Soundcheck: Lady Madonna, Have Mercy, Mountains in the Mist -> Dirt -> Mountains in the Mist, Guyute (part), You Better Believe It Baby
SET 1: Punch You in the Eye > Ghost > Farmhouse, Horn > Poor Heart > Axilla[1] > Theme From the Bottom, I Didn't Know, The Sloth, You Enjoy Myself
SET 2: Meatstick > Split Open and Melt[2] -> Kung -> Jam > Bouncing Around the Room, Chalk Dust Torture
ENCORE: Brian and Robert, Frankenstein
 Can't really fault the first set, with a reasonably good (and surprisingly fast-played, given how often the band tends to luxuriate in the jam) Ghost, some nicely played versions of Phish standbys, and a gigantic, propulsive YEM that zips along as though Wile E. Coyote tied his rocket skates to it. The second set, though, is something special and one of the best sets of the summer. Meatstick starts things off, which doesn't normally augur well for my enjoyment of a set, but then Trey starts talking about the Guinness Book of World Records, and then the song finally gets interesting with a foggy, ambient-laden jam that you would naturally expect to flow out of Meatstick. The jam peters out, and in a fog of white noise 2001 appears to be kicking off (Fish's beat is quite obviously 2001), but Mike launches into the SOAM bassline and that's what we get instead, and this SOAM is a monster, one of the best ever played.
		Can't really fault the first set, with a reasonably good (and surprisingly fast-played, given how often the band tends to luxuriate in the jam) Ghost, some nicely played versions of Phish standbys, and a gigantic, propulsive YEM that zips along as though Wile E. Coyote tied his rocket skates to it. The second set, though, is something special and one of the best sets of the summer. Meatstick starts things off, which doesn't normally augur well for my enjoyment of a set, but then Trey starts talking about the Guinness Book of World Records, and then the song finally gets interesting with a foggy, ambient-laden jam that you would naturally expect to flow out of Meatstick. The jam peters out, and in a fog of white noise 2001 appears to be kicking off (Fish's beat is quite obviously 2001), but Mike launches into the SOAM bassline and that's what we get instead, and this SOAM is a monster, one of the best ever played.  Hello! In an attempt to relive my many Phish adventures I have decided to write a review of every show that I have attended to keep me busy this summer. I began to listen to Phish in 1997 when I was 16-17 years old, being more interested in metal/alternative/punk rock through that point of my life. I truly didn't understand Phish until I was a freshman at Rutgers in 1998 and met some amazing phriends that showed me the way. That being said, my first Phish show was this one, 7/15/1999 at PNC, fifteen minutes from my parents' house.
		Hello! In an attempt to relive my many Phish adventures I have decided to write a review of every show that I have attended to keep me busy this summer. I began to listen to Phish in 1997 when I was 16-17 years old, being more interested in metal/alternative/punk rock through that point of my life. I truly didn't understand Phish until I was a freshman at Rutgers in 1998 and met some amazing phriends that showed me the way. That being said, my first Phish show was this one, 7/15/1999 at PNC, fifteen minutes from my parents' house. This show contains the single largest spur-of-the-moment missed opportunity in all of Phish-dom.  That moment would be, of course, if they had ended Chalk Dust Torture as Run Like An Antelope.  Chalk Dust Torture goes into a full-on pull-all-the-stops peaking Antelope jam that extremely precariously finds it’s way back into Chalk Dust.  The first time I heard this I almost shat bricks thinking they were gonna Chalk Dust (Beginning) -> Antelope (End).  That right there, folks, is the single largest missed opportunity in all Phish-dom.  However, it doesn’t detract from this awesome show, it just would have been crazy cool if it had happened.
		This show contains the single largest spur-of-the-moment missed opportunity in all of Phish-dom.  That moment would be, of course, if they had ended Chalk Dust Torture as Run Like An Antelope.  Chalk Dust Torture goes into a full-on pull-all-the-stops peaking Antelope jam that extremely precariously finds it’s way back into Chalk Dust.  The first time I heard this I almost shat bricks thinking they were gonna Chalk Dust (Beginning) -> Antelope (End).  That right there, folks, is the single largest missed opportunity in all Phish-dom.  However, it doesn’t detract from this awesome show, it just would have been crazy cool if it had happened.   The jam after Kung contains a really long take on a Split Open & Melt jam, which seems to start up around 7 minutes with the band starting to weave towards a "normal" Melt ending, which then mellows out- but from 8 until 11 minutes (on the really nice source thats on the spreadsheet) it's unquestionably a Melt jam. This then continues to sound "Melty" to varying degrees until about 15:00 in.
		The jam after Kung contains a really long take on a Split Open & Melt jam, which seems to start up around 7 minutes with the band starting to weave towards a "normal" Melt ending, which then mellows out- but from 8 until 11 minutes (on the really nice source thats on the spreadsheet) it's unquestionably a Melt jam. This then continues to sound "Melty" to varying degrees until about 15:00 in. This is a really jammy show, contrary to what you might think by looking at the setlist. Ghost as the second song of the first set has that classic 1999 style of jamming that I hesitate to agree in calling "spacey," but I'll come back to that. It is a really outstanding version, though, and I think it should be Highly Recommended. The other songs in the first set are mostly average-great, or standard, with the possible exception of You Enjoy Myself. The second set begins with Meatstick, and pretty much doesn't let up on its jam-filled program of action until the end of the Jam following Kung. This show's Ghost and particularly the just-mentioned Jam take a turn towards the mystical, in my opinion... a thread in Phish's music that can be found in other eras but is probably best exemplified by Big Cypress, the festival that ended this year and its millennium. A neat artifact of Phish's nimble music during this period can be found towards the end of the Meatstick jam when it would've been entirely plausible for Phish to reprise Ghost (around 18 minutes in, on the Spreadsheet recording.) I also encourage you to listen to the possibly frustrating for Fishman but otherwise mashup-presaging Split Open and Melt that begins with the 2001 rhythm.
		This is a really jammy show, contrary to what you might think by looking at the setlist. Ghost as the second song of the first set has that classic 1999 style of jamming that I hesitate to agree in calling "spacey," but I'll come back to that. It is a really outstanding version, though, and I think it should be Highly Recommended. The other songs in the first set are mostly average-great, or standard, with the possible exception of You Enjoy Myself. The second set begins with Meatstick, and pretty much doesn't let up on its jam-filled program of action until the end of the Jam following Kung. This show's Ghost and particularly the just-mentioned Jam take a turn towards the mystical, in my opinion... a thread in Phish's music that can be found in other eras but is probably best exemplified by Big Cypress, the festival that ended this year and its millennium. A neat artifact of Phish's nimble music during this period can be found towards the end of the Meatstick jam when it would've been entirely plausible for Phish to reprise Ghost (around 18 minutes in, on the Spreadsheet recording.) I also encourage you to listen to the possibly frustrating for Fishman but otherwise mashup-presaging Split Open and Melt that begins with the 2001 rhythm.
	 Yet another glorious from front to back kind of show.
		Yet another glorious from front to back kind of show. Summer 99 was my longest tour to date. Of those shows, this was by far my favorite. The band was loose, experimental and ready to freak out the House of Blues webcast audience. I was lucky enough to have seats Page side about 12 rows back and survived a run in with the NJ State Police earlier in the day (sorry Corey!). Any show that opens with Punch has a lot of potential. When Ghost followed, we knew the band was motivated. Ghost had a hurried pace, a sense of urgency that continued in jams the rest of the night. Instead of letting the band gallop through a long repetitive jam, Trey's spacey effects told a chilling story. Even the slowed down ending (ritardando) showed the band was moving together as a unit. This was just a warm up of things to come, but the Ghost set the tone for the rest of the night.
		Summer 99 was my longest tour to date. Of those shows, this was by far my favorite. The band was loose, experimental and ready to freak out the House of Blues webcast audience. I was lucky enough to have seats Page side about 12 rows back and survived a run in with the NJ State Police earlier in the day (sorry Corey!). Any show that opens with Punch has a lot of potential. When Ghost followed, we knew the band was motivated. Ghost had a hurried pace, a sense of urgency that continued in jams the rest of the night. Instead of letting the band gallop through a long repetitive jam, Trey's spacey effects told a chilling story. Even the slowed down ending (ritardando) showed the band was moving together as a unit. This was just a warm up of things to come, but the Ghost set the tone for the rest of the night.  I can hardly believe it--both that it happened and that I heard it--but I just want to add here that at about the 1:40 mark in the Jam in the 2nd set (after Kung is complete), you can plainly hear Mike quote Collective Spirit's "Shine."
		I can hardly believe it--both that it happened and that I heard it--but I just want to add here that at about the 1:40 mark in the Jam in the 2nd set (after Kung is complete), you can plainly hear Mike quote Collective Spirit's "Shine."
	 Stumbled upon this show not because of the Live Bait YEM or SOaM, but instead because of a Reddit post seeking the fattest Meatstick there ever was. Front to back, this is a pretty sweet show with plenty of memorable highlights scattered throughout a varied set of songs. Wish I was able to finder a high quality recording of it all (specifically that Chalkdust Torture),  hopefully this gets an official release some day.
		Stumbled upon this show not because of the Live Bait YEM or SOaM, but instead because of a Reddit post seeking the fattest Meatstick there ever was. Front to back, this is a pretty sweet show with plenty of memorable highlights scattered throughout a varied set of songs. Wish I was able to finder a high quality recording of it all (specifically that Chalkdust Torture),  hopefully this gets an official release some day. 7/15 Will Never Lie To You & Take Your Money & Steal Your Car.... She Loves You.
		7/15 Will Never Lie To You & Take Your Money & Steal Your Car.... She Loves You. This show is insane. I love the zippy warp speed Ghost here, a great example of the playing style. A bit of an old school feel in the first set from Horn on. The You Enjoy Myself is great and features more of a traditional rock jam than the typical YEM jam.
		This show is insane. I love the zippy warp speed Ghost here, a great example of the playing style. A bit of an old school feel in the first set from Horn on. The You Enjoy Myself is great and features more of a traditional rock jam than the typical YEM jam.  (Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)
		(Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...) Trey teased Oye Como Va by Santana during the YEM jam.
		Trey teased Oye Como Va by Santana during the YEM jam.
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