SET 1: Buried Alive > Poor Heart > Split Open and Melt, NICU > Foam, Bouncing Around the Room, Down with Disease > Silent in the Morning > Punch You in the Eye > Julius
SET 2: Frankenstein, David Bowie, The Mango Song > Axilla (Part II) > Uncle Pen, Tweezer > Lifeboy > Slave to the Traffic Light
ENCORE: Sparkle > Tweezer Reprise
 Just for clarity on the last post. Sparkle was dedicated to a great friend and amazing soul Aaron that had been put to rest. Friends of mine were able to get back stage before the encore to inform Phish of this and they did us and him a solid. I will never forget him as he was the one that got me into this band along with a crew of other great people. RIP Aaron!
		Just for clarity on the last post. Sparkle was dedicated to a great friend and amazing soul Aaron that had been put to rest. Friends of mine were able to get back stage before the encore to inform Phish of this and they did us and him a solid. I will never forget him as he was the one that got me into this band along with a crew of other great people. RIP Aaron!
	 Almost twenty years on, what I remember most is the rain.  After that it would be the venue, one of the strangest places I’ve ever seen a show.  The only other one that compares is when I went to see Todd Rundgren at the zoo.  The Phoenix Plaza was on top of a parking structure in lovely Pontiac, Michigan.  I was in grad school at Michigan State and was gradually getting into Phish during the previous year.  I had a few tapes, 12/30/1993 being my favorite and a copy of Rift and the new album, Hoist.  I would go over to the computer lab almost every day to check out rec.music.phish and there was a lot of concern that this new record and the new fans like me were going to ruin Phish, they made a video for god sakes!  I found all the consternation a little much, but it would be the first of many things that were going to change everything, and never for the better.  Earlier in the week I tried to get into the show in Kalamazoo but couldn’t score a ticket.  This intrigued me.  I had gotten pretty adroit at picking up tickets right before a show, more often than not with pretty good seats; The Rolling Stones, Paul McCarty, Roger Waters had all been last second purchases.  Who was this band that no one would give up a ticket?
		Almost twenty years on, what I remember most is the rain.  After that it would be the venue, one of the strangest places I’ve ever seen a show.  The only other one that compares is when I went to see Todd Rundgren at the zoo.  The Phoenix Plaza was on top of a parking structure in lovely Pontiac, Michigan.  I was in grad school at Michigan State and was gradually getting into Phish during the previous year.  I had a few tapes, 12/30/1993 being my favorite and a copy of Rift and the new album, Hoist.  I would go over to the computer lab almost every day to check out rec.music.phish and there was a lot of concern that this new record and the new fans like me were going to ruin Phish, they made a video for god sakes!  I found all the consternation a little much, but it would be the first of many things that were going to change everything, and never for the better.  Earlier in the week I tried to get into the show in Kalamazoo but couldn’t score a ticket.  This intrigued me.  I had gotten pretty adroit at picking up tickets right before a show, more often than not with pretty good seats; The Rolling Stones, Paul McCarty, Roger Waters had all been last second purchases.  Who was this band that no one would give up a ticket? This night will be remembered for the rain storm (and wind) that kept those of us jamming to Phish on top of a parking garage - the Phoenix Plaza - wet all night long.  It will also be remembered as one of the more aggressive dance scenes I've seen at a show, especially during Axilla.  The was a log of energy in the crowd on this night.
		This night will be remembered for the rain storm (and wind) that kept those of us jamming to Phish on top of a parking garage - the Phoenix Plaza - wet all night long.  It will also be remembered as one of the more aggressive dance scenes I've seen at a show, especially during Axilla.  The was a log of energy in the crowd on this night. It wasn't that summertime thunderstorm rain what you would typically see in the summertime that would last 30-60 mins and it would be fine. NO. This was that winter system kind of wind driven rain with temps in the 50's! The conditions were brutal. Basically it was non stop...in fact the rain picked up intensity as the temps continued to drop and the winds picked up. You can actually hear the rain and wind late in set 2 into the encore....BUT I still had the time of my life. I still remember that smoking Frankenstein in that rain like it was yesterday. You could have peed your pants and no one would have had a clue. If you had cotton mouth. You could easily drink your shirt. It was WET!
		It wasn't that summertime thunderstorm rain what you would typically see in the summertime that would last 30-60 mins and it would be fine. NO. This was that winter system kind of wind driven rain with temps in the 50's! The conditions were brutal. Basically it was non stop...in fact the rain picked up intensity as the temps continued to drop and the winds picked up. You can actually hear the rain and wind late in set 2 into the encore....BUT I still had the time of my life. I still remember that smoking Frankenstein in that rain like it was yesterday. You could have peed your pants and no one would have had a clue. If you had cotton mouth. You could easily drink your shirt. It was WET!  This show is inexplicably lowly rated, imho. Everything around it is 4.3, 4.6, 3.9... and then this is sub-3? Maybe it's just people who were there are only remember the rain. I don't know, but it's not some throwaway show. It's in the middle of a huge run of hotness and deserves a listen even if it's lacking HUGE moments.
		This show is inexplicably lowly rated, imho. Everything around it is 4.3, 4.6, 3.9... and then this is sub-3? Maybe it's just people who were there are only remember the rain. I don't know, but it's not some throwaway show. It's in the middle of a huge run of hotness and deserves a listen even if it's lacking HUGE moments.
	 I picked up summer tour 94 in chicago. in my bag i had clothes, a knife, and mushrooms for my burgers, because i like my mushrooms fresh. by the time we got to pontiac i was a full blown phish head. on this day i chose to go i. the venue to check out the digs cause the place looked strange. i climbed so step and who do i see coming toward me, but mike gorden, my favorite bass player in the world. i started talking to him and we bullshittedf for a few minutes when he said he had to bail to get ready to play. i was stoaked. i pulled a bowl out of my pocket and took a toke. a minute later security was gripping me up and telling me i was 86'ed. i was devastated. i threw a FIT. outside the venue a cop told me to just let it go and he wouldnt take me to jail, finally i accepted i was beAt and just listeded to the show bounce off a wall facing the venue. when we were getting ready to leave i told everybody what had happened and my friend chris told me they dedicated the encore to me...i couldnt believe it and one other guy said no,mthey said eric not aaron. well, they DID dedicate the encore to me and they DID say AAron. i just heard it on you tube on fromtheaquariums page yesterday. How fuckin cool are these guys! I am the aaron they mention at the end of that tape. wow..immortalized on a phish bootleg! fuck yeah!!
		I picked up summer tour 94 in chicago. in my bag i had clothes, a knife, and mushrooms for my burgers, because i like my mushrooms fresh. by the time we got to pontiac i was a full blown phish head. on this day i chose to go i. the venue to check out the digs cause the place looked strange. i climbed so step and who do i see coming toward me, but mike gorden, my favorite bass player in the world. i started talking to him and we bullshittedf for a few minutes when he said he had to bail to get ready to play. i was stoaked. i pulled a bowl out of my pocket and took a toke. a minute later security was gripping me up and telling me i was 86'ed. i was devastated. i threw a FIT. outside the venue a cop told me to just let it go and he wouldnt take me to jail, finally i accepted i was beAt and just listeded to the show bounce off a wall facing the venue. when we were getting ready to leave i told everybody what had happened and my friend chris told me they dedicated the encore to me...i couldnt believe it and one other guy said no,mthey said eric not aaron. well, they DID dedicate the encore to me and they DID say AAron. i just heard it on you tube on fromtheaquariums page yesterday. How fuckin cool are these guys! I am the aaron they mention at the end of that tape. wow..immortalized on a phish bootleg! fuck yeah!!
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Review by Matso
Anyway, as noted in the other review, the show was on the roof of a parking lot and it rained hard all night long (you can hear the pitter-patter of raindrops on the AUD of this show). Highlights included a spirited Buried Alive opener to warm everyone up; the return of NICU and PYITE (although I hadn't heard either before that night); a typically twisted 94 Split; and a strong Bowie/Tweezer/Slave in the second set. It was a good show, but given the weather and the shows that surround it (eg. 6/22/94 and 6/26/94), a weaker effort from that period. It being only my second show, I was still dazzled.
My mum seemed to enjoy it too. She liked the more melodic stuff (eg. Mango), the vocal harmonies (which the boys did well that night, I think), and Fish's drumming. I remember her remarking at the effort and energy of his playing.
Music aside, however, the personal legacy of that show for me is two-fold: (1) it made it clear to me that driving hundreds or thousands of miles for a show was a perfectly rational thing to do; and (2) it gave my mother a really positive insight into this "thing" which I had become more and more obsessed with over the preceding 2 years (which had exploded for me in April of that year with my first show). This was a small-ish (5,000 people?) show in 1994 and a couple of years before the awkwardness of dealing with barfing frat boys and vacant wooks would colour the concert experience and become the norm. We were among good people in other words, listening to a healthy band which was energised and passing that on to its audience night in, night out. In the years to come, my mum understood, and never questioned, the efforts I made to get to a show.
Thanks mum!