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Heavy things I could not see
When I finally came around
Something small would pin me down
When I try to step aside
I move to where they'd hoped I'd be
Vanessa calls me on the phone
Reminding me I'm not alone
I fuss and quake and cavitate
I try to speak and turn to stone
Tilly reaches through my vest
To do the thing that she does best
She probes and tears my ventricles
Steals my one remaining breath
Things are falling down on me
Heavy things I could not see
When I finally came around
Something small would pin me down
When I try to step aside
I move to where they'd hoped I'd be
Stumbling as I fall from Grace
She needs my vision to replace
Her ailing sight throughout the night
Leaving two holes in my face
Mary was a friend I'd say
'til one summer day
She borrowed everything I owned
And then simply ran away,
Things are falling down on me
Heavy things I could not see
When I finally came around
Something small would pin me down
When I try to step aside
I move to where they'd hoped I'd be
Are they? I sort of figured they were more GenX than millenial. Maybe really early millenials...
Remillenials?
Some bands are a guarantee to be heard daily on RP......Phish, sadly, is not one of them.
More Phish please!
Yes indeed! I was going to post something similar. MORE PHISH please. And for those in the know - I am most grateful for the PHELLOWSHIP.
(* ok, so the lyrics are not so happy but the tune is so uplifting)
"LSD sold separately"
It should also have a Scratch'n'Sniff patch that smells of weed smoke and BO.
Srsly tho', I love this song. The outro solo is so tasty.
Interestingly enough, that's not a cowbell. Trey samples a single note on his guitar that he can then trigger from a pedal. He's tapping his foot along with the drums to make that sound.
Source:
Under the Scales, episode 12: Trey Guitars 2
No, too late for us, source=Gen X'er
As a Gen X'er, I saw them a bunch while I was in grad school. I guess the older Millenials were in college at that point. So maybe a bit of both.
Are they? I sort of figured they were more GenX than millenial. Maybe really early millenials...
No, too late for us, source=Gen X'er
Are they? I sort of figured they were more GenX than millenial. Maybe really early millenials...
Agreed. Fluffy noodling.
Lyrically = T Ball
Phish are The Grateful Dead for millennials?!?
Really - which song? I guess we all hear different things.
I thought the same thing. guess thats why I like it
yeah it's like nothing,
i want to hear something
Still, I have to say that their live music is way better than their studio stuff.
Great post however, I would have to quibble over the "If you're to type of person that buys albums to hear great recording artists or goes to shows to hear the best musicians than Phish would never have appealed to you"
Just so you know where I am coming from, I'm an amateur musician but don't get out to too many shows by any bands these days. I think the musicianship of each of the folks in Phish is phenomenal. While I haven't heard anything recently from Paige McConnell lately compared to some of the earlier stuff (maybe just haven't listened enough), Trey is an amazing guitarist, and John Fishman has got to be one of the tightest drummers I have ever heard. And as a bass player, I love Mike's stuff.
The other thing to remember is that the band has been through a lot of phases. The broke up in the mid 2000's when their playing wasn't quite up to snuff. But since they started playing again a few years ago, they really have been on fire.
That doesn't mean you have to love everything they do. I don't. Some stuff definitely gets too ambient for me. But there is no denying these guys are some seriously talented musicians.
Everybody in my homeless camp loves this heavy song... hope all is groovy for you right this minute, treatment_bound...
Phish will perform next at big Dick’s Sporting Goods Park on August 29th...
Some things never go away...Death, Taxes, Phish shows, and mass arrests at Phish shows...
38 busted at Phish concert
Police said they arrested 38 people at Madison Square Garden on Saturday night during the first of four concerts by the hippie rock band Phish, with 36 of the collars for drug possession.
Two busts were for scalping or holding forged concert tickets.
With two nights played and two to go — including the band’s New Year’s Eve finale — there was no official word if cops also spent Sunday picking off “Phans.” Arrest figures for Sunday were not immediately available, a law enforcement source told the Post on Monday.
Concertgoers said the heat was still on. “I saw two people get bagged by undercovers in 10 minutes. They were out for blood tonight,” wrote one fan, “Dishphead,” on Sunday night on a Phish.net fan forum titled “security at msg.”
Others boasted of sneaking contraband past security.
“I stuffed a bottle of Jager in my waist band last night,” a fan named “SpreadheadJON” wrote on the forum. “Used some distraction methods. Shots for all!”
The Vermont-based band — known for its die-hard followers and its meandering, epic-length live shows — also draws great interest from law enforcement agencies.
Three shows during Halloween weekend at Atlantic City’s Boardwalk Hall netted 42 arrests – most for drug possession or distribution. Another 80 people were busted this summer during three days of Phish concerts in Saratoga Springs, and one 40-year-old concertgoer at the upstate gigs died of an overdose.
Back in 1990, early June, a quartet of shaggy mates from Vermont arrived at my beucolic boarding school along the Connecticut River to play a show for a bunch of preppies on a Saturday afternoon. They brought their little trampolines and a handful of hippy followers selling t-shirts. About 150 of us in the audience danced our asses off for nearly 4 hours. Trey would stop on occasion to talk to us about music and life. The band invited us on the low-rent risers we had erected for a stage and let us strum a few chords or take turns "bouncing 'round the room." When it was all over we had a memory that would stay with us forever.
Do I think the music of Phish is on par with the best acts of the 90s? Hell no. But their demeanor and generocity of spirit is what made me a fan of their music and everything else they stood for.
Years later I cought one of their New Years eve shows in Madison Square Garden. I had a good time. It wasn't like before, but the connetion their fans had to the music was nearly the same. I hope that explains a little of their popularity to the sceptics.
That is a cool story and it gives me a better appreciation for the band, which sadly doesn't impress me. I really liked the one song I've heard of a Mike Gordon/Leo Kottke collaboration, though.
The whole Rift album is tremendous.
More Phish please!
Everybody in my church loves this heavy song...
There are some superficial similarities- word-of-mouth popularity due to extensive touring, completely different setlists from show to show, liberal taping policy, hippie-looking crowd following them around, etc...
But the music is not even remotely the same. Musically, they have as much in common with Frank Zappa as they do with the Dead. They tend towards Prog Rock, Jazz, Funk, and even Bluegrass more than the country-ish americana rock of the Dead. I've seen them close a show with a barbershop quartet version of "freebird."
So let's please retire this false analogy. Anyone who claims that "Phish is just like the Grateful Dead" or "All of their music sounds the same" has obviously not listened to much of their music. You don't have to like their music, but at least stop trying to pigeonhole them with an incorrect stereotype.
I think the guitar solo sounds similar to Jerry Garcia's, but I'm neither a fan nor an expert.
There are some superficial similarities- word-of-mouth popularity due to extensive touring, completely different setlists from show to show, liberal taping policy, hippie-looking crowd following them around, etc...
But the music is not even remotely the same. Musically, they have as much in common with Frank Zappa as they do with the Dead. They tend towards Prog Rock, Jazz, Funk, and even Bluegrass more than the country-ish americana rock of the Dead. I've seen them close a show with a barbershop quartet version of "freebird."
So let's please retire this false analogy. Anyone who claims that "Phish is just like the Grateful Dead" or "All of their music sounds the same" has obviously not listened to much of their music. You don't have to like their music, but at least stop trying to pigeonhole them with an incorrect stereotype.
Amen!
Back in 1990, early June, a quartet of shaggy mates from Vermont arrived at my beucolic boarding school along the Connecticut River to play a show for a bunch of preppies on a Saturday afternoon. They brought their little trampolines and a handful of hippy followers selling t-shirts. About 150 of us in the audience danced our asses off for nearly 4 hours. Trey would stop on occasion to talk to us about music and life. The band invited us on the low-rent risers we had erected for a stage and let us strum a few chords or take turns "bouncing 'round the room." When it was all over we had a memory that would stay with us forever.
Do I think the music of Phish is on par with the best acts of the 90s? Hell no. But their demeanor and generocity of spirit is what made me a fan of their music and everything else they stood for.
Years later I cought one of their New Years eve shows in Madison Square Garden. I had a good time. It wasn't like before, but the connetion their fans had to the music was nearly the same. I hope that explains a little of their popularity to the sceptics.
We be dancing... love it...
Man you guys are always dancing!
I never got into them, but I can understand your disbelief. The Phish songs I've heard reminded me of low-energy, bland versions of forgettable B-sides by the Bare Naked Ladies and/or Blues Traveler. The Phish singer is boring as hell.
(John Popper, may you never touch a harmonica with any part of your body again).
LOL! And I totally agree. . .
I can't believe I used to enjoy Phish.
I never got into them, but I can understand your disbelief. The Phish songs I've heard reminded me of low-energy, bland versions of forgettable B-sides by the Bare Naked Ladies and/or Blues Traveler. The Phish singer is boring as hell.
(John Popper, may you never touch a harmonica with any part of your body again).
There are some superficial similarities- word-of-mouth popularity due to extensive touring, completely different setlists from show to show, liberal taping policy, hippie-looking crowd following them around, etc...
But the music is not even remotely the same. Musically, they have as much in common with Frank Zappa as they do with the Dead. They tend towards Prog Rock, Jazz, Funk, and even Bluegrass more than the country-ish americana rock of the Dead. I've seen them close a show with a barbershop quartet version of "freebird."
So let's please retire this false analogy. Anyone who claims that "Phish is just like the Grateful Dead" or "All of their music sounds the same" has obviously not listened to much of their music. You don't have to like their music, but at least stop trying to pigeonhole them with an incorrect stereotype.
Yea, I never really liked Phish or the Grateful Dead. You do realize that Jerry Garcia's roots are Bluegrass though, right? And no, Phish sounds as much like Zappa as they do the Dead so that is not a good comparison either.
There are some superficial similarities- word-of-mouth popularity due to extensive touring, completely different setlists from show to show, liberal taping policy, hippie-looking crowd following them around, etc...
But the music is not even remotely the same. Musically, they have as much in common with Frank Zappa as they do with the Dead. They tend towards Prog Rock, Jazz, Funk, and even Bluegrass more than the country-ish americana rock of the Dead. I've seen them close a show with a barbershop quartet version of "freebird."
So let's please retire this false analogy. Anyone who claims that "Phish is just like the Grateful Dead" or "All of their music sounds the same" has obviously not listened to much of their music. You don't have to like their music, but at least stop trying to pigeonhole them with an incorrect stereotype.
Well Said!!!!!
I can't believe I used to enjoy Phish.
There are some superficial similarities- word-of-mouth popularity due to extensive touring, completely different setlists from show to show, liberal taping policy, hippie-looking crowd following them around, etc...
But the music is not even remotely the same. Musically, they have as much in common with Frank Zappa as they do with the Dead. They tend towards Prog Rock, Jazz, Funk, and even Bluegrass more than the country-ish americana rock of the Dead. I've seen them close a show with a barbershop quartet version of "freebird."
So let's please retire this false analogy. Anyone who claims that "Phish is just like the Grateful Dead" or "All of their music sounds the same" has obviously not listened to much of their music. You don't have to like their music, but at least stop trying to pigeonhole them with an incorrect stereotype.
I frigging love this tune! More bell baby!
Are you saying that you have a short att... ooops, lost 'im.
good one
GD Cover bands and random local jam bands.
bobby
(P)Flying Phish-Head spotted in New York Everything's gonna be alright. The friends of an unhinged Phish fan who tossed himself off a 25-foot balcony at the Jones Beach amphitheater during the jam band's show Wednesday night said it looks as if their pal is going to pull through. "It's really a miracle, man. He's just got some broken bones, but he's going to be fine," said one pal of the 30-year-old from Maine. "He's talking; he's sedated, he's sort of out of it. But surprisingly, he was able to talk," the friend said at Nassau University Medical Center. The unidentified jumper and his three friends, also from Maine, are huge Phish fans and attend regional concerts.
8/20/10—
The man pushed through the crowd to make the jump. His friends said they didn't know if he was on drugs. A doctor at the scene described the man's face as "busted up."
GD Cover bands and random local jam bands.
Same here.... love the Dead... .never really "got" Phish....
go see them!
I guess that's what makes for horse racing. This is by far my favorite Phish album. I think it's fantastic.
But then what do I know?
Excellent statement. Come to think about it it can probably be applied to many artists with a significant body of work and big following.
Remillenials?
Xennials.