Soundcheck: Jam, Mercury
SET 1: Free, No Men In No Man's Land, Wolfman's Brother, 555, Birds of a Feather, Funky Bitch, When the Circus Comes, Stash, Lawn Boy, Walls of the Cave
SET 2: Golden Age > Light > Shade, Mike's Song > Piper > Crosseyed and Painless -> Weekapaug Groove
ENCORE: Slave to the Traffic Light
During Lawn Boy, Page walked all the way over and said hello to "Mike Side." Light's lyrics were changed to mention Tom Marshall, who was in attendance at the show. Weekapaug included Crosseyed quotes. During the Weekapaug jam, Trey and Mike stood face to face before turning to the front of the stage and stepping in unison with the music.
 
			Photo © @tweeprise
 Sigma Oasis
					1
					Sigma Oasis
					1
					 Big Boat
					1
					Big Boat
					1
					 Fuego
					1
					Fuego
					1
					 Joy
					1
					Joy
					1
					 Round Room
					1
					Round Room
					1
					 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
					 A Picture of Nectar
					1
					A Picture of Nectar
					1
					 Lawn Boy
					1
					Lawn Boy
					1
					 The White Tape
					1
					The White Tape
					1
					 I'm not huge into webcasts for some reason but I thoroughly enjoyed this one. No Men in No Man's Land continues to impress (though I'd love to see it in the second set again) and the Wolfman's is certainly interesting. Mike seems to having a lot of fun up there (they all do), which is especially nice to see. Great start to the show. Enjoyed Trey's very deliberate and emotionally dynamic vocal take on Circus, too. Haven't heard him sing like that before, really.
		I'm not huge into webcasts for some reason but I thoroughly enjoyed this one. No Men in No Man's Land continues to impress (though I'd love to see it in the second set again) and the Wolfman's is certainly interesting. Mike seems to having a lot of fun up there (they all do), which is especially nice to see. Great start to the show. Enjoyed Trey's very deliberate and emotionally dynamic vocal take on Circus, too. Haven't heard him sing like that before, really. Strong opening sequence punctuated by a particularly nasty Wolfman's. Rest of the first set is fairly pedestrian, if well-executed. Walls is always strong. Third quarter featured, again, great playing, but I would have liked to see Golden Age or Light go the distance in those slots. The return of the Mike's 2nd jam covers the price of admission and there's a little nod to the slow Piper intro, with Trey going out of his way, tongue firmly in cheek, to make sure you knew he was in on that complaint too. Oh, and there's that instant classic Groove. Consider that must-hear.
		Strong opening sequence punctuated by a particularly nasty Wolfman's. Rest of the first set is fairly pedestrian, if well-executed. Walls is always strong. Third quarter featured, again, great playing, but I would have liked to see Golden Age or Light go the distance in those slots. The return of the Mike's 2nd jam covers the price of admission and there's a little nod to the slow Piper intro, with Trey going out of his way, tongue firmly in cheek, to make sure you knew he was in on that complaint too. Oh, and there's that instant classic Groove. Consider that must-hear.
	 As I only caught the last two tracks of first set and the rest of the show, that is what I'll be basing this review on.
		As I only caught the last two tracks of first set and the rest of the show, that is what I'll be basing this review on. I'm with Sauce, here....  So I won't repeat what's been written.  (other than it's been an awesome tour....)
		I'm with Sauce, here....  So I won't repeat what's been written.  (other than it's been an awesome tour....) I have given a lot of love to the summer tour recently, and that is worth comment because I'm a pretty cynical phish fan.  The new generation of phans honestly don't seem to have as discriminating taste when it comes to what constitutes an epic jam, night, tour, etc.  And they also won't get off of my lawn or stop blaring their hip-hop music.
		I have given a lot of love to the summer tour recently, and that is worth comment because I'm a pretty cynical phish fan.  The new generation of phans honestly don't seem to have as discriminating taste when it comes to what constitutes an epic jam, night, tour, etc.  And they also won't get off of my lawn or stop blaring their hip-hop music.  So I have listened to Shoreline and L.A.  Webcasted Oregon.  Went to the Texas shows and have heard pieces, of which sounded great, of Atlanta and Tuscaloosa.  But this show...this show was freakin awesome from the couch.  Now I dont know if it was my sub and my yamaha speakers, or maybe the superb sound quality in Nashville but Im pretty damn certain it was the quality of play.  On paper the first set looks average but fun, but it was much more than that.  I could just tell after the NMNML and Wolmans that this would be fire.  Everything sounded great.  Trey stellar.  Mike really shined this night.  I got chills and was raging harder on my carpet than in a seat I think...wtf???
		So I have listened to Shoreline and L.A.  Webcasted Oregon.  Went to the Texas shows and have heard pieces, of which sounded great, of Atlanta and Tuscaloosa.  But this show...this show was freakin awesome from the couch.  Now I dont know if it was my sub and my yamaha speakers, or maybe the superb sound quality in Nashville but Im pretty damn certain it was the quality of play.  On paper the first set looks average but fun, but it was much more than that.  I could just tell after the NMNML and Wolmans that this would be fire.  Everything sounded great.  Trey stellar.  Mike really shined this night.  I got chills and was raging harder on my carpet than in a seat I think...wtf??? On August 4th, 2015 I ended my little southern Phish run in Nashville at the brand-spanking new Ascend Amphitheatre.  The ride from Alabama had been fun and uneventful, starting with an excellent breakfast at a hipster place in Tuscaloosa before ending at the Comfort Inn in Nashville.  There was a day off before the Nashville show and I spent it (and $1,600) at Gruhn’s Guitars.  I picked up a barely-used Jerry Jones Supreme double-neck electric sitar and a t-shirt.  That was one pricey t-shirt.
		On August 4th, 2015 I ended my little southern Phish run in Nashville at the brand-spanking new Ascend Amphitheatre.  The ride from Alabama had been fun and uneventful, starting with an excellent breakfast at a hipster place in Tuscaloosa before ending at the Comfort Inn in Nashville.  There was a day off before the Nashville show and I spent it (and $1,600) at Gruhn’s Guitars.  I picked up a barely-used Jerry Jones Supreme double-neck electric sitar and a t-shirt.  That was one pricey t-shirt.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 n00b100
1. The first set peaks with the manic funk 1-2 punch of NMINML and Wolfman's, the latter of which pushes against its boundaries and heads for a more minimalist space a la 3/1/97's historic version (Page, in particular, really rules it on the clavinet) before punching back into the major key peak modern day Wolfman's tend to have. The rest of the set is fine (although Trey does have a rig problem or two that was thankfully cleared up by Set 2), although Walls absolutely rips as it always does.
2. Golden Age, somewhat similarly to the Shoreline Blaze On, never *quite* breaks free of Golden Age, but still packs a fine wallop thanks to some tremendous Trey and Page interplay. Light, on the other hand, is far more interesting than its 10 minute length belies, really digging into some spooky and gnarly territory in the last few minutes before Page goes to the keyboard and the jam comes to a gentle finish that Shade makes sense emanating from (Light > Shade, nice play on words there). Don't forget this sequence when you play this show.
3. Second Mike's Songs jams can either be very good pieces of business, or a slightly extended version of the Mike's Song first jam in a different key, which is why it wouldn't have killed me if they never jammed out Mike's again. That they *did* add the fabled 2nd jam (with an amusing Simple fakeout on top, so much so that it's damn near a tease) and that it turned out so well (chugging rockout sliding into Page-and-Mike led warm beautiful minor-key zone until Trey moves back to the forefront with some beautiful soloing) is a legitimate treat. They may never extend Mike's again, but who cares? We got this Mike's, and we have it forever.
4. Piper, with its slower intro, feels more like the Fall '97 "let's play something nice and get you to Point B" Pipers than the big jam vehicle the song would become from 1998 on. I say that to tell you that, much like those Fall '97 Pipers, don't skip this bad boy. There's a lot going on in this one.
5. Any disappointment (?) about C&P sliding into Weekapaug (after Fish deciding he didn't want to play ball for a few measures) should have been instantly mitigated with the big-time Weekapaug that closed out this set. Page runs back to the clavinet almost immediately and the tempo goes molasses-thick, which might make you think funk is in the offing (the NMINML tease might further that expectation), but instead Trey hits on some heavy chords and we go into a heavy jam not unlike the 11/30/97 Wolfman's heavy metal jam (there's a Haunted House jam in there, apparently? I didn't quite catch it) that thankfully doesn't last as long as that death metal affair, and manages to be more interesting thanks to (yep) Page on the clavinet and Trey really tearing into his soloing. The Weekapaug theme returns from the muck, along with some amusing C&P vocal quotes on top, before blasting its way to the finish line.
6. Final thoughts: a really enjoyable show. Don't skip out on that opening sequence to hear the Groove, but don't be surprised if that Groove warrants *many* listens. Time to go blast that Mike's again!