SET 1: Prince Caspian > No Men In No Man's Land, Ghost, The Wedge, The Moma Dance, How Many People Are You, Rift, Mike's Song > I Am Hydrogen > Weekapaug Groove
SET 2: Kill Devil Falls[1] > Martian Monster[2] > Twist -> Back on the Train -> Reba[1], Bathtub Gin
ENCORE: Farmhouse > Character Zero
KDF was unfinished. During Martian Monster, Trey joined Page on clavinet and Trey and Mike both joined Fish on drums. Fish then played Mike's bass with Trey and Mike still on drums before Mike left to play Trey's guitar. Reba did not contain the whistling ending. Bathtub Gin included the whistling portion from Reba, a Reba tease from Page, a Funkytown tease from Mike, Apostrophe teases, and a Kill Devil Falls quote.
 
			Photo © Phish
 Long time fan of the band and this site, finally created an account to make one comment about last night's show because I see nobody else has pointed this out and it is relevant to the observations about the false starts to Mike's Song.
		Long time fan of the band and this site, finally created an account to make one comment about last night's show because I see nobody else has pointed this out and it is relevant to the observations about the false starts to Mike's Song. The boys took it to another level last night.
		The boys took it to another level last night. I just want to say I hope this isn't the final notes on this show. It doesn't even mention Page's teasing of Reba in Gin. Not to mention the fact that Twist is definitely not the only noteworthy jam in there. KDF, Reba and Gin all contend for the green highlight and KDF deserves it for sure. Not to forget the martian monster. The boys were on another level for that set. Just my opinion I guess though.
		I just want to say I hope this isn't the final notes on this show. It doesn't even mention Page's teasing of Reba in Gin. Not to mention the fact that Twist is definitely not the only noteworthy jam in there. KDF, Reba and Gin all contend for the green highlight and KDF deserves it for sure. Not to forget the martian monster. The boys were on another level for that set. Just my opinion I guess though.
	 This was my first Phish concert.
		This was my first Phish concert.  Well they really set the bar high for the run with this Friday show. I had lower expectations going in, as the recent southern shows haven't been quite up to par with other highly regarded 3.0 shows.
		Well they really set the bar high for the run with this Friday show. I had lower expectations going in, as the recent southern shows haven't been quite up to par with other highly regarded 3.0 shows.  "everyone is anxious to see if Phish is going to swallow their pride and give the fans a Grateful Dead tune."
		"everyone is anxious to see if Phish is going to swallow their pride and give the fans a Grateful Dead tune." tl;dr
		tl;dr History will hopefully be very kind to this show. I recommend everyone take a minute, or 77 and listen to the second set. The highlight of this show should not be the KDF, which was a great jam, but to me time doesn't always equal gold star. The gold star of the show goes to Bathtub Gin.
		History will hopefully be very kind to this show. I recommend everyone take a minute, or 77 and listen to the second set. The highlight of this show should not be the KDF, which was a great jam, but to me time doesn't always equal gold star. The gold star of the show goes to Bathtub Gin. My first review was of the Austin show, which I posted only in defense of the 46 Dogs, which I still think is one of the better jams of the tour so far. Still, didn't want my only review to be of a two star show.
		My first review was of the Austin show, which I posted only in defense of the 46 Dogs, which I still think is one of the better jams of the tour so far. Still, didn't want my only review to be of a two star show. Such a mix of fun and beauty is probably forbidden in some states. The “boys” are fifty, and they have fun like teens. From total controlled mess (see Mike's intro, or Martian Monster) to bliss (sublime 1st set Ghost), and adventurous as ever (KDF, which is so “noteworthy” that you don't need to be told, apparently).
		Such a mix of fun and beauty is probably forbidden in some states. The “boys” are fifty, and they have fun like teens. From total controlled mess (see Mike's intro, or Martian Monster) to bliss (sublime 1st set Ghost), and adventurous as ever (KDF, which is so “noteworthy” that you don't need to be told, apparently). Starting thirt minutes early,  the unusual choice of Caspian was a harbenger of the great things to come.   For the show opener, I think it serves well to play a song like Caspian as a warm up, easing onto stage and into the set.   Although i know it's no one's favorite, that song still has a place in my heart from the early days, specifically '96 Hampton.
		Starting thirt minutes early,  the unusual choice of Caspian was a harbenger of the great things to come.   For the show opener, I think it serves well to play a song like Caspian as a warm up, easing onto stage and into the set.   Although i know it's no one's favorite, that song still has a place in my heart from the early days, specifically '96 Hampton. On July 31st, 2015 I woke up at the Hilton in Atlanta, Georgia for the first in a four-night mini tour that would have me see Phish four times in three states.
		On July 31st, 2015 I woke up at the Hilton in Atlanta, Georgia for the first in a four-night mini tour that would have me see Phish four times in three states. This Twist is extremely powerful. Whole show is amazing, honestly, but something about the Twist speaks to my soul. It has pulled me out of some of the darkest times of my life and given me hope. At only 10 minutes too. Pure joy and euphoria. Give it a listen, then listen to the whole show all the way through. Truly special.
		This Twist is extremely powerful. Whole show is amazing, honestly, but something about the Twist speaks to my soul. It has pulled me out of some of the darkest times of my life and given me hope. At only 10 minutes too. Pure joy and euphoria. Give it a listen, then listen to the whole show all the way through. Truly special.
	 2015 was a standout year for 3.0 Phish. This summer tour was largely consistent with stellar playing, good jams, and unique song choice. I think if there is any tour of the 3.0 era that signified that Phish was really back to peak form, it was Summer 2015. This is probably the first of three truly stand-out shows leading up to Magnaball and its definitely worth the listen, particularly the entirety of set II. Highlights:
		2015 was a standout year for 3.0 Phish. This summer tour was largely consistent with stellar playing, good jams, and unique song choice. I think if there is any tour of the 3.0 era that signified that Phish was really back to peak form, it was Summer 2015. This is probably the first of three truly stand-out shows leading up to Magnaball and its definitely worth the listen, particularly the entirety of set II. Highlights: I had initially rated this show 4-out-of-5 stars, but upon relisten, with some distance from the glow, I've revised that to 3-out-of-5. The setlist is really strong, but 2015 was in some ways a very awkward time for Phish. It seems to me to have been the beginning of the smoothing-over of the variety of jamming styles, except in songs here like Weekapaug Groove and Bathtub Gin that have their own distinctive (usually Type I) jams. The Kill Devil Falls is of course a huge achievement, and features some really interesting use of effects by Trey in particular. No Men in No Man's Land also makes use of his Tru-Tron, which I wish he had continued to use if only in that song. But, aside from not really liking what was introduced with the 10/31/14 songs being put in heavy rotation, the Martian Monster seems to follow a template that is being used all too often in these setlong Crosseyed-fests or Marimba Lumina jams, whereas in earlier Phishtory instrument switching or rotation jams were accomplished a lot more cohesively, as evinced first of all by the songs Acoustic Army and Keyboard Army.
		I had initially rated this show 4-out-of-5 stars, but upon relisten, with some distance from the glow, I've revised that to 3-out-of-5. The setlist is really strong, but 2015 was in some ways a very awkward time for Phish. It seems to me to have been the beginning of the smoothing-over of the variety of jamming styles, except in songs here like Weekapaug Groove and Bathtub Gin that have their own distinctive (usually Type I) jams. The Kill Devil Falls is of course a huge achievement, and features some really interesting use of effects by Trey in particular. No Men in No Man's Land also makes use of his Tru-Tron, which I wish he had continued to use if only in that song. But, aside from not really liking what was introduced with the 10/31/14 songs being put in heavy rotation, the Martian Monster seems to follow a template that is being used all too often in these setlong Crosseyed-fests or Marimba Lumina jams, whereas in earlier Phishtory instrument switching or rotation jams were accomplished a lot more cohesively, as evinced first of all by the songs Acoustic Army and Keyboard Army.
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Review by n00b100
Did we get that huge second set? Well, if that eye-popping setlist doesn't convince you, let me see if I can do the trick:
1. Kill Devil Falls immediately plants a flag as yet another in the long and storied history of killer 7/31 jams, as the band slowly extricates from the usual KDF rhythm (Page switching up his piano playing, Trey flipping on an effect) and dig into a dark and gnarly space, then Page moves to the organ and pushes things in a more relaxed and contemplative direction (Trey's tone again goes 2.0-ish), before Fish picks up the pace, Trey moves to chords, and they hit on a glorious classic-rock groove. But just when you think the jam is going to peter out, Fish starts working his trusty woodblock and some glorious funkiness enters our lives, and then Trey pushes his way to the front and plays Rock God as the tempo picks up and we get the jam's true peak. So that's a exceptional 23 minute jam to open the proceedings, and as the band puddles into gooey ambiance and the embers of the jam fade away...
2. ...one of the great surprise calls of the past few years comes with Martian Monster batting in the 2 hole, and its usual "instant energy" explosiveness is given a new quality by the instrument switching. It's not quite the most musical thing you'll hear in your life, but rotation jams aren't always such, and the sheer craziness of the proceedings serves both as a throwback to mid-90s Crazy Bastards Phish and a sign that Martian Monster continues to mutate beyond its CTSOTHH boundaries. And, after they've gotten the weirdness out of their system...
3. ...they proceed to leap headfirst into the Pool of Bliss with Twist, which does not take long to move into an utterly *gorgeous* jam with Page on the electric piano and Trey playing some of the most sympathetic notes you'll hear. It's actually a very fine companion piece to the 10/28/14 Twist, finding beauty in lightness where that Twist found beauty in darkness, and it once again shows how much 3.0 Phish can do with 10 minutes. As that jam dies away, Trey hits upon a familiar opening riff...
4. ...and they work into Back on the Train (I think a case for -> could be made there; it's no Tweezer -> BOTT from 7/27/14, but what is?), and the band cranks into a fine version of the tune - note that this is the *breather song* for the set - before Trey makes a great call...
5. ...with a fourth quarter Reba, and this Reba is a match for Shoreline's very strong version (Reba has been *great* the last few years, and a pretty reliable indicator of a strong show, as - 8/2/14 aside - it's shown up in a run of very good-to-classic shows from Reading 2013 to this one), with Trey really going off like it's 1994 again and the band matching him step by step. They're really doing a great job switching up setlists in 2015, and as if to prove that statement...
6. ...we get a closing Bathtub Gin, the first such to follow a Reba in 25 years and the first ever Set 2 closing Gin (I can't believe it either), and this Gin is full of hilarity (Trey somehow squeezing Reba's post-jam whistling into the opening, Page hinting at Reba in his piano playing, a freakin' Guy Forget tease at the 7 minute mark) and musical piss & vinegar (the Classic Gin jam here is absolutely on fire) and is one hell of a way to close out Set 2. Farmhouse > Zero is an encore to which nobody will say no.
Final thoughts: if you think your life is complete without hearing this wonderful show, much like dissing Dre, you're dissing yourself. Don't diss yourself.
Bonus final thought: http://forum.phish.net/forum/permalink/1376081146