SET 1: Pebbles and Marbles[1] -> Makisupa Policeman > Sample in a Jar[1] > The Silver Light[2] > Halley's Comet > Mountains in the Mist, Mull > Set Your Soul Free
SET 2: Blaze On[3] > Beneath a Sea of Stars Part 1 > 46 Days > Sneakin' Sally Through the Alley -> Weekapaug Groove, About to Run, If I Could > Sigma Oasis
ENCORE: Fuck Your Face > Meatstick > The Lizards > A Life Beyond The Dream
Pebbles and Marbles and Sample in a Jar were unfinished. Makisupa and Weekapaug contained quotes of Little Squirrel. This show featured the Phish debut of The Silver Light. Halley's Comet included an Oye Como Va jam. Blaze On's lyrics were changed to "We'll be dancing at the Bowl." Trey teased Manteca in 46 Days. Weekapaug contained a Piper jam and a Crimes of the Mind tease from Trey.
 
			© 2021 Phish - Rene Huemer
 I noticed there aren't any reviews yet so I'll take a stab at my first one here. A little caveat, I was at this and the last two shows.
		I noticed there aren't any reviews yet so I'll take a stab at my first one here. A little caveat, I was at this and the last two shows. I was in attendance and the reactions are mixed on this one so I’ll settle the score: this was a better show than the forums and memes will lead you to believe. The opening P&M is the perfect show-opener trifecta: rare song, rare placement, big jam. Segue into Makisupa was buttery and the banter featured a hella rare quote - what’s not to like? Also Sample jammed like 7/25/17 and no one seems to care?? I can’t with y’all. Santana Halley’s was hot but for my money the Mull jam is top-shelf Phish: the outro from about 7min onward is the sort of dark, sticky, chunky, THICC groove I want from Phish shows. Reminiscent of Brooklyn 04 Moma and a sleeper for first set highlight, but I’m probably the only one who thinks so. SYSF jam was tasty; Mike seemed to miss the cue coming back in from the jam, but Phish is the most professional band out there and held the set closer together without issue. Please refer to Zappa’s “wind up monkey” speech if you’re unwilling to ease up on critique of the inherent imperfections of improvisational music. Suffice to say that this first set was money if not necessarily a treasure trove of classic hits… get over it, Phish is on phire.
		I was in attendance and the reactions are mixed on this one so I’ll settle the score: this was a better show than the forums and memes will lead you to believe. The opening P&M is the perfect show-opener trifecta: rare song, rare placement, big jam. Segue into Makisupa was buttery and the banter featured a hella rare quote - what’s not to like? Also Sample jammed like 7/25/17 and no one seems to care?? I can’t with y’all. Santana Halley’s was hot but for my money the Mull jam is top-shelf Phish: the outro from about 7min onward is the sort of dark, sticky, chunky, THICC groove I want from Phish shows. Reminiscent of Brooklyn 04 Moma and a sleeper for first set highlight, but I’m probably the only one who thinks so. SYSF jam was tasty; Mike seemed to miss the cue coming back in from the jam, but Phish is the most professional band out there and held the set closer together without issue. Please refer to Zappa’s “wind up monkey” speech if you’re unwilling to ease up on critique of the inherent imperfections of improvisational music. Suffice to say that this first set was money if not necessarily a treasure trove of classic hits… get over it, Phish is on phire.  Have never posted a review myself but feel the need to draw attention to this show which appears under-reviewed and also had a few negative comments off the blog post.  While this show had no A+ jam moments, at least 2/3 of the main show songs were jammed, mostly Type II, with 7 songs over 10 minutes.  And maybe its just because the SB Bowl was the smallest venue I've ever seen them at and this is par for the Kuroda course in sub-5K seaters, but the light show was just sick, and the compactness of it seemed to tie it closer to the jams than I'd ever noticed in an arena or big shed.  I give this one a big Huzzah and enjoyed it as much as the Forum a few nights earlier.
		Have never posted a review myself but feel the need to draw attention to this show which appears under-reviewed and also had a few negative comments off the blog post.  While this show had no A+ jam moments, at least 2/3 of the main show songs were jammed, mostly Type II, with 7 songs over 10 minutes.  And maybe its just because the SB Bowl was the smallest venue I've ever seen them at and this is par for the Kuroda course in sub-5K seaters, but the light show was just sick, and the compactness of it seemed to tie it closer to the jams than I'd ever noticed in an arena or big shed.  I give this one a big Huzzah and enjoyed it as much as the Forum a few nights earlier.
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Review by waxbanks
Fall Tour was so good this year -- a bold step beyond Summer and and flying leap beyond what 'Phish 3.0' had led us to expect -- that this show is likely being marked down a bit for being merely Kong- and not Godzilla-sized. The best of this tour can reasonably be named the best Phish of the 21st century, and the band was unquestionably playing at a more consistently high level than at any point since Coventry, if not Big Cypress. This show is 'merely' that good, Mike and Fish merely playing their asses off, Trey merely high as a kite off his Dezron-meets-Fish-and-Ray TAB vacation, Page merely bringing a Soviet nuclear reactor's worth of electromechanical doodads to bear on his bandmates' intriguing musical/emotional problems. We might be grateful for a tour so ludicrously good (at this improbably late hour) that this excellent Phish concert manages, somehow, not to stand out. Anyway, I love it and suggest you do the same.