SET 1: Buried Alive > Ghost > Scent of a Mule, Sample in a Jar > Reba, 46 Days, Big Black Furry Creature from Mars, Lawn Boy[1], Saw It Again > Tube > Wolfman's Brother
SET 2: Intro[2], The Haunted House[2], The Very Long Fuse[2], The Dogs[2], Timber[2], Your Pet Cat[2], Shipwreck[2], The Unsafe Bridge[2], The Chinese Water Torture[2], The Birds[2], Martian Monster[2]
SET 3: Punch You in the Eye > Golden Age > Tweezer -> Heavy Things, Guyute, Sand -> Tweezer Reprise
ENCORE: Is This What You Wanted[3], Frankenstein[4]
The backdrop on the stage at the start of the show was a large gate adorned with a "P." During Lawn Boy, Page introduced Mike as "Michael Gordleone" and Fish took a drum solo. Trey teased Saw It Again during Tube and San-Ho-Zay during Wolfman's. The musical costume was a set of original, mostly instrumental music played with the sound effects and narration of the 1964 Disneyland album Chilling, Thrilling Sounds of the Haunted House. Prior to the start of Set II, the stage was cleared of all band equipment, and a graveyard set was brought out. At the start of the set, smoke filled the stage, and zombies appeared behind the gate. When the gate opened, a large haunted house with the band inside was brought to the front of the stage. The sound effects and narration were played on the PA, while an undead narrator would emerge from a crypt inscribed with "ESTHER" prior to each song for the introduction. At the end of The Fuse, the sides of the house came down while sounds of an explosion were heard, and the band was revealed inside, dressed in white tuxedoes and with zombie face paint. Several zombies came to the front of the stage and danced during Martian Monster. At the conclusion of the set, the band members came down from the Haunted House riser, slowly walked to the front of the stage, and took bows, along with the entire cast of zombies. All songs during the second set were debuts, with the titles taken from the first ten tracks of Chilling, Thrilling Sounds of the Haunted House. Sand contained a tease by Trey of School's Out. Is This What You Wanted was a Phish debut. Page performed Frankenstein on keytar, which was played for the first time since July 1, 2012 (100 shows).
 
			Photo by Rene Huemer © Phish
 I wrote this at 1:20 am at http://soundandphission.blogspot.com . It may not be the most technical review of set II but I think it stands for itself. I edited out some swear words just because.
		I wrote this at 1:20 am at http://soundandphission.blogspot.com . It may not be the most technical review of set II but I think it stands for itself. I edited out some swear words just because.  This show has inspired me to write my first Phish.net review. Thank you, 10/31/14!
		This show has inspired me to write my first Phish.net review. Thank you, 10/31/14!  I have finally decided to dive in and write a review.  I will leave the musical analysis to others who are far more qualified than myself.  I guess I would like to concentrate on on the feeling this show gave me.  If (when) I get long-winded, I apologize in advance.
		I have finally decided to dive in and write a review.  I will leave the musical analysis to others who are far more qualified than myself.  I guess I would like to concentrate on on the feeling this show gave me.  If (when) I get long-winded, I apologize in advance. If this show is wrong, I don't wanna be right! Phish took a huge risk this tour, spending countless hours rehearsing one of the most profound musical endeavors of their musical career. Everyone I talked to who was in attendance with me was completely blown away by the second set. At times we could hear what has already been a theme in their jamming lately: Take a familiar song or melody, alter it ever so keenly to where it sounds new and run with it. There was a Tube jam, a Free section and BOAF to only name a few. Of course, some of the sound effects became over the top, but only to add to the ridiculousness of what we were witnessing.
		If this show is wrong, I don't wanna be right! Phish took a huge risk this tour, spending countless hours rehearsing one of the most profound musical endeavors of their musical career. Everyone I talked to who was in attendance with me was completely blown away by the second set. At times we could hear what has already been a theme in their jamming lately: Take a familiar song or melody, alter it ever so keenly to where it sounds new and run with it. There was a Tube jam, a Free section and BOAF to only name a few. Of course, some of the sound effects became over the top, but only to add to the ridiculousness of what we were witnessing.  In one line:  this was one of Phish's most consequential performances of their career.
		In one line:  this was one of Phish's most consequential performances of their career. 
  As far as I'm concerned, this was Phish's application for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and it came in on 3.0 stationary. Sets I and III showcase their diverse sound -- Jazzy Buried Alive and PYITE, Prog with Reba and Guyute, Straight Up Rock with Sample, 46 Days, Saw it Again and Tweezer/Reprise, Quality covers of Golden Age, Is This What You Wanted, and Frankenstein, the Jewgrass Mule, metal BBFCFM, lounge lizard Lawn Boy, pop of Wolfman's and Heavy Things, a couple of segues, the genius improv of Sand and SO MUCH FUNK.
		As far as I'm concerned, this was Phish's application for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and it came in on 3.0 stationary. Sets I and III showcase their diverse sound -- Jazzy Buried Alive and PYITE, Prog with Reba and Guyute, Straight Up Rock with Sample, 46 Days, Saw it Again and Tweezer/Reprise, Quality covers of Golden Age, Is This What You Wanted, and Frankenstein, the Jewgrass Mule, metal BBFCFM, lounge lizard Lawn Boy, pop of Wolfman's and Heavy Things, a couple of segues, the genius improv of Sand and SO MUCH FUNK.  I wouldn't call myself a 3.0 hater, but I am one of those that has always said that 3.0 just can't touch what they were doing from '93-'99.  Like Halloween '96, this show may prove to be THE pivotal show of the era.  Trey's playing on this night, and for the rest of this run, had a swagger that I had not seen/heard from him in some time.  After spending most of 2014 sitting on rhythm and guiding jams that way, this was the night that he remembered how to grab a song by the throat and just rip it.  If the approach he took this run carries over to 2015, I may be singing a different tune when the 1.0/3.0 debate comes up again.
		I wouldn't call myself a 3.0 hater, but I am one of those that has always said that 3.0 just can't touch what they were doing from '93-'99.  Like Halloween '96, this show may prove to be THE pivotal show of the era.  Trey's playing on this night, and for the rest of this run, had a swagger that I had not seen/heard from him in some time.  After spending most of 2014 sitting on rhythm and guiding jams that way, this was the night that he remembered how to grab a song by the throat and just rip it.  If the approach he took this run carries over to 2015, I may be singing a different tune when the 1.0/3.0 debate comes up again. In my opinion this was the best show since Cypress, Top 5 show-all time.  It was obvious the band was stoked to be playing something different and it showed.  They were so crisp and tight throughout the night with smooth jams and segways.  Fishman's textured drumming set the tone for much of the evening.
		In my opinion this was the best show since Cypress, Top 5 show-all time.  It was obvious the band was stoked to be playing something different and it showed.  They were so crisp and tight throughout the night with smooth jams and segways.  Fishman's textured drumming set the tone for much of the evening.    Listening to the Second Set and I already know what I will be playing through my front door for all the tricker-treaters next year (and the indefinite future).
		Listening to the Second Set and I already know what I will be playing through my front door for all the tricker-treaters next year (and the indefinite future).   I might be guilty of apostasy here, so flame away, but ... I don't get the myriad show lists in which Trey supposedly teases "San-Ho-Zay".  I'm not hearing it.  Trey's style is simply derivative of Freddie King's in some way, and I think someone is hearing it because they want to.  To me it sounds like Trey has a natural language inflection in his licks that conjure references to other songs, but they're really just syntactical elements of the blues rock genre we're accustomed to.
		I might be guilty of apostasy here, so flame away, but ... I don't get the myriad show lists in which Trey supposedly teases "San-Ho-Zay".  I'm not hearing it.  Trey's style is simply derivative of Freddie King's in some way, and I think someone is hearing it because they want to.  To me it sounds like Trey has a natural language inflection in his licks that conjure references to other songs, but they're really just syntactical elements of the blues rock genre we're accustomed to. My review of last night!
		My review of last night! Phish review 10/31/14
		Phish review 10/31/14 I know my review is a bit late but I was reading through and got the urge to write one. I got a miracle during the first set break, so I missed the first set but got in just in time for what was the coolest thing I've ever seen. Ever. Met up with some buddies who were behind the stage and didn't get to see all the zombies and such but that didn't matter. I had a great view of the House with Mikes back to us. Somebody said that they wanted to hear from people behind the stage and what it was like. It was my first time behind the stage, didn't really mind at all because I was in the venue. But it will not be my last time behind the stage. during "Your Pet Cat" I finally looked around and everybody was dancing. I like to look around at shows and watch people get down and for the second time (first time at Deer Creek 10) I got chills just from watching the crowd, everybody was getting down... HARD. Another awesome thing was that Golden Age "Clap your hands if you think you're in the right place" the place went nuts. Had flown in from Indy and searching all day for tickets and finally getting in, That part made me super emotional. I don't know why but I had some tears flowing I thought to myself "I AM in the right place" that's all I have to say.
		I know my review is a bit late but I was reading through and got the urge to write one. I got a miracle during the first set break, so I missed the first set but got in just in time for what was the coolest thing I've ever seen. Ever. Met up with some buddies who were behind the stage and didn't get to see all the zombies and such but that didn't matter. I had a great view of the House with Mikes back to us. Somebody said that they wanted to hear from people behind the stage and what it was like. It was my first time behind the stage, didn't really mind at all because I was in the venue. But it will not be my last time behind the stage. during "Your Pet Cat" I finally looked around and everybody was dancing. I like to look around at shows and watch people get down and for the second time (first time at Deer Creek 10) I got chills just from watching the crowd, everybody was getting down... HARD. Another awesome thing was that Golden Age "Clap your hands if you think you're in the right place" the place went nuts. Had flown in from Indy and searching all day for tickets and finally getting in, That part made me super emotional. I don't know why but I had some tears flowing I thought to myself "I AM in the right place" that's all I have to say.
	 I'll simply say that this show was flat out amazing.  I don't know if the recordings will ever be able to translate what it was like being there, but it was some of the illest sh*t ever.  An absolutely, amazing and incredible night.  It was the type of show we always dream about being a part of, and for those of us who were there....we'll never forget it.  Thank you so much to the band for taking a monumental chance and delivering something so special!
		I'll simply say that this show was flat out amazing.  I don't know if the recordings will ever be able to translate what it was like being there, but it was some of the illest sh*t ever.  An absolutely, amazing and incredible night.  It was the type of show we always dream about being a part of, and for those of us who were there....we'll never forget it.  Thank you so much to the band for taking a monumental chance and delivering something so special!
	 I have to say they do continue to surprise me!
		I have to say they do continue to surprise me!   It often amuses me that my review for this show is the lowest-rated contribution to Phish.net when I absolutely love this show and was complimenting it in my review.
		It often amuses me that my review for this show is the lowest-rated contribution to Phish.net when I absolutely love this show and was complimenting it in my review. I loved everything about the musical costume.  I've owned the album since I was a kid (I was glad they declined to insert of the more racially tinged elements from Chinese Water Torture; gotta love that Disney classiness) and I was delighted and tickled by the music that unfolded from the very basic ideas laid out on the album.
		I loved everything about the musical costume.  I've owned the album since I was a kid (I was glad they declined to insert of the more racially tinged elements from Chinese Water Torture; gotta love that Disney classiness) and I was delighted and tickled by the music that unfolded from the very basic ideas laid out on the album. (Full review is at https://medium.com/the-phish-from-vermont/the-very-long-fuse-a9af353bb9f0)
		(Full review is at https://medium.com/the-phish-from-vermont/the-very-long-fuse-a9af353bb9f0) For the first ten minutes or so I wasn't buying the gimmick, but as mentioned, the dogs turned it around and it just got better and better. Amazing.
		For the first ten minutes or so I wasn't buying the gimmick, but as mentioned, the dogs turned it around and it just got better and better. Amazing.   Set two here is of course the most interesting thing about this show – and I think it is great. Without analyzing the songs in detail after only one listen, I would say that in general they are focused and hard driving. The music of the set reminds me of Vida Blue with the Spam Allstars more than anything. This is not the spaceyness of the Siket or Victor discs (although I like those as well), but the funk of the Illustrated Band. They Attack! Check it out!
		Set two here is of course the most interesting thing about this show – and I think it is great. Without analyzing the songs in detail after only one listen, I would say that in general they are focused and hard driving. The music of the set reminds me of Vida Blue with the Spam Allstars more than anything. This is not the spaceyness of the Siket or Victor discs (although I like those as well), but the funk of the Illustrated Band. They Attack! Check it out!
	 This was an incredible show, but being Vegas and all, they tolerate smoking in a non-smoking venue WAY too much. So to the obnoxious woman in the row in front of us who insisted on smoking cigarettes even AFTER we politely asked you to stop... I hope you're happy - you made it so unbearable for my wife to breathe that we had to LEAVE after the second set and miss what should prove to be a third set finale to one of the best shows ever.
		This was an incredible show, but being Vegas and all, they tolerate smoking in a non-smoking venue WAY too much. So to the obnoxious woman in the row in front of us who insisted on smoking cigarettes even AFTER we politely asked you to stop... I hope you're happy - you made it so unbearable for my wife to breathe that we had to LEAVE after the second set and miss what should prove to be a third set finale to one of the best shows ever.  For as long as I’ve ever known anything about Phish, I’ve known that they have a tradition of donning a musical costume when they gig on Hallowe’en, which means they reserve the middle of three sets on the special night to perform an entire album by another artist.  In the past they have done albums by The Beatles, The Talking Heads, The Velvet Underground, and several others.  I had experienced this wonder once before, when Phish covered Exile On Main Street by The Rolling Stones at a blazing weekend retreat in Indio, California, and on October 31st, 2014 I had the great joy to do it again, this time in Las Vegas.
		For as long as I’ve ever known anything about Phish, I’ve known that they have a tradition of donning a musical costume when they gig on Hallowe’en, which means they reserve the middle of three sets on the special night to perform an entire album by another artist.  In the past they have done albums by The Beatles, The Talking Heads, The Velvet Underground, and several others.  I had experienced this wonder once before, when Phish covered Exile On Main Street by The Rolling Stones at a blazing weekend retreat in Indio, California, and on October 31st, 2014 I had the great joy to do it again, this time in Las Vegas. This show get alot of praise and it deserves it all.  It is tough sometimes to get the fanbase to agree, but everyone I've talked to says it was one of their favorite shows of all time.
		This show get alot of praise and it deserves it all.  It is tough sometimes to get the fanbase to agree, but everyone I've talked to says it was one of their favorite shows of all time. To see/hear the band I love create something brandnew and present it in such a unique way is special.
		To see/hear the band I love create something brandnew and present it in such a unique way is special.  Buried alive was a great opener - band and crowd fed on each others' energy, which was pretty intense throughout the entire show. Check out Trey and Mike guitar duel in Scent of a Mule. Big black furry creature was a treat, but the real delicacy was set 2. If you haven't seen it, check it out on YouTube to get a flavor. But "you had to be there" really applies, and I'm so grateful that I was! After last Halloween, which I missed, I had no expectations for set 2. Reading the Phishbill before the show, I wondered how a 1964 Walt Disney record could possibly provide the basis for an interesting set of Phish. Lots of speculation after the first set as the stage hands cleared away keyboards, drum kit, etc., which left a large opening at center stage. Hmmm, what's this all about?  I see where Fish and Page are going to be, but where are Mike and Trey going to stand? What's going to happen at center stage, perhaps a bunch of dancing ghouls and goblins while the band plays weird sound effects adapted from the album? Guess we'll just have to wait and see! When the lights went down and the haunted house was rolled out, it soon became clear that the band was inside the haunted house playing, but you could only catch brief glimpses of their outlines flashing on the walls of the house due to the light show inside the house. The first number played out and the second number finally provided a clue as to what was coming. The very long fuse finally burned out ("You thought there was going to be a huge explosion, didn't you?") and the second floor walls of the haunted house folded down to reveal the band inside (see YouTube video - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yKaZVKeF2A  at the 12.5 minute mark). Each of the ten vignettes were accompanied by newly composed instrumentals - check 'em out; the boys really outdid themselves! The Birds is my personal favorite ("they attack!!") and Martian Monster is great, too ("your trip is short!").
		Buried alive was a great opener - band and crowd fed on each others' energy, which was pretty intense throughout the entire show. Check out Trey and Mike guitar duel in Scent of a Mule. Big black furry creature was a treat, but the real delicacy was set 2. If you haven't seen it, check it out on YouTube to get a flavor. But "you had to be there" really applies, and I'm so grateful that I was! After last Halloween, which I missed, I had no expectations for set 2. Reading the Phishbill before the show, I wondered how a 1964 Walt Disney record could possibly provide the basis for an interesting set of Phish. Lots of speculation after the first set as the stage hands cleared away keyboards, drum kit, etc., which left a large opening at center stage. Hmmm, what's this all about?  I see where Fish and Page are going to be, but where are Mike and Trey going to stand? What's going to happen at center stage, perhaps a bunch of dancing ghouls and goblins while the band plays weird sound effects adapted from the album? Guess we'll just have to wait and see! When the lights went down and the haunted house was rolled out, it soon became clear that the band was inside the haunted house playing, but you could only catch brief glimpses of their outlines flashing on the walls of the house due to the light show inside the house. The first number played out and the second number finally provided a clue as to what was coming. The very long fuse finally burned out ("You thought there was going to be a huge explosion, didn't you?") and the second floor walls of the haunted house folded down to reveal the band inside (see YouTube video - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yKaZVKeF2A  at the 12.5 minute mark). Each of the ten vignettes were accompanied by newly composed instrumentals - check 'em out; the boys really outdid themselves! The Birds is my personal favorite ("they attack!!") and Martian Monster is great, too ("your trip is short!"). Set two here is, of course, the most interesting thing about this show – and I think it is great. Without going through the details of the songs (after one listen), I would say that the songs are focused and, for the most part, hard driving. The music of the set reminds me of Vida Blue with the Spam Allstars more than anything. This is not the spaceyness of the Siket or Victor discs (although I like those as well), but the funk of the Illustrated Band. They attack! Check it out!
		Set two here is, of course, the most interesting thing about this show – and I think it is great. Without going through the details of the songs (after one listen), I would say that the songs are focused and, for the most part, hard driving. The music of the set reminds me of Vida Blue with the Spam Allstars more than anything. This is not the spaceyness of the Siket or Victor discs (although I like those as well), but the funk of the Illustrated Band. They attack! Check it out!
	 Since we are on the heel of a 10 year anniversary of this particular night in the town they call sin city in Nevada, I feel like it’s a good time to write my review of this show.
		Since we are on the heel of a 10 year anniversary of this particular night in the town they call sin city in Nevada, I feel like it’s a good time to write my review of this show.  There's been a lot of solid review and analysis of Halloween 2014 and most of it has been on point. This show is not overrated. It is just hear phish not only of 3.0 but of any era. It's flames. My personal top 5 easily and I'm a 1.0 guy. It's phucking phlames. I know what FoMo is. I had it the following year when my ride from LA to Las Vegas ditched me and left me to eat my tickets. (I will never forgive you Sam!) That said, I get it. It's easy to hate shows you didn't attend. I do it all the time. If the band plays Harpua and I'm not there, it's automatically the WORST Harpua of all time. Don't be hatin doe! If you weren't there, you missed out. Plain and simple. Enough of that though. I want to point out something less obvious...
		There's been a lot of solid review and analysis of Halloween 2014 and most of it has been on point. This show is not overrated. It is just hear phish not only of 3.0 but of any era. It's flames. My personal top 5 easily and I'm a 1.0 guy. It's phucking phlames. I know what FoMo is. I had it the following year when my ride from LA to Las Vegas ditched me and left me to eat my tickets. (I will never forgive you Sam!) That said, I get it. It's easy to hate shows you didn't attend. I do it all the time. If the band plays Harpua and I'm not there, it's automatically the WORST Harpua of all time. Don't be hatin doe! If you weren't there, you missed out. Plain and simple. Enough of that though. I want to point out something less obvious... Boy, was this a spectacle! The kind heretofore reserved for New Year's Eve, I might venture to say, and perhaps exceeding some of those "stunts." I was totally transfixed by the Disney sound-effect songs in the second set, though they have not--to me--weathered as well as the Fuego (née Wingsuit) album material from the previous year's Halloween. Lots of phans seem to really get off on the sound-effect songs, though, so what do I know? An unfortunate similarity between that year's songs and 2014's songs is that with the exception of Fuego, none have seemed to been jammed out extensively. I want Phish to be interested in jamming... not at the expense of their songwriting vocations, but isn't the unknown what we all seek in the Phish experience? Don't we want to be surprised? I've never heard anyone come away from a show saying, "Man, I'm so glad that show was just like the last show I saw," unless they were speaking generally about how awesome both shows were in their respective merits. To be entirely fair, Phish does still jam, and I love them for many reasons. But God, it would be awesome to see a huge version of one of these Disney songs, or many over a tour or any amount of time. The Sand in the third set is certainly worth hearing, too, since I kind of glossed over anything but the costume. Shit, Phish can do anything they want. I just wanna hear it.
		Boy, was this a spectacle! The kind heretofore reserved for New Year's Eve, I might venture to say, and perhaps exceeding some of those "stunts." I was totally transfixed by the Disney sound-effect songs in the second set, though they have not--to me--weathered as well as the Fuego (née Wingsuit) album material from the previous year's Halloween. Lots of phans seem to really get off on the sound-effect songs, though, so what do I know? An unfortunate similarity between that year's songs and 2014's songs is that with the exception of Fuego, none have seemed to been jammed out extensively. I want Phish to be interested in jamming... not at the expense of their songwriting vocations, but isn't the unknown what we all seek in the Phish experience? Don't we want to be surprised? I've never heard anyone come away from a show saying, "Man, I'm so glad that show was just like the last show I saw," unless they were speaking generally about how awesome both shows were in their respective merits. To be entirely fair, Phish does still jam, and I love them for many reasons. But God, it would be awesome to see a huge version of one of these Disney songs, or many over a tour or any amount of time. The Sand in the third set is certainly worth hearing, too, since I kind of glossed over anything but the costume. Shit, Phish can do anything they want. I just wanna hear it.
	 the #2 for this show means the song was a debut but "the dogs" was played the night before so its not a debut, that should be changed hopefully an admin sees this. but by far i think this show 100% deserves a 5 star rating for this halloween 2014 show is this what you wanted?
		the #2 for this show means the song was a debut but "the dogs" was played the night before so its not a debut, that should be changed hopefully an admin sees this. but by far i think this show 100% deserves a 5 star rating for this halloween 2014 show is this what you wanted?
	 Theatrics, Art, Creative juice. Tour closer.
		Theatrics, Art, Creative juice. Tour closer. First off, I wasn't there. I'm rating this solely from the music presented on the soundboard. This is both a good thing and a bad thing.
		First off, I wasn't there. I'm rating this solely from the music presented on the soundboard. This is both a good thing and a bad thing. I have only heard the first half of the second set and parts of the first, but from what I saw; it was one of the only shows in the modern era where I felt like I wasn't watching a castrated version of the band I knew and loved from 1994 - 2004 fronted by a walking rehab trope content to sit in the backseat strumming chords while his less-talented bandmates (save Fishman) drove the JEMP truck.
		I have only heard the first half of the second set and parts of the first, but from what I saw; it was one of the only shows in the modern era where I felt like I wasn't watching a castrated version of the band I knew and loved from 1994 - 2004 fronted by a walking rehab trope content to sit in the backseat strumming chords while his less-talented bandmates (save Fishman) drove the JEMP truck.Add a Review
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Review by n00b100
Set 2: So, here's one way to look at this set - "I love the tradition of playing classic albums, because it's an established 90s tradition, they play albums I'm generally familiar with, and it's a lot of fun to listen to live. This? This is sabotaging that tradition just to play original music, which isn't all that great to begin with. It's the Wingsuit debacle all over again. Just imagine all the pissed-off people that paid $300 and got this? I really hope they finally play Eat A Peach next year."
Here's another way to look at this set - "Phish has played 6 musical costumes, 7 if you count last year's (which you should). They want to continue the tradition, but they want to do it on their own terms. Not only did they find a clever concept for said musical costume, but *they actually composed their own music*, ten totally new pieces of music, without those pesky 'lyrics' and 'vocals' getting in the way. They're playing a structured soundcheck, AND they're playing it with CK's lights and a fun theatrical bent to it. Oh, and did I mention the music generally sounds fantastic?"
I know which of those ways of looking at things seems more appealing.
So, the music. The first two songs, to me, are meant to ease the listener into a hot bath, more about introducing the concept of "musical accompaniment to spooky sound effects album" than exploring musical ground. But from The Dogs on, it's all about hearing 3.0 jamming at its finest, its most experimental, and (most importantly) its most fun; every band member is loose and on point with their playing, showing how much work went into this piece of music. The Dogs utterly soars, Timber swaggers with menacing 70s-rock energy, Your Pet Cat is a crazed funk-fest that apes the 12/7/97 Tube in the best possible way, Shipwreck is a Page-driven effects-laden trip through fog and darkness with a great Trey solo at the end, The Unsafe Bridge is Phish Does Ennio Morricone, The Chinese Water Torture bounces energetically (Fish has a great drum part here) and peaks nicely, The Birds (the set highlight) is a heavy jam that Page goes sample-nuts on (petition to exchange "They attack!" for "Woo" during stop-start jams), and Martian Monster lives up to its name with trippy vocal samples ("your trip is short!"), a wicked groove that Page splashes clavinet magic over, and a droning finale not unlike Halloweens past. Trust me, you would have been quite happy to hear any of these songs come out of any jam from the last six years. And once the crowd figures out what's going on, about 3 songs in? They're totally on board. It's a joy to hear their enthusiasm, a far cry from the hands-sitting of the Wingsuit set. Add it all up, and it's one of Phish's boldest moves, and a set of music with ridiculous replay value.
Set 3: Save Trey getting a bit too antsy moving into Tweezer and Guyute having some fugly moments, a "second" set on par with the last two wonderful nights. Golden Age rediscovers some of its Fall 2013 mojo thanks to Page on his 70s organ and clavinet, Tweezer kicks into a tasty groove SB-style that suddenly reverses course into a sweet major-key jam before Fish speeds up, finds the Heavy Things opening drum part, and everyone else shrugs and nicely segues into Heavy Things with him. But the real drawing card of this set (other than how nicely it's structured, another great aspect of the last few shows) is Sand, which starts life as a fierce Type I Trey soloing showcase (think 10/20/13 II), but instead of ending in its usual manner (Fish has gone back to the usual Sand beat, note) Page and Trey keep things at a low simmer, the band moves into a disgusting funk space (with plinko-y notes meshing with that dang clavinet), they bring on the "woo"s (which you gotta expect with this kind of danceable jam), then in one final surprise rebuild into a ferocious blues-rock breakdown, with Page still wailing away on the clavinet, before Trey catches onto Tweezer Reprise, the rest of the band catch up with him (Fish stumbles a bit, but recovers nicely), and we get another great segue into a fiery Reprise to end the set. The surprise cover (give the lyrics a listen and think on them) and Frankenstein round out a superb, superb night.
Final thoughts: I'll step aside from any debates about this show's place in history and the Phish pantheon and all of that for now. All I ask is you give the show a listen and make up your mind for yourself. I think you'll like what you hear.