Hood > First Tube
ENCORE: Fluffhead
Suzy Greenberg contained a quote of Stealing Time From the Faulty Plan by Trey. Trey teased Call to the Post before CDT. Chalk Dust Torture was unfinished. Scents and Subtle Sounds was last played on September 2, 2011 (109 shows) and did not have the intro. Harry Hood featured a duel section in which Trey traded solos with Mike, Fish, and Page in turn.
 
			Photo © Phish
 Fuego
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					Fuego
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					 Farmhouse
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					Farmhouse
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					 Joy
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					Joy
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					 Stash
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					Stash
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					 Rift
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					Rift
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					 Undermind
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					Undermind
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					 Round Room
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					Round Room
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					 Billy Breathes
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					Billy Breathes
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					 A Picture of Nectar
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					A Picture of Nectar
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					 Lawn Boy
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					Lawn Boy
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					 Junta
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					Junta
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					 This was a great show, folks! No, we didn't the kind of epic jams/explorations we were lucky to experience earlier in the tour, but we did get to see a band having SO MUCH FUN on the final night of tour. Trey especially was hopping around like a kid on Christmas morning. Always a delightful treat!
		This was a great show, folks! No, we didn't the kind of epic jams/explorations we were lucky to experience earlier in the tour, but we did get to see a band having SO MUCH FUN on the final night of tour. Trey especially was hopping around like a kid on Christmas morning. Always a delightful treat! https://medium.com/the-phish-from-vermont/subtle-sounds-review-8-3-14-14ac58e3bef1
		https://medium.com/the-phish-from-vermont/subtle-sounds-review-8-3-14-14ac58e3bef1 This one show where I was glad to have seen it on webcast.  Of course, I would love to have been there, but the webcast allowed me to see just how much fun the band was having on stage during this high-energy love-fest.  I was smiling ear-to-ear and was almost at the point of crying tears of joy during the second set.  If there is one thing that stands out for me about this show was that Harry Hood.  Others have alluded to it (and some even ho-hummed it) and that moment where Trey moves from Mike to Fish to Page and "duets" with each was evidence of just how much love these guys have for each other and how that is translating to the music every night.  To me, that Hood was the defining moment of Summer 2014 in terms of the theme of the tour.  Yes, we can all point to the epic jams and stand-out versions of songs as we usually do, but this time around we are getting so much more than the Phish we usually expect.  There is a lot of love for the music, love for the fans, and love for each other up there on that stage and its really amazing to see.  That Hood, man.  It's all there in that Hood.  Oh yeah, then there is that flippin' First Tube.  Then the Fluffhead encore.  I couldn't avert my gaze from the wonderment.
		This one show where I was glad to have seen it on webcast.  Of course, I would love to have been there, but the webcast allowed me to see just how much fun the band was having on stage during this high-energy love-fest.  I was smiling ear-to-ear and was almost at the point of crying tears of joy during the second set.  If there is one thing that stands out for me about this show was that Harry Hood.  Others have alluded to it (and some even ho-hummed it) and that moment where Trey moves from Mike to Fish to Page and "duets" with each was evidence of just how much love these guys have for each other and how that is translating to the music every night.  To me, that Hood was the defining moment of Summer 2014 in terms of the theme of the tour.  Yes, we can all point to the epic jams and stand-out versions of songs as we usually do, but this time around we are getting so much more than the Phish we usually expect.  There is a lot of love for the music, love for the fans, and love for each other up there on that stage and its really amazing to see.  That Hood, man.  It's all there in that Hood.  Oh yeah, then there is that flippin' First Tube.  Then the Fluffhead encore.  I couldn't avert my gaze from the wonderment.
	 First of all, thanks to everyone involved in putting on this amazing free webcast. It looked and sounded fantastic, there were zero dropouts or hiccups, and it brought me pure joy.
		First of all, thanks to everyone involved in putting on this amazing free webcast. It looked and sounded fantastic, there were zero dropouts or hiccups, and it brought me pure joy.  this show made me realize how useless internet opinions are.
		this show made me realize how useless internet opinions are.  This was my 4th show and this is best one I've seen, next to my first one of course.
		This was my 4th show and this is best one I've seen, next to my first one of course.  Pros: Very good Gin and Fluffhead. Pantheon Gumbo. Solid CDT and Light>Hood>First Tube.
		Pros: Very good Gin and Fluffhead. Pantheon Gumbo. Solid CDT and Light>Hood>First Tube.  Except for The Line, which should go into a vault (seeing people fake free throws on the lawn is amusing however), the first set was furious! i dont know why some phans dog My Soul, i dont care either, i was thundering the m'm'm'm'm'm'm'm's the whole way, i may have even started them in the lot on the way in, hard to recall. >'Gin, then 555, for me, at my 30th show, it was a gnarly phuckin' intro, brau! overall tightness was a little off for the night, page side was rage side, he smoked dem dare keys, while Fishman's tap tap tapparoo on the skins was Ghengis Kahn at times! Troy was equally out and in tune at many instances, which I live for, and I saw Scarffy McDrillbitz in the lot pre-show, he drove off before I could sketch him on my easel. damn! First Tube was an unusal placement, but needed, i had to get some karate kicks in 2nd round while it lasted! Fluffapottomus closer was pretty damn sharp, like Vermont cheddar, see you in '15 at Fest X Best X, gotta take the late summer/fall to rebuild walls around my castle, goddamn 'Panic fans!!!
		Except for The Line, which should go into a vault (seeing people fake free throws on the lawn is amusing however), the first set was furious! i dont know why some phans dog My Soul, i dont care either, i was thundering the m'm'm'm'm'm'm'm's the whole way, i may have even started them in the lot on the way in, hard to recall. >'Gin, then 555, for me, at my 30th show, it was a gnarly phuckin' intro, brau! overall tightness was a little off for the night, page side was rage side, he smoked dem dare keys, while Fishman's tap tap tapparoo on the skins was Ghengis Kahn at times! Troy was equally out and in tune at many instances, which I live for, and I saw Scarffy McDrillbitz in the lot pre-show, he drove off before I could sketch him on my easel. damn! First Tube was an unusal placement, but needed, i had to get some karate kicks in 2nd round while it lasted! Fluffapottomus closer was pretty damn sharp, like Vermont cheddar, see you in '15 at Fest X Best X, gotta take the late summer/fall to rebuild walls around my castle, goddamn 'Panic fans!!!
	 An interesting and generous tour closer by the boys.  The first set clocked in at an eye-popping 90 minutes.  The show featured some interesting bust-outs and a few noteworthy highlights but the second set was marred by impatience and underdeveloped concepts. I don't believe that this was a lack of effort by the band.  Rather, I think Trey was too excited and seemed to be trying to squeeze two nights of material into one evening.  The show would have been well-served to reduce the number of songs and increase the exploration.
		An interesting and generous tour closer by the boys.  The first set clocked in at an eye-popping 90 minutes.  The show featured some interesting bust-outs and a few noteworthy highlights but the second set was marred by impatience and underdeveloped concepts. I don't believe that this was a lack of effort by the band.  Rather, I think Trey was too excited and seemed to be trying to squeeze two nights of material into one evening.  The show would have been well-served to reduce the number of songs and increase the exploration. Back On the Train is a song I feel is criminally overlooked. Unless it's a MONSTER version (Japan in 2000, Nassau in 2003) it's just one people hardly ever talk about.  To my ear, Fishman just always, always sounds so damn good on this tune, propelling the song along with such an infectious rhythm. And Trey's tone when playing this is spectacular.  This version is no slouch. No, it's not a 20-minute rager, but not everything has to be; sometimes it's just perfectly good enough to be THIS band playing songs from all throughout their catalogue, and with aplomb. That's the case here.
		Back On the Train is a song I feel is criminally overlooked. Unless it's a MONSTER version (Japan in 2000, Nassau in 2003) it's just one people hardly ever talk about.  To my ear, Fishman just always, always sounds so damn good on this tune, propelling the song along with such an infectious rhythm. And Trey's tone when playing this is spectacular.  This version is no slouch. No, it's not a 20-minute rager, but not everything has to be; sometimes it's just perfectly good enough to be THIS band playing songs from all throughout their catalogue, and with aplomb. That's the case here. I remember this show--webcast for free by LivePhish--feeling sort of mixed at the time, kind of a grab-bag if you will. It's a highly intriguing setlist, to say the least. Bathtub Gin, the rare Pebbles and Marbles, Taste, and Gumbo are the biggest highlights from the first set to me, and if you can say that a set has 4 highlights, that's quite a recommendation! (Here I would also add Vultures and Fast Enough for You into the mix, just because I'm in love with those songs.) Gumbo gets a big crowd reaction as they realise it's getting extended a bit more than usual for this period in Phishtory. The second set looks like absolute fire, but a lot of those songs are short (especially Scents and Subtle Sounds, which, aside from lacking the Intro, is only like 6 minutes long. Compare that with the several 30-minute versions from 2.0?) Twist also goes into this kind of stoner-rockish jam that I don't really like to hear come out of any Phish song, and I'm already not a big Twist fan. But how can you be disappointed with a Fluffhead encore? (Protip: you can't!)
		I remember this show--webcast for free by LivePhish--feeling sort of mixed at the time, kind of a grab-bag if you will. It's a highly intriguing setlist, to say the least. Bathtub Gin, the rare Pebbles and Marbles, Taste, and Gumbo are the biggest highlights from the first set to me, and if you can say that a set has 4 highlights, that's quite a recommendation! (Here I would also add Vultures and Fast Enough for You into the mix, just because I'm in love with those songs.) Gumbo gets a big crowd reaction as they realise it's getting extended a bit more than usual for this period in Phishtory. The second set looks like absolute fire, but a lot of those songs are short (especially Scents and Subtle Sounds, which, aside from lacking the Intro, is only like 6 minutes long. Compare that with the several 30-minute versions from 2.0?) Twist also goes into this kind of stoner-rockish jam that I don't really like to hear come out of any Phish song, and I'm already not a big Twist fan. But how can you be disappointed with a Fluffhead encore? (Protip: you can't!)
	 At the beginning of Chalkdust it sounds like Trey is teasing The Birds and then Fishman chimes in with a quick drum roll that sounds like The Birds.  Can anyone confirm?  I have been listening to a lot of early 2014 lately and have noticed some very subtle Chilling & Thrilling teases.
		At the beginning of Chalkdust it sounds like Trey is teasing The Birds and then Fishman chimes in with a quick drum roll that sounds like The Birds.  Can anyone confirm?  I have been listening to a lot of early 2014 lately and have noticed some very subtle Chilling & Thrilling teases.
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Review by arghdos
Yes, the Chalkdust > Scents could have been jammed out more...
Yes the Fuego was rough near the beginning...
But seriously?
"The Wedge was a mistake?".
"The crowd was visibly deflated"
Bullshit. Complete and utter bullshit.
Was it the best show Phish has ever played? No.
But I'll tell you what it did have... fucking attitude. I get that this is not the big ticket item that thirty minute jams are, or that a segue-fest can be.... but sometimes it's nice to hear our favorite band play with so much joy and emotion. If that really doesn't work for you as a Phish show... well I feel bad for you.
About three minutes (or whatever we want to call that number) into CDT, Trey got in synch with the rest of the band... and then he was dialed in for the rest of the night (with the exception of Fuego). From there on out, the band seemed to be right on top of everything, with each musical phrase leading inextricably to a response. It was a bit like being in the world's largest ping pong hall, with music bouncing and refracting off the walls being slapped and redirected in so many interesting ways.
Instead of focusing on any of the negatives, I'm going to talk about what I enjoyed.
Chalk Dust. Excellent jam. Let's leave it at that.
Scents. Anytime you get one it's a thing to behold. Type I all the way, but heart achingly beautiful at that.
Twist. Other reviewers may label this as "passe"... to which I say, were you watching that fucking crowd on the "Woo!"? IMO it was right about here that Trey and the rest of the band really started feeling the energy
Fuego. Did anyone else see Page's face light up when he heard the crowd repeating "Vlad the Impaler"? Exactly what I love about this band. They're in it as much as we are.
The Wedge. Beautiful version. Face it, not version of this is suddenly and magically going to be the Chicago version. But are we really claiming that we don't like very well played versions of great compositions now? They should'a played a Wading just to spite you fuckers
Light. Picked up the jam beautifully. Any doubts we had about the rest of the set were pretty much thrown by the wayside at this point.
Harry Hood. Oh what a Hood. Seeing Mike and Trey play that lovely duet was simply magic. You could tell that crowd was loving it as well. Marvelous stuff.
First Tube. Is there a better choice for a show closer. Probably... but this is perfect in my book.
Fluffhead. Really, as an encore? I think I loved it almost as much as the legion of fans in the pit who were jumping up and down the entire time. No 3.0 Fluffhead is without flaws (face it, it's a really difficult song to nail), but this one was as good as any, and better than most.
Finally I'm going to give a shout-out to the MVPs of the night.
1. Jon Fishman. I don't know whether it was because I could actually see everything Fish was doing on the webcast, or whether he's simply always that amazing... but holy shit. I was blown away.
2. Trey's Energy. Any time big red starts dancing around the stage like it's his birthday, I'm having a good time... and you should be too.
3. The Crowd. You guys loved it. You guys made it the show that it was. Thank you.