6-22-02 - Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, MD
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Date: Mon, 24 Jun 2002 17:12:51 -0400
From: [email protected]
Subject: 6-22-02 Merriweather
This is my Cayman Review:
Set I: Burlap Sack and Pumps, Mozambique, Night Speaks to a Woman,
Small Axe, Acting the Devil, Cayman Review, Last Tube
Set II: Money Love and Change, Olivia, Ether Sunday, Ray Dawn Balloon,
Thunderhead, Simple Twist Up Dave > E: STUD Reprise > Push On 'Til the
Day
I was 12th row right/center and the show was approx 4 hours long,
including setbreak.
Set I
BURLAP SACK & PUMPS: very rocking and energetic, but you got a sense
that it was sort of a warm-up for the band; trey kept throwing in these
little 2-noter licks and easing his way into the jam, not doing much in
terms of ripping solos, etc^�next was
MOZAMBIQUE: they were a lot more rhythmic and grooving on this one^�you
really could tell how much tighter this band is now than they were last
summer^�this song single-handedly proved it, though they showed us
throughout the show how badass they are; still not too much from trey
in terms of taking over with guitar solos but whatever, quite nice.
Andy took a solo and trey danced around when he put his guitar down to
conduct.
NIGHT SPEAKS: rocked for a very long time. It had about 4 different
jam sections, each of which were set up by Trey. I'm guessing this
song lasted somewhere around 20-24 minutes or so. Trey kept setting up
the horns and then he^�d play little arrhythmic guitar lines in between
and it gave the jam a nice escalation. Finally there was a very rough
transition back into the main theme, but whatever, trey pulled it off
somehow. At this point the band seemed really together and you could
sense they were ready to rock and experiment hard. The set chilled out
a bit with
SMALL AXE: it was just fun and mellow and danceable. (Lots of people
ran to get more beer during this reggae tune, and trey danced quite a
bit). Then they picked it up again with
ACTING THE DEVIL: this tune was really cool in terms of the energy that
it brought to the crowd and it really livened up the people around me.
Also the sun was going down so the venue got to smelling pretty good.
There wasn't really any jamming on this one but we finally got to hear
Trey rip a few solos so I was pleased. Then came
CAYMAN REVIEW: I like this song a lot and it was a fun jam with Trey
playing a lot with Ray and Cyro. They really broke it down in the
middle and at one point the entire rhythm section dropped out and it
was just Trey, a little bit of Ray, and Cyro keeping up the song. Then
Tony pounded back in with Russ and they finished the song out. The
band did that a lot and it was such a great way to get the crowd into
it: Tony and Russ will drop out and Cyro and Peter or any of the horns
will keep up the rhythm with hand drums while Trey noodles, then Russ
and Tony explode back into the song and the crowd gets pumped again.
Then it came.
LAST TUBE. Just fucking incredible. There weren't any weird time
changes or breakdowns or anything playful like that. They played this
straight up and it rocked for about 12 minutes. The energy in the
pavilion just got huge and everyone could feel the huge buildup.
Definitely the best version I^�ve ever seen/heard of this tune, and it
left everyone begging for more in the coming second set. This was the
highlight of the first set for me, even though it lacked the
experimentation of Night Speaks.
Set II
Trey came out and talked to the kids in the front row for a while, I
think taking requests b/c after he talked he went and told the entire
band the song that would come next.
MONEY LOVE AND CHANGE: this rocked hard too, very similar to the Night
Speaks jam in terms of length and taking lots of changes, though quite
different in terms of the music. Trey really got into conductor mode
which at times is a bit annoying but whatever, he^�s a genius and he
knows what he^�s doing. Trey danced around and then wandered all over
stage giving directions to the other guys on how to jam the next
section of the song. The energy was enormous and it was a perfect way
to get the set livened up with experimentation and hard core energy. I
think it was during this song that someone threw a blowup doll with
huge boobs onstage but the band ignored it until later. Then Trey
introduced his bus driver who played horns for
OLIVIA: I^�m not familiar with this song but it was decent and we needed
to chill out just a tad after Money so no complaints. Not exactly
jammed out but the bus driver took a cool solo. Trey picked up the
boob-doll and put it in his chair onstage, but then took it off and
threw it back to Cyro, who proudly displayed it on his cymbals kit as
the doll^�s boobs held it up for the audience to gawk at.
ETHER SUNDAY: another good song with a beautiful trumpet solo from
Jen. Trey and Jen smiled as they sang the end of the song to each
other (^�it^�s true^�^�) and it was kinda nice, although it looked like
they were having a love affair onstage J the band left stage so trey
could play with Tony and Cyro on:
RAY DAWN BALLON: Very well played by Trey, Tony and Cyro, who luckily
didn^�t overdo it on this one with the percussion
THUNDERHEAD: hadn^�t heard it before but it was kind of nice and mellow,
trey on acoustic guitar. The singing was a little off and it didn^�t
seem like Trey had the lyrics exactly how he wanted them so it was a
little rusty vocally, but no problem.
SIMPLE TWIST UP DAVE: this was another awesome jam that was very long.
Lots of horn solos and tons of conducting by Trey. Peter Apfelbaum
took a crazy long solo by himself at the front of the stage and the
spotlight went on him as Trey called a sidebar with Andy, Jen and
Grippo. Russ was playing hand-drums with Cyro. The jam gets going
again after Peter^�s solo and Andy and Jen start ripping these really
fast horn lines. Trey gets a little guitar-lick going that harmonizes
the horns, and everyone else bangs away at percussion. As it
intensified, Cyro started yelling into the microphone. Later in the
jam Grippo started yelling ^�oh^� and a certain point and Trey got into
that and he did it too, so we in the audience followed suit and would
periodically yell Oh in unison. Also Ray switched over to the piano
and was playing a beautiful solo at one point. Eventually it gets
crazier and climactic and the horns just move to the front of the stage
and start playing unmiked. Then Cyro grabs some drums and runs down
there and they start dancing. Trey follows suit, as do Ray and Russ
and everyone is banging on drums or playing horns. Finally Tony comes
down too and we in the audience clap along to keep the rhythm, as we
did when Peter took his long solo. The band-audience interaction was
just incredibly rich which made the concert such a great experience.
Then they all march offstage for about 30 seconds and come back out and
keep up the banging etc. Trey picks up his guitar and the horns get
back on their microphones and the jam returns to the fast energetic
section. Then it slows down again and they start up with
PUSH ON TIL THE DAY: this fucking rocked so hard and the whole place
screamed once trey started playing the opening chords^�the first little
diddie that Trey plays before the lyrics was temporarily replaced by
the lick that Trey had going during STUD and that made the horns laugh
and everyone cheered. So the song was just fucking HUGE, no jamming
out or experimenting, but just HUGE ENERGY. Trey signaled for the drop
down to the low-octave that starts the buildup and the place starts
going crazy. Then the climax was ridiculous and everyone just started
jumping up and down and screaming, including trey. Kuroda kicked ass
with the lights at this point and it felt so great to have such a
moment with everyone. The band left stage and we cheered for an encore
but the lights came on and the after music played, which led us to
believe that Push On was the encore and that when they wandered
offstage that was the end of the set for the 30 second break. Anyway,
too bad we didn^�t get a ^�second^� encore but whatever. Great Show.
Trey Rocks.
Date: Mon, 24 Jun 2002 15:43:30 -0400
From: Mike Petrella [email protected]
Subject: 6-22 Merriweather
Let me say this first, Trey is the man, he has always been and will always
be the man. Not sure where the man was on 6/22 though. When the tickets
were first released, I was all psyched, last show of the tour, new
musicians, new tunes, I had high hopes for this show. That, and everytime
Trey band or Phish came to Merriweather, the show was always phenomenal.
First set opened with Burlap, same opener as last year, different
arrangement. I never saw Trey wail so hard, so early in a show, but he made
that tune unforgettable. I thought this to be an indicator of some crazy
stuff to come, but after Burlap, not much really stuck out. I didn't write
the set list down, but after looking at other shows, you knew they were
going to jam out "Night Speaks to Woman", Mozambique was ok, not nearly as
lively as last years, "Cayman Review" was decent. Everything was shaping up
to be the exact way it looked on paper. The set was long, probably close to
1.5 hrs, but nothing stuck out past Burlap.
Set break was short, no "15 minute break."
Second set opened with a 40min+ "Money, Love & Change". Man, that was
boring, i'm not sure why Trey re-made the tune, the old version was more
interactive with the audience, if that makes sense. the new version starts
off in the middle of nowhere, and makes nothing of the melody, it almost
masks the original direction of the tune. the jam itself had it's good
points, but for the most part, just lingered until someone else picked up a
solo. then came some Latin tune with the band's bus driver sitting in.
cool little groove, but sounded just like the "Money,Love & Change" jam.
the rest of the set was filled with Sunday Morning, some acoustic tunes and
closed with "Simple Twist Up Dave", with the band doing a conga line off
stage. they marched on back on stage and went into "Push On 'Til The Day".
i thought this was the closer, didn't know it was the encore. "Push..." is
a great tune, such a great way to end a show. the crowd was pumped, Trey
was wailing, it was a great closer.
Overall the show was ok, last year's Merriweather was more fun, better song
selection, more crowd interaction. I can't complain, Trey is the man,
always has been, always will be. I guess I was hoping for something
special, maybe a little pre-Bonaroo Phish reunion, but then again, who
wasn't.
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