New Phish CD has elements found in live performances
January 23, 2003 - Tufts Daily
By Joshua Weisstuch
Album Review - Round Room
Back from the depths of a two-and-a-half year hiatus, the popular jamband
Phish emerges with their new album, Round Room. The album lacks typical
studio perfection, yet inhabits small nuances that usually only exist in
spontaneous live performances. If you listen closely, you can hear Trey get a
little choked up and cough in "Friday," and the background harmony he adds in
"Mock Song" is a cacophony of nonsensical words. Like at a live show these
impulsive or flawed nuances are alluring. Indeed, they're what the band has
thrived on in concert for 17 years.
The first track, "Pebbles and Marbles," will be one of the band's live
epic crowd pleasers. A catchy riff leads into Trey's soft and melodic voice
stretching to the energy-building chorus. The song lasts longer than 11
minutes, complete with a heavy jam from front man Trey Anastasio.
The jam is perhaps a little long, but that only authenticates the live
performance effect. There are a number of other bone-grooving tunes like "46
Days," "Walls of the Cave," and the funk-circus song that the band brought in
the New Year with, "Seven Below."
Yet not all of the songs are filled with technical and splendid virtuoso.
"Anything But Me," "Friday," and "All of These Dreams," to name a few, are
hardly danceable numbers. The music is droopy and the pace too slow for its
words. After the initial listen, all the songs seem to blend together. In
concert, of course, these songs will provide "phans" with a much-needed
slow-down reprieve between jams.
Mike Gordon, perhaps the band's weirdest member, inspired the title track
with his profound words, My room is round when I lay down/ When I wake up
it's square, which suggest the malleability of reality.
Is the band back to stay or will they reshape their anticipated future as
well? Only time will tell what is in store for these hippie heroes. The
Vermont-based group, consisting of Anastasio (guitar), Gordon (bass), Page
McConnell (keyboard), and Jon Fishman (drums) began learning, rehearsing, and
recording the new album in a matter of days.
The band claims they are back and ready to go for the long haul. Is this
the case, or is it merely a ploy to "piss in the ears of their listeners" (as
a Rolling Stone magazine article so blatantly put it) and run with their
hippie stash of profit?
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