Phish - Billy Breathes
October 18, 1996 - Rolling Stone
By Steve McCarty
Album Review - Billy Breathes

It took them the better part of a decade and five other studio albums, but Phish have finally learned to trust in, and enjoy, the wide-open pleasures of simple, concise songwriting. In doing so, the band has also turned the volume down quite a bit, something that heightens rather than hurts the billowing effect of the singing in "Free" and "Swept Away," and the funky cut of the choral hook in "Character Zero." There is much to admire in the linear intricacies of Phish's live improvising and their instrumental and vocal precision (the band's note-perfect concert version of "A Day in the Life" is something to behold). But "Billy Breathes" is the first time on record that Phish have emphasized warmth over facility and ambition, and, frankly, it suits them.

Article © 1996 Rolling Stone