Soundcheck: Funk Jam, Uncle Pen
SET 1: Llama, Foam, Sparkle, Cavern > Reba, The Landlady, Split Open and Melt, Poor Heart > All Things Reconsidered, Bouncing Around the Room > Run Like an Antelope[1]
SET 2: Maze, Glide, The Curtain > Tweezer > Rift, Guelah Papyrus, You Enjoy Myself, Hold Your Head Up > If I Only Had a Brain > Hold Your Head Up, The Squirming Coil > Golgi Apparatus
ENCORE: Ride Captain Ride > Tweezer Reprise
 I was at this show.  It was my first show.  It was 23 years ago today.  I'm giving it a 5 because it rocked my world.  I haven't listened to the show in over 20 years so I'm pulling from memory of being there experiencing it live, and seeing a band I'd been anticipating for a year.
		I was at this show.  It was my first show.  It was 23 years ago today.  I'm giving it a 5 because it rocked my world.  I haven't listened to the show in over 20 years so I'm pulling from memory of being there experiencing it live, and seeing a band I'd been anticipating for a year. 
 
	 Hidden gem indeed!  First headliner in Canada, and twentieth show of fall tour.  Excellent recording of an excellent show!  Really exceptional for 1992.
		Hidden gem indeed!  First headliner in Canada, and twentieth show of fall tour.  Excellent recording of an excellent show!  Really exceptional for 1992. This is the only show from 1992 that I consider essential in the grand scheme of things.  I feel they didn't really fully developed their listening skills until sometime in the second half of their Spring '94 tour.  I can't fully articulate what the difference between everything before late Spring '94 (including 8/93) and everything after it, to me, there is just a noticeable difference in energy.  It seems to me that after after late Spring '94 they were more easily realizing what they were hearing.
		This is the only show from 1992 that I consider essential in the grand scheme of things.  I feel they didn't really fully developed their listening skills until sometime in the second half of their Spring '94 tour.  I can't fully articulate what the difference between everything before late Spring '94 (including 8/93) and everything after it, to me, there is just a noticeable difference in energy.  It seems to me that after after late Spring '94 they were more easily realizing what they were hearing.  Early 90's Phish can be hit-or-miss for me, personally. Some shows I can listen to on repeat (Durham, Murat, Schnitzer), while others I just don't really "get" (Roxy - all of it).
		Early 90's Phish can be hit-or-miss for me, personally. Some shows I can listen to on repeat (Durham, Murat, Schnitzer), while others I just don't really "get" (Roxy - all of it). Great show!! Hidden gem! Foam and SOAM are at there early best.
		Great show!! Hidden gem! Foam and SOAM are at there early best.
	 Amazing energy and playful. Spectrum was just a cozy club venue. Page and Mike milled about with the crowd on the floor during the setbreak; who are these Canadians, they wanted to know. Stage was a single riser or two. Super casual vibe even though the music indicated something extraordinary. Then it was over and we stumbled out onto the freezing streets of Toronto, forever changed. Or at least that's how I remember it.
		Amazing energy and playful. Spectrum was just a cozy club venue. Page and Mike milled about with the crowd on the floor during the setbreak; who are these Canadians, they wanted to know. Stage was a single riser or two. Super casual vibe even though the music indicated something extraordinary. Then it was over and we stumbled out onto the freezing streets of Toronto, forever changed. Or at least that's how I remember it.
	 One of the better '92 shows for sure, 12/12 at the Spectrum sees the band shine as they ease their way into the tight, consistent jamming of later greatness. Like the rest of the official releases from this year, this show throws out a relatively high number of tunes from all over the catalog, all of which are delivered with exceptional prowess on the part of the individual. The tunes where I hear the band excelling beyond the greatness threshold as a cohesive unit are scattered across both sets: Reba, Split Open and Melt, Tweezer, and YEM.
		One of the better '92 shows for sure, 12/12 at the Spectrum sees the band shine as they ease their way into the tight, consistent jamming of later greatness. Like the rest of the official releases from this year, this show throws out a relatively high number of tunes from all over the catalog, all of which are delivered with exceptional prowess on the part of the individual. The tunes where I hear the band excelling beyond the greatness threshold as a cohesive unit are scattered across both sets: Reba, Split Open and Melt, Tweezer, and YEM. This Tweezer is a wonderful example of the band just having an absolute BLAST.
		This Tweezer is a wonderful example of the band just having an absolute BLAST.Add a Review
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Review by Roofless_Sheds
All four 'big jam' songs - Reba, Tweezer, SOAMelt, and YEM - are absolutely destroyed, with the incredible 15-minute shapeshifting light/dark flow of Tweezer and the 'Davy Crocket'-infused YEM as clear highlights. Reba has a tightness and focus to the jam that left my jaw hanging open.
These are bookended by many technically complex pieces like Foam, ATR, and Guelah, all flawlessly executed in typical '92 fashion. Fans of the late '90s might find themselves flabbergasted by how fast Trey's fingers seem to move around the fretboard.
You know how people talk about Fall '96 as the proto-funk period, where you can hear the prenatal sounds and instincts and atmosphere of 1997 start to creep into the music? Well, this show is proto-'93. You get a whiff the zany energy that would later realize itself in shows like the Murat and Tinley Park the following year.
Great sound on the spreadsheet SBD, taboot.