SET 1: Golgi Apparatus, Rocky Top > Wilson > Divided Sky, Foam, My Sweet One, The Oh Kee Pa Ceremony > AC/DC Bag > Tela, Mike's Song > I Am Hydrogen > Weekapaug Groove, Sweet Adeline
SET 2: Possum, Fee, The Landlady, Colonel Forbin's Ascent > Fly Famous Mockingbird[1] > Llama, Uncle Pen, Harry Hood, Cavern
ENCORE: I Didn't Know[2] > David Bowie
 My first Phish show.  I was playing in a little band in Potsdam called Fathead Minnow and we played a bunch of Phish songs (AC/DC Bag, Mike's Song, YEM [without the complex parts!!]), but I hadn't seen them until this show.  Really fun night.  "Swank" (another reviewer) describes it perfectly (and we must know each other pretty well because I have almost the same story, so we were definitely a part of the same group of friends).  Yes, the Environmental Club actually got suspended for a year because of the show.  It was ridiculous.  Per the reviewer who read Peter's book - yes, he was part of our whole crew as well (in fact, I'm "Shasta" in his book) and I spent much of the night with him.  Potsdam is a super small world, so it's funny to look back on that show now and see things in a different context.
		My first Phish show.  I was playing in a little band in Potsdam called Fathead Minnow and we played a bunch of Phish songs (AC/DC Bag, Mike's Song, YEM [without the complex parts!!]), but I hadn't seen them until this show.  Really fun night.  "Swank" (another reviewer) describes it perfectly (and we must know each other pretty well because I have almost the same story, so we were definitely a part of the same group of friends).  Yes, the Environmental Club actually got suspended for a year because of the show.  It was ridiculous.  Per the reviewer who read Peter's book - yes, he was part of our whole crew as well (in fact, I'm "Shasta" in his book) and I spent much of the night with him.  Potsdam is a super small world, so it's funny to look back on that show now and see things in a different context.
	 I read about this in a book called "growing up dead" about a teen following the dead in the 80's. After the dead scene was ruined by the new heads in the 90's, the author turned to Phish. He attended this show and said it was great, and that the future of jam bands was deffinetly not over. There was much hope. Long live Phish!
		I read about this in a book called "growing up dead" about a teen following the dead in the 80's. After the dead scene was ruined by the new heads in the 90's, the author turned to Phish. He attended this show and said it was great, and that the future of jam bands was deffinetly not over. There was much hope. Long live Phish!
	 Another reminiscence that starts with reading the Schvice in my buddy's kitchen in Albany NY and realizing that John Paluska put the phone number to Dionysian Productions on the back page.  Logically the next thing to do was say, 'fuck it, I'll call them!'  As a member of SUNY Potsdam's Students for Environmental Awareness (SEA) I told John we were putting on a huge Earth Day event incorporating all four colleges in the North Country area.  We were organizing a big event and were looking for a closing act.  He said it fit perfectly into their tour schedule.  A week or so later he sent me a contract.  All I needed to do was find someone to sign it, get some money to pay them, and Phish would play at my school.  By this time, I had several shows under my belt.  I think I was among the first people that started following them around who didn't directly know them.  Regardless, I knew how awesome it would be if I could pull it off.  So, I set out trying to get the $3,500 needed to book them by approaching the school's Student Government Association (SGA).  After my compelling testimony, that did not mention weed, shrooms or copious amounts of alcohol, that outlined how appropriate the band would be for an Earth Day celebration, SEA received a check from the SGA for $2,500.  Fuck, we were short a grand.  So, off to Clarkson University's Student Government Council I went.  After more compelling testimony, another check was issued to the SEA in the amount of $1,000.  We had the money but the question of who should sign the contract remained.  Once again, the prevailing logic of ‘fuck it’ took course. I signed the contract, stuck it and the payment in the mail and waited for them to show up.
		Another reminiscence that starts with reading the Schvice in my buddy's kitchen in Albany NY and realizing that John Paluska put the phone number to Dionysian Productions on the back page.  Logically the next thing to do was say, 'fuck it, I'll call them!'  As a member of SUNY Potsdam's Students for Environmental Awareness (SEA) I told John we were putting on a huge Earth Day event incorporating all four colleges in the North Country area.  We were organizing a big event and were looking for a closing act.  He said it fit perfectly into their tour schedule.  A week or so later he sent me a contract.  All I needed to do was find someone to sign it, get some money to pay them, and Phish would play at my school.  By this time, I had several shows under my belt.  I think I was among the first people that started following them around who didn't directly know them.  Regardless, I knew how awesome it would be if I could pull it off.  So, I set out trying to get the $3,500 needed to book them by approaching the school's Student Government Association (SGA).  After my compelling testimony, that did not mention weed, shrooms or copious amounts of alcohol, that outlined how appropriate the band would be for an Earth Day celebration, SEA received a check from the SGA for $2,500.  Fuck, we were short a grand.  So, off to Clarkson University's Student Government Council I went.  After more compelling testimony, another check was issued to the SEA in the amount of $1,000.  We had the money but the question of who should sign the contract remained.  Once again, the prevailing logic of ‘fuck it’ took course. I signed the contract, stuck it and the payment in the mail and waited for them to show up.   Beautiful Crispy Cass/1 SBD available for this show. Nice mix but unfortunately there’s not much of the room mixed in. Big thanks to Jason Sobel for cleaning this one up and patching in the missing portions of Possum with Dave Schanker’s AKG 414 source to make a complete show.
		Beautiful Crispy Cass/1 SBD available for this show. Nice mix but unfortunately there’s not much of the room mixed in. Big thanks to Jason Sobel for cleaning this one up and patching in the missing portions of Possum with Dave Schanker’s AKG 414 source to make a complete show.Add a Review
 Phish.net
Phish.netPhish.net is a non-commercial project run by Phish fans and for Phish fans under the auspices of the all-volunteer, non-profit Mockingbird Foundation.
This project serves to compile, preserve, and protect encyclopedic information about Phish and their music.
Credits | Terms Of Use | Legal | DMCA
 The Mockingbird Foundation
The Mockingbird FoundationThe Mockingbird Foundation is a non-profit organization founded by Phish fans in 1996 to generate charitable proceeds from the Phish community.
And since we're entirely volunteer – with no office, salaries, or paid staff – administrative costs are less than 2% of revenues! So far, we've distributed over $2 million to support music education for children – hundreds of grants in all 50 states, with more on the way.
Review by swank
I was a sophomore at Potsdam at the time. I had seen Phish several times before then, and had been turning a lot of friends at school and at home on to the music. So I was stoked to find out that the school's Environmental Club was working to convince the College to pay for the whole thing and make it a free event. And they succeeded. The school paid for the gig, and no admission was charged for anyone, even non-students.
So, this show was up in the Multi Purpose Room on the second floor of our little student union building. I remember I helped unload Phish's truck, and got to hang around backstage for a while. I remember playing with Trey's dog Marley, running around the floor of the room while the real crew set up the stage. At some point close to the show I ditched all that and went to hang with my friends in the crowd.
I don't remember much detail about the actual show itself, but I do remember having a great time. This was back in the day when I hadn't yet seen a single low energy Phish show. I had seen some Dead shows that blew my mind, but then a few that didn't, and was disappointed in that. Then I started seeing these Phish shows and every single one of them was a least as good as the one before. My mind kept getting blown, and this show was no exception.
Well, because the show was free, word got out, so even though Potsdam College is small and the town is small, the place was pretty packed (at least for little old Potsdam). The school was caught by surprise by the fact that this was a REAL rock show. Big sound, big crowd (for Potsdam), big fun. No meaningful security presence, no tickets, lines, check-ins, pat downs. Just waltz right in and prepare to boogie. It was awesome! Some guys I knew brought a beer ball right in to the room (remember those?). Yeah, it was a fun scene.
Of course security had a fit. I don't remember any trouble that night, but the school did call the Environmental Club organizers in front of some judicial/review board and reamed them pretty good! I think it was mostly about beers (and beer balls) in the MPR, and maybe pot being smoked. I don't remember what punishment was doled out, but I'm pretty sure they thought it was worth it!
Can't believe that's almost two decades ago now...backwards down the number line and twenty years later, eh?