SOUNDTRACK: PHISH-A Live One (1995).
Phish has released virtually every show that they have played in some recorded format (not to mention all of the shows that have circulated as tapes). But before all of that, it took them five studio albums before the released their first official live record. And while it is not one show, it is a great collection of their more popular live songs. There’s some really long jams (30 minutes for “Tweezer”) but also some normal length songs (several under 5 minutes).
If you ever want to know anything about Phish, they are probably the most well-documented bands around. Their fan base is encyclopedic (if they didn’t follow Phish, they would be really into sports stats, clearly).
So a cursory search will tell you
Each track on the album was recorded at a different live show in the United States during Phish’s 1994 summer and fall tours. Several of the songs have never appeared on studio albums and the track “Montana” is not really a song, but actually a two-minute excerpt from the longform improvisation that followed “Tweezer” during the band’s show in Bozeman, Montana. On A Live One, “Montana” serves as a prelude to the epic “You Enjoy Myself”, one of the most well-known versions of that song.
“Bouncing Around the Room” is light and fun, a great start to a show. I was really happy when I finally got to see it live. It segues into a a rather quiet “Stash.” There’s a lot going on in the solo with the chorus repeating and then a solo resuming. It’s followed by a slow Gumbo with The Giant Country Horns: Peter Apfelbaum – tenor saxophone; Carl Gerhard – trumpet; Dave Grippo – alto saxophone; James Harvey – trombone; Michael Ray – trumpet.
“Montana Jam” is a short instrumental segue into “You Enjoy Myself.” As stated above, this is a killer version of “YEM.” There’s a funky bass solo, there’s many elements to the jam including a section where they chant “ahhh way um way um.” After 15 minutes, the end is a five-minute “voice jam” with them making crazy sounds. It devolves into a lot of clicking and other weird noises. “YEM” would normally end a set but this one it’s followed by a rousing “Chalk Dust Torture” (a song that I really wanted to see). The disc ends with a really rocking “Slave to the Traffic Light,” that has a mellow solo until everyone builds it up hugely at the end.
Disc two opens with “Wilson” (I was really excited to see that one live). The “Tweezer” on this one is a much darker version—with lots of weird solos and crazy sounds including keyboard sirens. The song kind of thuds and lumbers along and then turns into what sounds like a heavy metal riff—distorted guitars and bass–until it eventually returns to a rocking jam. They start doing the “Tweezer” riff again but it segues into a new jam with noisy guitar and funky keys. There’s a whole lot more going on in these 30 minutes).
“Simple” is rocking fun and ends with them singing in a whisper. This version of “Harry Hood” sounds great with all three parts connected by lengthy jams. The drums are quite prominent in this song with Fish doing all manner of drums fills. The disc ends with Squirming Coil which is primarily a long and pretty jam, with some really nice solos.
Since it’s a well curated live album, it’s really a great place to start exploring their love shows. And the sound is fantastic.
Some people care about this sort of thing, so these songs come from:
- “Stash,” July 8, 1994, Great Woods Center for the Performing Arts, Mansfield, MA
- “The Squirming Coil,” October 9, 1994, A. J. Palumbo Center, Pittsburgh, PA
- “Harry Hood” October 23, 1994, Band Shell, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL
- “Tweezer,” November 2, 1994, Bangor Auditorium, Bangor, ME
- “Chalk Dust Torture,” November 16, 1994, Hill Auditorium, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
- “Slave to the Traffic Light,” November 26, 1994, Orpheum Theatre, Minneapolis, MN
- “Montana,” November 28, 1994, Field House, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT
- “Gumbo,” December 2, 1994, Recreation Hall, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA
- “You Enjoy Myself,” December 7, 1994, Spreckels Theater Building, San Diego, CA
- “Simple,” December 10, 1994, Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, Santa Monica, CA
- “Wilson,” December 30, 1994, Madison Square Garden, New York, NY
- “Bouncing Around the Room,” December 31, 1994, Boston Garden, Boston, MA
[READ: March 10, 2017] “Jack and Jim Who Lived by the River”
I tend to not really like the stories in Lucky Peach. That’s not entirely fair, because some of them are quite good. But many of them, like this one, are just kind of weird an unsatisfying.
Jim doesn’t like to each much fish in the morning, but Jack sure does. He eats fish because “we are Jack and Jim who live by the river, and we are excellent fisherman.”
Jack smokes his fish while he drinks a beer and then he goes over to see Jim who has just woken up.
That morning’s fish bones stayed in Jack’s mind after he threw them away. And that night he dug them out and began to see things in them–rabbits, a house, himself. It turned out though that whatever Jim was dreaming about was appeared to Jack in the bones.
Their fish catch was dwindling however, and Jim had started hunting rabbit (as the bones showed).
And then after a strange ritual, things begin to pick up, or maybe they don’t. I’m really not sure what was going on at the end.

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