Gratuitous Picture of Yourself Cheesing Before Phish Covers Exile on Main St. on Halloween in the SoCal Desert!
(via fromtheroad)
99 Albums in 4:20 - Eclectic Method
Played as a live intro to Phish’s Exile On Main St. Set 10.31.09 - Empire Polo Club, Indio, CA
One of the coolest parts of the Ocho was the cover set of The Rolling Stones’ Exile on Main Street. However, this intro video that came on 4:20 before the set started got everyone dancing and going nuts as Phish took the stage, putting an end to the game that so many of us have enjoyed the past month! Give it a watch, it sums up some of the best artists and albums in rock and roll history!
(via thebutterroom)
Phish - “Torn and Frayed”
Phish’s Halloween show was hands down the greatest concert experience of my life. It was the most professional, soulful, and happy I think I’ve ever seen the band, and one of the greatest crowds I’d ever been part of. You could see the pride in their eyes as they played Exile On Main Street with care and respect, while still making it unique and their own.
I myself have never been more proud to be a fan of this band, especially during “Torn and Frayed.” The lyrics just spoke to the hope and belief of Phish 3.0:
And his coat is torn and frayed,
It’s seen much better days.
Just as long as the guitar plays
Let it steal your heart away,
But the exclamation point came half way through the album with “Loving Cup,” which the band covers regularly. It was the best version they’ve ever played, and just blew away everyone. The energy in the crowd was unreal and it carried over into the 3rd set of the night, in which we were treated to the best versions this year from some of their heavy hitters.
I’ll never, ever forget this Halloween!
The Rolling Stones (aka Phish featuring Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings) - “Loving Cup”
10.31.09 - Empire Polo Club, Indio, CA
Indio Soundcheck - Phish
10.29.09 - Empire Polo Fields, Indio, CATonight’s soundcheck. Lots of teases of other albums, lots of great jamming, and new material. This weekend is going to be The Real Deal.
Yeah, this weekend is going to be something special - MGMT, Yes, Zeppelin… keep going, there’s a lot of teases in there.
On another note, our resort is incredible. Probably the nicest place I’ve ever stayed.
Your time is near, the mission’s clear
For a Phish fan, this last part brings it full circle. From the disaster that was Coventry and the bad shape Trey was in, to a healthy, rejuvinated and forward looking group throwing what stands to be one of the most exciting live music events of the year.
We’re leaving LA shortly and heading to Indio. We’ll be providing updates all weekend long on The Butter Room’s From The Road blog.
The third installment might be my favorite. The band members talk about playing the largest Millenium concert in the world at Big Cypress, and one of the longest continuous sets of music played by any band (from about 11:45 PM until sunrise, approximately 7 hours), and then flying home that same morning.
This episode also covers the IT festival, my first festival. The band talks about playing the late night jam from atop the air traffic control tower, and how these creative ideas take off during the planning of the festivals. No doubt there will be big some surprises this weekend in Indio!
Michael Jackson - “Off The Wall”
Phish will cover Off The Wall with Sharon Jones on vocals and a full horn section on Halloween. You heard it here first ;-)
Part two covers Phish’s festivals from 1998 and 1999, Lemonwheel and Camp Oswego, highlighting their growth as a band, and contrasting Phish’s festival versus multi-band festivals from the same time period. There’s a great version of the Talking Heads’ “Cities” as well as one of my personal favorite jams from 1998, Gumbo -> Sanity.
I often find it hard to explain to people - be it friends, family, colleagues, strangers - why Phish is my favorite band, why I see them as much as I possibly can, and why I love their music and community.
A major reason for my devotion stems from my first festival experience when I was 18 years old. I had just graduated high school, and road tripped by myself from Indiana out to Pittsburgh, Philly, and then all the way up to Limestone, Maine for the IT festival. Over 70,000 people showed up, and I was just one of them.
It took me 27 hours to get from Philadelphia to my parked spot on the abandoned runway. I knew no one there (at the time), and I was a n00b having seen less than 10 shows. Yet, everywhere I went, I met wonderfully nice people who took the time to get to know me, congratulate me on going to such great lengths on my own, and just sharing in what they already loved.
A few really nice people brought me up to the rail and I saw both days from the first few rows, in total awe of how far I’d come all by myself, how great the music was, and how unique the culture was. It was a life changing experience, a rite of passage, almost as if I’d opened up a door where so much could be found.
Since then I’ve made countless friendships through Phish and their music, and continue to almost everywhere I see them. Because of Phish there is The Butter Room, and because of The Butter Room, I now have dozens more friends that I never would have met or known about any other way. It’s also opened up some great business opportunities in the last year that most people wouldn’t think exist in some pseduo-hippie community that many think centers around drugs (which is simply not true).
And unlike the last festival which was supposed to be the band’s final concerts - and turned out to be a complete and utter disaster resulting in me walking over 15 miles - this weekend will undoubtedly go down as a success on many different levels.
Over the past week, Sirius has been running “Festivalography” which is a radio documentary with interviews from the band members and music from the various festivals. Part one tackles the band’s first two festivals, and over the next 3 nights I will be posting the remaining episodes, leading up to this weekend’s first ever Halloween festival.
Even if you’re not a Phish fan, have a listen because I think you’ll find that there’s a unique cultural aspect in their festivals that exists nowhere else today - or over the past 15 years. No other band can throw a festival of their own, gear the experience to their own community, and foster such positive and meaningful experiences for all involved. It’s incredibly special and I’m so excited for the music and memories that I’m going to share with many of my close friends.
Next Friday The Butter Room will be bringing you live coverage from Indio, CA as Festival 8 kicks off. It will be one of the biggest weekends in recent Phish history, perhaps even pushing aside Hampton, Red Rocks, and The Gorge as the premier shows of 2009. And for the band’s biggest fans, this will be our final exorcism of Coventry demons as we finally get festival vindication. So in honor of 8, here’s some quality Festival Phish!
(via thebutterroom)
What we might be treated to as part of the light show at Festival 8.
So the Festival 8 map (for workers) has leaked. Campgrounds will be named after albums:
While these may or may not be one of the albums the band plans on playing on Halloween, of more interest to me is what’s inside the concert grounds (right side between 5 and 6, click thru to see in detail). View to the side of the stage - but in front - “Burble” and “Borealis.” It appears Phish is planning to bring a man-made Aurora Borealis as part of their musical costume. Check out Haque’s “Primal Source” lighting, which is what’s being rumored as the group who will be bringing Northern Lights to SoCal.
All of this follow’s last week’s announcement of some other incredibly awesome stuff for next weekend:
This is primed to be quite possibly the greatest single band music festival of all time, and certainly the best Halloween ever!