5-29-02, Greek Theatre, Los Angeles, CA
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Date: Thu, 30 May 2002 21:18:34 EDT
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Greek Theatre, Hollywood
Within the Hollywood Hills once again, one of the most amazing second sets . �Soul touching
vibrations. ��The SAND felt like the earth was erupting, Tony on Bass is out of this world......
the entire band is out of this world, oh yeah and then there's Trey...... �Masterfully poised,
unbelievable music... �get on tour, feel the power.... �
�
Vegas & Red Rocks in the horizon, uh ohh....... ��Trey & Band rocks... �Peace
���..... oh yeah and the light show... pheeeewwwwww ��:-)
Date: Thu, 30 May 2002 10:55:01 -0700
From: Justin T Reid [email protected]
Subject: REVIEW 5-29-02 Trey at Greek Theater
The Trey show at the Greek Theater last night was slammin^�. First off,
the Greek is dope. The parking lots are surrounded by woods and there
are beautiful lawns and it^�s all nestled in a hill filled with trees
that^�s just past a rich ass neighborhood. It^�s pretty much in
Hollywood. At the top of the hill you get a great view of L.A. Anyway,
the show was not too crowded. The sections on the sides were only about
a third to a half full, the back was not full either.
Set 1 opened with Simple Twist Up Dave. It was a hot opener, the improv
got going pretty nice. The band is really hot and really tight. Solid
opener. Then Tube Top Flop. It^�s a nice mellow groove with some cool
stops and starts. Then we get Push On Til The Day. I really like this
song but it^�s gotten very predictable for me after listening to it a
lot on disc. The jam at the end got real ragin^� though. Then we got a
new tune, Sweet Dreams Melinda, sort of a standard good rock tune, no
real intense jamming. Good shit though. Sidewalks of San Francisco is a
hot little groovy number. The lights were real cool here and I remember
it getting kind psychedelic. It was phat. Money Love and Change. I
loved this song last summer but I HATE the album version. They play it
like the album, but without all the studio tinkering it sounds much
cleaner and I like it better. The jam on that was huge. Very raging.
Then we got a nice Mozambique. I think there was some boogying by the
band, but not the choreographed dance like last summer. Trey did put
down his guitar and dance around a bit. Cute. Flock of Words was very
nice. Alive Again was cool. When the time has come for you to be alive
again Kuroda shines the lights on the crowd and the energy got huge.
Those lyrics are a bit forced and slightly cheesy, but I dig the
unashamed positivity of it all.
The second set opened with Sand, which was dope as always. Great
jamming in there. Mr. Completely also had some drawn out, intense
jamming. Trey does a lot of conducting with this band. He^�ll turn
around and give signals for certain people to stop and for certain
people to play. It^�s really great, superphat, I love it and all, but it
takes some of the spontaneity out of the music knowing someone is
calling pretty much how the music is gonna go. One of the main sources
of Phish^�s magic in my opinion is their ability to improvise on the
fly, to nail major improvisational changes TOGETHER. This band does
that in a sense, but it^�s Trey^�s mind deciding the changes, not 4
collective minds uncannily connected. Anyway, then came Noodle Rave
Daddio. I thought it sucked. Trey and the horns kept on this sour note
for what seemed like a minute or two. Crappy. Then Caymen Review was
nice. I love Trey^�s guitar work on that tune. It^�s a fun one. It had
some nice fun jamming. Then the monster Last Tube. The way they get the
energy ripping on that tune is amazing, if I were on a hallucinogen I
would have been transported someplace. Word. That is a true jam vehicle
and it really allows Trey to rip. I love it when they^�re rockin^� so
hard you don^�t think they can rock any harder but then they just rock
harder, then they rock harder, then harder. That shit is so real. Last
Tube was a fantastic rager. Then they played Moesha (for the first time
this summer) as a request from a girl in the front row. Trey and Jen
flubbed the lyrics at the end pretty bad. They couldn^�t remember all
the things Moesha does. The Pebbles and Marbles encore was very solid.
I think that song was previously called Nothing But An E Thing. The
lyrics are nice and well timed and the tune went from being kind of a
soft mellow groove to being a real groovy rocker.
It was a great show. At times it was incredible and at times it was
good but not great. Noodle Rave Daddio sucked. The venue was fantastic.
I had 11th row center seats. Good shit. I hope they take it up a few
levels at Vegas and Red Rocks. I think they will. And by the time they
hit the east coast they will be even more on fire. Also, the band just
has so much fun on stage. Cyro is all wild, playing all sorts of crazy
homemade instruments and such, running around, being goofy. The horns
are constantly talking to each other and moving around, walking all
over the stage. Sometimes they^�ll all leave then come back a few
minutes later. And sometimes Jen had this effect on her trumpet that
was sounding so sweet. Real funky. This band is doing some great shit
and they^�ll only get better. They need to add in at least 2 covers
every night to mix it up though. I think everyone except maybe Trey
agrees with me on that. And the crowd was real nice. Super mellow, no
schwilly tour rats. It was a bit older, not too many kids. People were
diggin^� it, groovin^� and what not. It was a Wednesday too. Anyway, I^�ve
written enough. Great show, great crowd. It will inevitably get better
with time. Need more variety though. I think they^�ll get there.
Date: Thu, 30 May 2002 12:54:52 -0700
From: Chris Stebbins [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Trey at the LA Greek - 5/29/02
Trey Anastasio at the Greek Theater, LA - 5/29/02
Last night was, by far, the best live Trey music I've ever heard. The
energy they created, the spacey, afro-beat grooves they locked in to were
incredible. I think they earned a bunch of new fans in LA on this warm
night.
I also went to the Salem Armory show a week earlier, and the LA Greek was
completely different. The sound was much, much better at the Greek. I
could hear each member of the band individually and clearly. The band was
much more in-sync as compared to the Salem show. I noticed Ray's
keyboarding more last night because I could hear him better and more clearly
than ever before. Cyro the percussionist truly added to the rhythm and
energy. I didn't know what to think about this guy at Salem, but now I like
him. The entire band was having so much fun, especially Trey. He was
bouncing around like a happy kid. The whole band was on fire and having
fun! Of course, Tony and Russ are the groove foundation on which this Trey
house is built, and they never faultered.
Overall, it seems they lengthened-out the jam segments for every song, and
it seemed each jam segment had an orchestrated purpose. Each song seemed
long with periods of exploration. Sand, starting out the second set, was
easily one of the longest and most unique I've ever heard. Last Tube was
incredible. The Moesha closer was shouted from a fan to Trey, where Trey
said, "this one's for the screamer in the front". They haven't played
Moesha all tour, and probably not in awhile, and Jen and Trey were having
fun pushing through the lyrics. The rework of "Nothing but an E Thing" for
the encore was very interesting. The new name is "Pebbles and Marbles", and
it added a new chorus to the favorite instrumental of mine.
I think Trey achieved his objective to bring groovey, colorful, and
energetic music to everyone's ears--and to bring everyone a great time in LA
last night. I was glad to share it with our crew of friends from Santa
Barbara. Both nights in Vegas will be incredible, I'm looking to hearing
about the night with Antibalas. Unfortunately, I won't be making Vegas
myself, but it's going to be "The Shows" of his tour, I think.
Peace,
Chris Stebbins
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