SET 1: David Bowie -> Catapult -> David Bowie, Horn > Guyute, Round Room, Golden Lady > Poor Heart, Pebbles and Marbles
SET 2: Down with Disease -> Seven Below -> Down with Disease > Anything But Me > Piper -> Makisupa Policeman, Character Zero
ENCORE: Friday
 Round Room
					5
					Round Room
					5
					 A Picture of Nectar
					2
					A Picture of Nectar
					2
					 Farmhouse
					1
					Farmhouse
					1
					 The Story of the Ghost
					1
					The Story of the Ghost
					1
					 Billy Breathes
					1
					Billy Breathes
					1
					 Stash
					1
					Stash
					1
					 Hoist
					1
					Hoist
					1
					 Rift
					1
					Rift
					1
					 Junta
					1
					Junta
					1
					 Fantastic show wall to wall, and the second set has a mid-90's segue-fest feel - particularly the *two* DWD reprises. Winter '03 a strong tour without the narcotic spaciness of summer '03, and this is the show that kicked it into high gear. Listen especially for Trey's triumphant chording in Piper, climbing through a series of inversions to bring the set over the top. Top-drawer versions of Round Room and Bowie in the first set to boot.
		Fantastic show wall to wall, and the second set has a mid-90's segue-fest feel - particularly the *two* DWD reprises. Winter '03 a strong tour without the narcotic spaciness of summer '03, and this is the show that kicked it into high gear. Listen especially for Trey's triumphant chording in Piper, climbing through a series of inversions to bring the set over the top. Top-drawer versions of Round Room and Bowie in the first set to boot.
	 (Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)
		(Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...) This is an exhilarating and confusing show to revisit. It contains an inarguable top-5 Piper ever, and depending on your taste and/or mood, the finest rendition ever. It also contains a lot of filler material and a sub-60 minute second set. But it also contains a 20-min Bowie show opener. As you can see, we are dealing with quite a polarized show today, so let's start where Phish started!
		This is an exhilarating and confusing show to revisit. It contains an inarguable top-5 Piper ever, and depending on your taste and/or mood, the finest rendition ever. It also contains a lot of filler material and a sub-60 minute second set. But it also contains a 20-min Bowie show opener. As you can see, we are dealing with quite a polarized show today, so let's start where Phish started! Riding on the heels of yesterday.
		Riding on the heels of yesterday. The Bowie --> Catapult --> Bowie is exceptional, especially the --> back to Bowie. Run through a brick wall type intensity. Definitely my highlight of the show. I can't decide whether the second set is good or very good. The DwD --> Seven Below --> DwD is very good, and Anything But Me works pretty decently as a pillow. Probably comes down to the Piper and your tolerance for 03-04 Pipers. Sometimes I'm in the mood, lots of times I'm not.
		The Bowie --> Catapult --> Bowie is exceptional, especially the --> back to Bowie. Run through a brick wall type intensity. Definitely my highlight of the show. I can't decide whether the second set is good or very good. The DwD --> Seven Below --> DwD is very good, and Anything But Me works pretty decently as a pillow. Probably comes down to the Piper and your tolerance for 03-04 Pipers. Sometimes I'm in the mood, lots of times I'm not.
	 Bowie opener is really nice! The jam starts strong and begins to go deep and dark. Trey finds a crunchy little riff and starts the Catapult lyrics over it. This is evil! The sudden launch into the end of Bowie closes a top tier opening segment for any Phish era. Horn and Guyute come next and are mostly fine with a few hiccups. Nothing to write home about. I really like this Round Room and I wish they would play this one more. It's such a slightly off kilter song that screams "Mike wrote that." The jam seems to keep building into a big break but it never comes. Aside from that, I dig vibes of this one a lot. Golden Lady is an odd but welcome cover. I don't detect any obvious errors but it does feel timid overall. Shame this never popped up again for them to really kill it. Poor Heart and Pebbles liven up the last bit of the set but are straightforward. Bowie is the star here but the rest of the set is a little aimless.
		Bowie opener is really nice! The jam starts strong and begins to go deep and dark. Trey finds a crunchy little riff and starts the Catapult lyrics over it. This is evil! The sudden launch into the end of Bowie closes a top tier opening segment for any Phish era. Horn and Guyute come next and are mostly fine with a few hiccups. Nothing to write home about. I really like this Round Room and I wish they would play this one more. It's such a slightly off kilter song that screams "Mike wrote that." The jam seems to keep building into a big break but it never comes. Aside from that, I dig vibes of this one a lot. Golden Lady is an odd but welcome cover. I don't detect any obvious errors but it does feel timid overall. Shame this never popped up again for them to really kill it. Poor Heart and Pebbles liven up the last bit of the set but are straightforward. Bowie is the star here but the rest of the set is a little aimless.                                                                                                                                                                               Killer show to wrap up the first great weekend of 2.0 Phish. A rare Bowie opener kicks things off nice and hot, distinguished by a cool dip into the major key which burns for a bit before moving toward a more frenetic and chaotic riff session. Once Trey lands on something he likes, and the rest of the band picks up on the pattern, we get a surprise Catapult that fits quite nice. Nothing about this machine malfunctions though, as it launches the band right into a soaring Bowie finale expertly. Horn is a little laid back, but Guyute is pretty decent. Round Room isn't one of my favorite Phish tunes, but man this jam is so cool. The beginning feels almost like the blend of an Antelope intro and a subdued Runaway Jim jam. Though the sounds evolve, the band is patient and restrained. They keep the groove nice and low, allowing it to slowly melt into a contemplative drone. Happy to get a surprise bustout of Golden Lady (the random covers are a nice theme throughout the weekend). Poor Heart is par for the course, but Pebbles and Marbles rocks real hard to close out Set 1.
		Killer show to wrap up the first great weekend of 2.0 Phish. A rare Bowie opener kicks things off nice and hot, distinguished by a cool dip into the major key which burns for a bit before moving toward a more frenetic and chaotic riff session. Once Trey lands on something he likes, and the rest of the band picks up on the pattern, we get a surprise Catapult that fits quite nice. Nothing about this machine malfunctions though, as it launches the band right into a soaring Bowie finale expertly. Horn is a little laid back, but Guyute is pretty decent. Round Room isn't one of my favorite Phish tunes, but man this jam is so cool. The beginning feels almost like the blend of an Antelope intro and a subdued Runaway Jim jam. Though the sounds evolve, the band is patient and restrained. They keep the groove nice and low, allowing it to slowly melt into a contemplative drone. Happy to get a surprise bustout of Golden Lady (the random covers are a nice theme throughout the weekend). Poor Heart is par for the course, but Pebbles and Marbles rocks real hard to close out Set 1. SET 1: David Bowie -> Catapult -> David Bowie: Exceptionally rare for Bowie to open a show, only 7 times in 490 times played. Last time was 12.30.93 – kind of a good show, maybe you have heard it lol. Great indication of how awesome this Vegas show was going to be. They would open the Miami NYE run with this too! It has only happened two times since, both times in 3.0. Definitely a solid Bowie here and the Catapult in the middle is nice if not a bit forced as it seemed to come out of nowhere. ->
		SET 1: David Bowie -> Catapult -> David Bowie: Exceptionally rare for Bowie to open a show, only 7 times in 490 times played. Last time was 12.30.93 – kind of a good show, maybe you have heard it lol. Great indication of how awesome this Vegas show was going to be. They would open the Miami NYE run with this too! It has only happened two times since, both times in 3.0. Definitely a solid Bowie here and the Catapult in the middle is nice if not a bit forced as it seemed to come out of nowhere. ->  (Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)
		(Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...) (Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)
		(Published in the second edition of The Phish Companion...)Add a Review
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Review by n00b100
Set 1 kicks off with Bowie, already a sign that the band's gonna get down to some serious business, and this is a sharp Bowie that catches a sweet groove at the 10 minute mark and morphs into quicksilver hazy bliss (a hallmark of 2003), then makes a fine return to the classic Bowie jam. The band churns out a thick, dark groove for a few minutes, makes room for Catapult, and then bursts back to the main Bowie theme for a fine finale. But lest you think they'd gotten all the first set jamming out of their system, there's a very good rendition of the now-forgotten Round Room that beautifully peters out in typical 2003 fashion, super-rarity Golden Lady (which I wouldn't mind hearing again), and a fine set-closing Pebbles and Marbles that lets Trey cook, so to speak (and lets him hint ever so gently at DWD, to my ears). That's a darn fine 70 minutes of music right there.
Set 2, as @waxbanks points out, takes on some of the shared qualities of the segue-fests of old, but with a true 2.0 feel. DWD starts up the set, and this is a perfectly good DWD (analogous to, say, 12/11/99's version) that rocks hard before simmering down and slowly, sneakily winding its way into Seven Below (albeit with a key change needed to get into -7 proper). Seven Below, one of the many reasons why 2.0 cannot be dismissed, gets a very nice relaxed reading here, with Page showing off his chops in fine fashion, and the band throws in a DEG tease just for funsies. Then, after making their way back to the Seven Below theme, Trey gets a neat idea and fires up Ye Olde DWD Theme, and the band makes a proper return to DWD. It's a fine piece of business (if not quite as truly dramatic as 12/29/13's brilliant DWD -> jam -> DWD), and wraps up a tremendous opening act to the set.
Anything But Me gives the band a breather, then we get the real meat of the set in a standout Piper from an era where Piper really found its legs as a set-making vehicle. The band immediately whips up a propulsive, heady brew in the Piper jam (another hallmark of 2003), with that new guitar tone helping to add to the jam's raw power. Trey starts snapping off chords as Page gives the ivories a good tickling, and things settle (if that's the word) into an upbeat, peppy jam as Page moves to the organ and Mike starts making his presence felt. The groove starts getting more and more minimalist, with Fish's busy drumming really keeping the pace, and Trey starts playing more optimistic chords as Fish goes to the hi-hats. Then, just as one fine broad wink to the audience, Trey picks out the DWD theme yet again, and we get one final rush before the jam amusingly slides into Makisupa. This is a fine companion piece to (again) 12/29/13's in-the-pocket Carini, and an A+ jam. Everything else is standard, but that hardly matters.
Final thoughts: an absolutely classic show. The first set is very accomplished, even for an era where first sets were often quite strong, and the second set features a deservedly highly recommended jam and a glorious DWD -> -7 -> DWD sandwich. I know 2.0 has a contentious reputation, and can often get a bad rap, but if you can put that aside there's no shortage of riches in those two years. 2/16/03, in my opinion, is one of the most precious jewels in that treasure chest.