Phish, Finally
February 28, 2003 - Winston Salem Journal
By Mark Brown
Fans ready for return after 2-year shutdown
For Phish fans, it was agonizing. The group's popularity was at a fever pitch
in 2000 when leader Trey Anastasio abruptly announced that Phish was quitting
- unquestionably, inarguably and indefinitely - until the members felt like
playing together again.
For the hard-core fans, the announcement kicked off a rather desperate 26
months of scrutinizing interviews, looking for clues - the musical equivalent
of Kremlin-watching or reading tea leaves - wondering when Phish would get
back together.
Often, searching for clues brought more frustration. Anastasio, Jonathan
"Fish" Fishman, Page McConnell and Michael Gordon all pursued solo projects.
According to Phish.net, an exhaustive fan Web site, the Vermont jam band's
hiatus lasted 815 days - from the final Oct. 7, 2000, show at Shoreline
Amphitheatre to Phish's triumphant onstage reunion at Madison Square Garden
this past New Year's Eve.
"Everyone knew it was going to happen eventually," said Phish fan and taper
Zachary Andersson of Denver. "A lot of us knew the band needed to take the
time off. They weren't as creative in the end. We knew a good break would be
able to get us our Phish back."
The band began talking about taking a breather after the millennium show Dec.
31, 1999.
"We didn't want to experience Phish in any way other than peak energy,"
Anastasio said shortly after.
"After 17 years of us being with each other 24 hours a day ... there was some
concern that if we didn't get out and live life for a while, we couldn't
maintain that feeling. We could foresee that coming."
Paradoxically, more Phish music was available during the two-year hiatus than
ever before. They used the break to release 16 multidisc live CDs, including
classic sets of their own material and Halloween shows where they covered
other bands' music - from The Beatles to Talking Heads. And if that's not
enough, all four warm-up shows from December and January are available to buy
and download online, along with all 12 of the sold-out shows on this
toe-in-the-water tour, including Saturday's show in Greensboro.
As with the Grateful Dead, fans tend to love the live Phish shows more than
the studio albums. The band's comeback studio disc, Round Room, was received
with mixed reviews from fans and critics in December.
Anastasio said that the studio recordings are just the jumping-off point.
"When I'm onstage with Phish, all we care about is connecting. Period. That's
it," he said last year.
"Every day of band practice was us talking as a group about what our weak
points and strong points were. We found a hell of a lot of weak points in
that band. We never thought we were all that good as individuals at really
much of anything singing or playing.
"But we had certain strengths, so we'd try to create situations and write
music that would utilize those strengths, so the whole becomes more than the
sum of the parts."
"That being said, I wouldn't change a thing about Phish."
Nor would the fans - except, maybe, for the popularity. Phish shows have sold
out quickly in the past, but on this tour it has taken just minutes.
Andersson and other longtime fans are somewhat nostalgic for the days of old,
when Phish would play a half-dozen gigs within driving distance of Denver -
or when the band did multiple nights at Red Rocks in 1996, resulting in riots
and chaos in nearby Morrison, Colo. Now there are only 12 shows across the
United States.
During the hiatus, fans hoped that the band members would become rejuvenated
but not feel so liberated musically that they would never return to the band.
But it turned out exactly as planned. Besides fronting his own solo project,
Anastasio formed a power trio, Oysterhead, with drummer Stewart Copeland of
The Police and bassist Les Claypool of Primus.
"That was the final piece of the puzzle for me," Anastasio said. "I'll say
that with more conviction than ever. The fact that everyone had the sense to
know it was the best thing to do, then we went and did it. It makes me even
more respectful of Phish now that we've done this."
Copyright © 2003 Winston Salem Journal
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