
SOUNDTRACK: PHISH Live Bait 14 (2018).
Phish has just released its 14th compilation of free downloads. This one is a little over two hours with seven long songs.
Harry Hood (8/2/97 Gorge Amphitheatre – George, WA) 18:11
After a slow intro–it’s about two and a half minutes before the vocals come in–then there’s jazzy bass and funky keys. The jam is pretty mellow, he even asks to have them kill the lights “so I can have the outdoor vibe here.” A relaxed piano comes in around 12 and it’s not until 17 minutes that they sing the end of the song.
McGrupp And The Watchful Hosemasters (10/29/98 Greek Theatre – Los Angeles, CA) 11:45
This is a fun treat as they don;t play this song much anymore. The piano opening is very quiet, but the middle is cool with a piano and splash cymbals. The ending is twinkling piano that segues perfectly (despite being nearly a year later) into the next song.
Wolfman’s Brother (9/24/99 South Park Meadows – Austin, TX) 18:55
opens with a quiet piano but it quickly grows upbeat with a hot jam. Although the final section is dark for a bout a minute before it ends.
Gotta Jibboo > Saw It Again > Magilla (7/4/00 E Centre – Camden, NJ) 39:28
Gotta Jibboo brings back the lightness again. It’s got a happy solo with a pulsing high keyboard note that runs for almost ten minutes while Trey solos. It turns funky/groovy around fifteen minutes in and then around 17 minutes in it shifts gears and grows slowly noisy and chaotic before sequing to Saw It Again. Around 34 minutes, it slows down and segues into Magilla with really cool drums.
What’s The Use? (6/25/00 Alltel Pavilion at Walnut Creek – Raleigh, NC) 9:52
This is an instrumental that starts out sounding quite raw–the guitar is sharp with feedback moments. After couple of minutes the guitar fades and it gets quiet and pretty before the guitar returns and grows noisy again.
Runaway Jim (7/9/99 Merriweather Post Pavilion – Columbia, MD) 12:21
As always this song rocks. Although the jam is pretty mellow and pleasant sounding.
Tweezer > Prince Caspian (8/22/15 Magnaball, Watkins Glen International – Watkins Glen, NY) 34:17
Most of the songs on this compilation are from the turn of the century, but this one is from just a couple years ago and it’s a big old “Tweezer” exploration. This version sounds pretty loose–Trey even modifies the open chord riff somewhat. Even the “Uncle Ebeneezer” noise is somewhat subdued. It grows fairly calm before a funky guitar solo. By 11 minutes, there’s a lot of piano added and then through 17 minutes “Prince Caspian” begins. It’s a typically fun version of the song. And by 31 minutes it feels like the song is circling back around to “Tweezer,” but it never actually gets there. It just kind of ends.
Hard to complain about a free compilation, and there’s not much to complain about here. Good selection of songs and great performances.
[READ: January 19, 2018] “The Blade”
This is story of tramps. Hoboes.
There is a young kid who reminded Ronnie of himself from way back. But it generally assumed the kid will be tossed off the train car before two long.
After some silence Vanboss and Stark begin talking. Vanboss tells of a head on collision between two cars going 100 mph and how the cars were melded into a small cube but somehow a baby escaped unharmed. No one believes that, so they talk of other deaths, brutal and extraordinary.
The junkie kid tells a story about an Indian man on a Zuni reservation who said his baby daughter had been lifted away by a hawk.
Then Vanboss told them how to stab someone. “If the knife is sharp, ease into the handle and let the edge do the work; if it’s dull, stab fucking hard–for the startling shock if it–and then twist even harder to make up for the dullness.”
Ronnie had a story about a blade. It involved him when he was young, like that junkie kid. He rode with a man named Hambone. He and Hambone grew close–Ronnie even waited for him when Hambone went to jail so they could ride together. Hambone eventually repaid the favor. But things went sour, as they always do.
Turns out you have to be careful about what you say about someone’s mother, even if that person earlier called his mother some pretty awful things.
The question was whether or not Ronnie wanted to tell these guys about that story.

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