Phish keeps fans dancing in fun concert
November 3, 1994 - Bangor Daily News
by Dale McGarrigle
What do you get when you cross an up-and-coming band with a
sellout crowd?
You get three hours of great music, thanks to Phish and an
enthusiastic Bangor Auditorium audience, most of them high school
and college age.
The festive atmosphere at the concert started early, as the
doors opened at 6:30 p.m. for general admission seating, and the
crowd rushed in, looking to get the best possible seat. It was like
taking a step back into the '60s fashionwise, with seas of denim
and flannel mixed with tie-dye. Friends met up and talked, while colorful balloons were bounced
along overhead. Big band, then jazz, played in the background.
Smoke quickly filled the auditorium, first from cigarettes and
later from joints.
The audience had filled up into the second balcony by the time
the four-member band took the stage, 45 minutes late.
Chairs from the floor immediately began being passed overhead,
continuing up into the nosebleed seats of the ancient structure.
People were making room for dancing, and dance they did nonstop,
except for the lone half-hour intermission.
Usually the act onstage provides the energy at a concert, but
with Phish, it was a two-way street, with the audience's delirious
approval pushing the band on to greater musical feats.
Now Phish doesn't just come out and play its hits. First off,
since the band's songs can go on for five to 10 minutes, Phish
isn't very radio-friendly. And without radio support, it's hard to
have hits.
Still, within a few notes, the audience was screaming in
recognition of each song. Phish may not yet be a household name,
but its fans are faithful.
Phish also just uses each song as a building block. After a
couple of verses,the group takes off on an extended jam, whipping
the crowd into a fervor.
Guitarist Trey Anastasio and keyboardist Page McConnell would
take turns in the spotlight with animated solos. By contrast,
bassist Mike Gordon would stand stock still while laying down the
foundation with drummer Jon "Greasy Fizeek" Fishman.
Most of the time, Phish's jamming worked. Fans would get tired
of dancing, stop to cool off or catch their breath, then rejoin the
group later in the jam. Jamming is a fine line to tread, and a
couple of times, Phish went over the edge from musical
experimentation into dissonance.
In addition to a wide variety of songs from their own five
albums, the quartet turned in a sizzling version of the Beatles'
"While My Guitar Gently Weeps. " (In fact, on Halloween, the band
played the tunes from the Fab Four's "White Album" in concert).
For an encore, the group went unplugged, with Fishman on
mandolin and washboard, Anastasio on acoustic guitar, McConnell on
standup bass and Gordon on banjo. Their bluegrass version of the
Boston classic "Long Time" was a big hit.
If their Bangor stop was any indication, Phish promises to
become one of the great touring bands of the present and the
future, a logical heir to the Grateful Dead. The unpredictable band
will keep audiences guessing and happy.
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