[We would like to thank Doug Kaplan, user @MrDougDoug (Twitter: @hausumountain, IG: @hausumountain) for recapping last night's show. -Ed.]
What’s up wooks, custies, spinners, and spunions? It’s your boy @MrDougDoug, here to share the heady scoop on Phish’s 22nd ever show at Alpine Valley, on the day of our Lord Icculus, August 13th, 2022.
Today we’re going to focus on the notion of between-ness and liminality in the Phish experience. So we aren’t focusing on what was before, or what will be after, but that undecided, undefined space in the middle . Some of the most important rituals in the life cycle – like a wedding or graduation – celebrate the passage from what was known into the unknown and can serve as essential touchpoints, unforgettable times, moments in a box.
Conversely, some of the most mundane elements of life brim with this feeling of liminality: a doctor’s office waiting room or a train station are equally marked by their between-ness, but on a less world-altering "from-where-you-were-to-where-you’re-going"-sort-of-vibe. A liminal space brims with potential energy as one moves from what was before into what could possibly be. To exist in this sort of space in the present could be disorienting, or even a little bit frightening, like standing on the edge of a cliff. But being open to this sort of zone can provide life-altering and life-afirming experiences when you lean into embracing the unknown.
Listening to Phish, like the life events I’m describing above, is very much about between-ness. In a zoomed out listening perspective, we are constantly weighing the differences between tonight’s show and other shows on the tour, or tonight’s version of "Fluffhead" and all that came before, or weighing the differences between this Alpine run and all others, and the list goes on. Zooming inward, fans are thinking about the between-ness on a personal level: what has happened in my life between visits to Alpine Valley; how many years has it been since I last saw "Petrichor"; what is happening between me and my mind? In the moment, Phish fans are invited to embrace between-ness as the band composes in real time, inviting us to step beyond the threshold from the known to the unknown. Embracing this feeling is what we refer to as “surrendering to the flow.”
Phish took the stage at 7:36PM, instantly blowing the roof off the shed with Prince’s “1999.” My first thought was that between the 88 shows I’ve attended since 2003, I’ve seen all three performances of this track. My mind drifted to Friday night’s show in which me and my partner were in the side of the pit, looking up at the whole crowd, experiencing a very sappy and nostalgic moment as we felt transported back in time to the 1990s – between then and now everything in our lives has changed, but Alpine Valley has remained stuck in time. Between tonight and our next run at Alpine Valley, we’ll be married.
“The Squirming Coil” was up next and between all the shows I’ve seen in the last two years I hadn’t caught a single version of this song, making some tears well up. "Coil" capped off a gorgeous set, full of purpose and intent, with not a single wasted moment. But then the rain really came down and washed it all away. Set break was a very wet one, but after last week’s show at Pine Knob, where I had to remove my soaked underwear after they finally let us in the venue, this was child’s play.
The second set started off full of promise, with “Backwards Down the Number Line” taking an improvisatory ride for the first time since the early years of 3.0. As the official birthday anthem, the band invites us to consider milestone events in our lives – moments where we have an opportunity to look back and look forward in equal measure as we embrace a day of between-ness. As the band figured out how to bridge the known and unknown, the jam took on a similarly sneaky, groovy characteristic that was on display during “Leaves,” with a little bit more pep in their step. “Maze” flowed out of “Number Line,” showcasing another tightly performed, composed tune. This was perhaps the moment where the crowd was the happiest and most engaged.
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Loved the perspective and the message (at least the one I unpacked) that we should always attempt to be in the moment when it comes to this band.
Those of you on the lawn tonight for night three be on the lookout for the spirit of SRV and the soft drone of helicopter blade cavitations.
Mahalo Nui!!
As a small bit if nerdy housekeeping….undermind finished the first set on 8/31/12, not the second.
good review outside of that
"After “Roggae”, the set kind of fell apart. Of course this is just one wook’s opinion, but the sequence of “About to Run” followed by “Waves” > “Undermind” didn’t quite put the cherry on the top of what had been a very inspired show up to this point"
Twas there and i disagree with this.
Sure a YEM>jam or a Waves > Tweezer or Hood would have been better (to me) but they played these really well or with inspiration if you will.
I'm a big Waves fan and was befuddled when Trey strummed instead of taking his usual solo but they made up for it with a nice spacey outro jam > a very well played and fiery Undermind.