Originally Performed By | Trey Anastasio |
Original Album | One Man's Trash (1998) |
Appears On | |
Music/Lyrics | Anastasio |
Vocals | Trey |
Historian | Tim Wade (TheEmu) Scott Marks (Bizarro_Jerry) |
Last Update | 2020-11-01 |
The second track on 1998’s One Man’s Trash, “Quantegy,” is in its album form essentially a creeping bass line with light guitar and drum accompaniment, overlaid with trippy effects. “Quantegy” seems to be a Trey-invented word (although there is a company by that name which produces commercial recording tape) whose definition is ambiguous. Fortunately, the lyrics provide a hint: “immaterial to replace material.” The studio version, clocking in at just less than three minutes, seems more like a lead-in to “Mr. Completely” than a stand-alone song.
In live performances, though, “Quantegy” gradually became a ten-minute detour into psychedelic improvisational space. Early performances are centered on Trey’s licks, with the keyboards and horns adding color – visit the 7/4/01 debut or 7/17/01 Red Rocks for early examples. By the end of TAB’s summer 2001 tour the song had become less structured, with the horns playing a larger role and the rhythm section serving as a tether to keep the band from drifting off into a formless musical nebula. This quantegenic evolution is apparent in the song’s two 2002 performances, on 6/16/02 (with Fish sitting in on drums) and 11/2/02.
“Quantegy” would make one final appearance, on 5/3/05 with the 70 Volt Parade lineup, before going on the shelf. Reversing the trend of spacious exploration, this hornless version instead featured a buildup to a ferocious Trey supernova shred explosion, and sent “Quantegy” out of the rotation with a big bang.
During The Beacon Jams, Trey brought "Quantegy" back on 10/30/20 with a five-piece rendition of TAB with no horns.
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