School Daze, Hungry Phish
December 25, 2003 - Miami New Times
By Paul Iorio
Believe it or not there was a time when Phish was not one of the most
successful concert acts ever. Of course one wouldn't know that, judging by the
Phishmania surrounding the band's twentieth anniversary celebrations, which include
four shows at the American Airlines Arena in Miami at the end of this month.
Phish's exact birthday is December 2, 1983, when an early version of the band
played its first gig at the University of Vermont in Burlington. But the
group didn't establish its current lineup -- bandleader Trey Anastasio, bassist
Mike Gordon, keyboardist Page McConnell, and drummer (and namesake) Jon Fishman
-- until 1985.
The group's lean years were quite lean. Through the mid-Eighties, Phish
played mostly universities in and around Vermont to little or no notice. By early
1989 it was not even the best-known band in Burlington, whose most famous
musical exports at the time were post-punkers the Hollywood Indians, Pinhead, and
Screaming Broccoli, and alternative popsters Undercurrent.
In a previously unpublished interview with Anastasio that is presented here
-- apparently the earliest existing audiotape interview with the band leader --
he was clearly proud that Phish's shows were attracting a few hundred fans on
some nights. He was also excited about new material he was developing for a
tape that would soon become Junta, the group's first album, which they released
themselves around May 1989 (and which was re-released by Elektra Records in
1992).
At the time of this interview, which took place in late January or early
February 1989, the band hadn't yet sent out its demo to record companies, and the
rock press outside of the Burlington region didn't so much as mention the word
Phish in print. It would be a year and a half before it signed to independent
label Absolute A-Go-Go for a brief period -- and nearly three years before
Elektra signed them.
I found out about the group only because I was exploring the Burlington rock
scene in 1988 for the East Coast Rocker, a New Jersey-based music newspaper. I
asked dozens of Vermont bands to send me tapes. Among them was Phish, which
mailed a 1987 demo featuring four originals ("Golgi Apparatus," "Fee," "David
Bowie," and "Fluffhead," all of which later appeared on Junta) and two covers.
I eventually wrote about the group for the newspaper's July 19, 1989 issue,
calling Phish "an unlikely combination of the Grateful Dead and Steely Dan" in a
story that is one of the first to mention it in a publication outside the
Burlington area. But my Anastasio interview was never used in that story or any
other piece for fourteen years. Until now.
Since then, Phish's sound has evolved into an inspired mix of unpredictable
rock and jazz elements, open-ended song structures, and deliberate sonic
weirdness that recalls the Grateful Dead's experimental Aoxomoxoa. On peak albums
such as 1996's Billy Breathes, the group seems as if it is trying to capture the
very sound of freedom itself through soaring vocal harmonies and McConnell's
cascading keyboard playing. Though it has never had a massive hit on the order
of, say, Nirvana's Nevermind, and is not as culturally resonant as the Dead,
it has become a wildly successful -- and lucrative -- concert act. And the
quartet is known for pushing the boundaries of live performance to the level of
conceptual art, with playful shows that make imaginative use of things like
vacuum cleaners and the Beatles' White Album (which it reportedly once played in
sequence from start to finish live). Initially not a critical favorite, the
general consensus today is that Phish is one of the most significant rock groups
of the past dozen years.
But back in early 1989 Anastasio, then 24, was still toiling in obscurity. In
this edited transcript he speaks candidly (and obviously not coached by
publicists), opening a rare window into the early evolution of Phish and the making
of its first album.
New Times: What does the demo include?
Anastasio: Now we've pretty much got an album. We've got almost two albums'
worth of material recorded. We've only got one day left of recording. What it
includes is more originals. All fairly new songs, newer than stuff on the old
[six-song] tape [from 1987]. Two of them are very new; we just finished them.
Two of them are things we've been playing for a while but haven't gotten around
to recording. We're a lot happier with it than with the demo. When we choose
stuff for the album, I think the only thing on the demo that'll make it onto
the album is "Fee."
You write them all, right?
Yeah, pretty much. Mike [Gordon] writes songs as well. One of Mike's songs
that's going to be on the album is called "Contact." Actually it might not be on
the album. See, we're having a hard time deciding what to put on the album.
And I think that's the first thing we're going to do is talk with record
companies and tell them we have all these songs.
Have you started the process of sending the [demo] around to record
companies?
Yeah, we've only just started talking to people [at record companies]. And we
haven't really sent it out yet. We wanted to finish this last song. We [are
performing on] three nights -- tonight, tomorrow, the next night -- in Vermont.
And then we're going to Boston. And we're doing a mixdown on "Let's Go Out to
Dinner and See a Movie," another Mike song. We talked to a guy at Rounder
Records, we have a connection there, and they seemed pretty interested. [The band
would eventually be signed by Elektra Records, not Rounder, in late 1991,
after a short time with Absolute A-Go-Go in 1990.]
What about the Grateful Dead comparisons? It seems like a lot of people make
those.
People are definitely starting to make the [Grateful Dead] comparisons less.
But as far as those comparisons, there's nothing really wrong with it,
considering that they're one of the most successful bands anywhere now. But the thing
that's different about it is the kind of music we're writing now, the newer
stuff is sounding less and less like that. No one in the band listens to the
Grateful Dead very much.
Did you grow up listening to [the Grateful Dead]?
I had a phase where I listened to them. I was more into Led Zeppelin in high
school. I was a Led Zeppelin fanatic and so was the drummer [Jon Fishman]; he
went to see them all the time and followed them around. When I got to college
-- the last year of high school and into college -- I got into a little bit of
a Grateful Dead phase but [grew] out of that and went into a sort of jazz
phase. I mean I've seen Pat Metheny as many times as I've seen the Grateful Dead.
Mike [Gordon] was talking to me about the jazz aspect of ... your music in
the sense of improvisation. Do you do long extended jams?
Yeah, we've kind of been cutting [the jams] down to like one per set, two per
set. But we do do that. That's definitely where the Grateful Dead connection
comes in. As well as the fact that a lot of the people that come down to see
us are hippie types.
Young hippies or old ones?
Umm ... young hippies. More like college -type hippies. You know what I mean?
But actually when we play in Boston -- this is one of the great things that's
happening to us in Boston right now -- it's not really that way. We're
getting a different type of crowd. When we first started, we had much more of a Dead
sound, even through that demo with "David Bowie," that song. So our following
up here [in Boston and in Burlington] was definitely a "Deadhead" type
following. And it still kind of is.
How do [fans] hear about you?
Word of mouth.
Are you getting people who show up at all your gigs?
Oh, yes. Definitely.
Are you familiar with a band called Widespread Panic?
No, I'm not.
They're a band from Athens, Georgia, that has a following similar to what
you're describing. They really go very far into long-form jams and attract a lot
of Deadheads.
It's a great thing. I was talking to some girl from the BU [Boston
University] paper, and she said the closest she had seen in crowds was actually the
Radiators. I've never seen the Radiators. The word of mouth thing is working out
real well. I think there's also a lot of people who like us because we do --
have you heard "Fluffhead" on the demo? -- a lot of stuff that's pretty
different. [But] that's where the Dead connection really ends. A large bulk of what we
do ... we don't play the same three chords over and over again. We do a lot
of variety. Like last night, we did a couple jazz songs, "Take the A Train,"
"Satin Doll." Things like that. And then we'll do in the same set maybe a Led
Zeppelin song.
But you lean heavily toward originals.
But almost all originals. Usually not more than three or four covers.
What did you do by Zeppelin?
We did "Good Times, Bad Times."
So what's your next step?
We're definitely going to keep playing live. But the album thing is important
for a lot of reasons. We're pretty much done recording it. Like I said, we've
got so much material recorded we could put out a double album. So I guess the
next step is to try to get signed to a label, even if it's an indie. I think
we'll do all right. Because if the distribution isn't that great, we've got
such a big following -- we've got a mailing list now, we've got a hotline, and I
think we'll be able to sell it ourselves.
Article Copyright © 2003 New Times Miami
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