Following the debut of Miss You, Trey noted that the song would be on their new album and thanked the crowd for letting them try new material. Disease was unfinished. Fish teased Weekapaug in Twist. Space Oddity was a Phish debut.

Photo by Scott Marks

Jam Chart Versions
Teases
Weekapaug Groove tease in Twist
Debut Years (Average: 2001)

This show was part of the "2016 Summer Tour"

Show Reviews

, attached to 2016-06-24

Review by Franklin

Franklin First set:

I feel absurd discussing song selection in a first set because, more often than not, it's just about how much you like a given song, not really how they fit together as a unit, especially in a set with as few alligator mouths as this one has. For example, I have a completely irrational hatred of both The Wedge and Yarmouth Road, but that does not mean that this was a bad set; they just played two songs I didn't like. So I'd much rather just talk about things that I thought were noteworthy...

Sand - Trey basically decides to build tension in this jam from moment one, and it really pays off. The best metaphor I could come up with is a high-speed chase across a bunch of city rooftops. There's a group of mini-peaks when you jump from one rooftop to the next and the band settles back onto one with increasing intensity each time, and then, when it's time to slide back onto the main theme, you jump off the final rooftop onto the back of an already-moving jet ski. There was no stumbling -- the group settles right back into Sand proper as if nothing had ever happened. Real smooth way to thwart the bad guys.

Miss You - New songs are always roughed up a bit when they debut, and I think ballads have it especially bad. This one has a little bit of cheese on the lyrics and I'm not hella crazy about those three chords that get played after every. single. line. in the verse, but Trey simply tears up the solo. If I have to endure the song itself for that kind of guitar work, I'll make that trade any day of the week.

Blaze On - Absolute heater. The BOs of yore have gone the dark and twisty route, and this version flirts with that a little bit at the beginning of the jam, but at the end of a first set in the middle of a baseball stadium, you just want the fun. Leo's solo between the two verses was particularly good, I thought, but the real magic comes when the band builds up to a glorious peak, pushing the tempo and volume just enough to deliver a smooth end of the set.

Everything else was well-played, if not sung... come on guys, get yourselves a copy of the third edition of the phish companion (available now at https://phishcompanion.com!) and learn the lyrics to your own darn songs.

The set is full of fan favorites and very intact chops all around. While there isn't much replay value in the first half, it all bodes well for the rest of tour.

--------

Second set:

Down With Disease - Ahoy! We've reached our first extended type-two jam of the summer. After the usual shredfest, Mike and Page start pushing a darker groove, and Trey keeps soloing for a little bit and then everything starts locking. From 7:00 on, we're in new, undefined territory. The jam spends its time fluctuating between pushing rock and muddier, less defined areas, but the whole thing is dark and mysterious. To be honest, this kind of jamming might be among Phish's signature moves in 3.0. Fishman and Mike get so locked in it's almost unfair, and there are often three melodies weaving around each other. An organic, exploratory jam -- a fine place to start the summer.

Fuego is essentially the same as any of 2015's interchangeable versions.

Twist -- It's a shame that the Disease was only the best jam of Summer 2016 for like nine minutes, but that's life in the rough-and-tumble world of Phish. Last year, we started disentangling ourselves from Twist pretty quickly (see Magnaball, where the song itself is basically gone once the Woos happen), but this version stays close to the ranch for quite a bit longer -- I wasn't even sure if it was going to go Type II at all. But go Type II it did. It's hard to say where, to be honest, and that's one of the things that makes this jam great -- it all just unfolds in front of you.

At one point near 9:00 Mike plays this line that sounds like Ghost at double speed, and Trey picks up on it and, with Page hammering away on the grand, we quickly jettison ourselves into this complicated area around 10:30, where Fishman is playing a sweet rock beat and Trey is playing these distorted, echoey chords -- I'm not sure which effect it is but it creates a cool juxtaposition that leads us smoothly into a more normal (albeit still magnificent) rock section by 11:30. They cover a lot of ground in 2.5 minutes there, and it brings us to a glorious place -- the ensuing two minutes is pure bliss before we drop back down underwater. Great stuff. The segue into 20YL was smooth enough to keep me from getting upset that 20YL was playing.

Waste is a good song.

A 2001 at this point in the set is a real treat. While the Disease and Twist were both great jams, they didn't provide all that much in terms of pure danceability. This tune totally delivers in a 6 minutes that looked like it got the place going real good. Sure, we don't build up to the first motif for ten minutes like it's Gorge 98, but it gets the job done.

At this point, it's clear that we're not in for a jam fest, and so BDTNL and Loving Cup are just celebrations on top of a fun show. Third quarter here is for replay, fourth quarter is for fun. Nothing wrong with that.

-----

To be honest, I'm not a big David Bowie fan. I have nothing against him; his work just doesn't hit me in the way that other artists do. But. The way the crowd reacted to the words "Ground Control to Major Tom" and the visible weight behind each band members' vocals was enough to give me chills. Apart from being really musically satisfying (they must have been practicing this for ages) it's just stirring.

Antelope closer can't be beat.

Is this a show where every single song deserves to be replayed? Not really. Does it have a small handful of riches? You bet. Can't wait for night two.

*Edit* I just hit the "preview" button and this is WAY longer than I intended it to be. My bad.
, attached to 2016-06-24

Review by kyleindeed

kyleindeed Awesome show!

Set one: Sample was a solid opener per usual. I know not everyone is a phan of placing jam machines like CDT,Martian Monster and Sand in S1, but they do work here for a raucus Wrigley crowd. Sure they are going to be condensed versions by comparison that don't rip into type 2 land before the sun goes down... but the crowd was digging it (Sand especially). Only real flub-ski in set 1 was trey fighting his guitar on Rift. Bend N1 and Blossom last year were much worse tho. I like Yarmouth Road and appreciate when they band gives it a little more grit and grime. Trey and Mike are usually good for this. Love Paige's work on the Hammond B3 each time they play it. I would honestly take Shade over Miss You every day of the week. Not that it was a bad ballad, it just isn't romantic enough for the high level of sappiness. The Wedge, Free and Blaze On give us the appropriate amount of funkiness to finish out a solid set. And yes, Blaze On works very well as a S1 closer. That's not to say they need to pigeon hole it away from an extended S2 jam vehicle... but if they have to play it S1, go for the closing spot more often than not.

S2. DWD.... nailed it. Fishman deserves the most credit on this because if not for him then Paige, Mike and Trey would not be able to drop the napalm that they did. It felt like it could be our first 20 minute jam but it's worth remembering that it's only the 2nd show of the tour. Fuego was an appropriate transition to keep fire in the set without allowing a flat-line after the incredible DWD. Is it just me, or when Paige switches from the piano to the organ approx 2:19 that he usually brain farts? The first couple organ chords have been hit or miss since the song came out (see NYE 2013, but maybe that's the confetti's fault).
Twist is also killer and surprisingly hits a more badass peak than the aforementioned DWD (How? No clue... it just does). It almost seemed like they were teasing a DWD-prise, which I have been asking for the last couple months.
There may be a tendency to shite on the rest of S2 because they don't stay in jam mode after Twist. I don't think that's a fair assessment (esp. at later spots in that 2001, which was blazing hot). 20 Years Later, Waste and #Line were all solid and well place. Loving Cup was just a joy and very well received from the crowd. Smiles abound.

Space Oddity (A'Cappella taboot!) was a blast and completely unexpected. Chicago's art scene has an extreme appreciation for David Bowie and this could not have been received any better. Antelope takes us home in fine fashion to put the finishing touches on a great N1.

Will this show be the best of summer 2016? No. Will it be worth a listen next year and in year's to follow? Oh phuck yeah...

N1 gave 2 Hose in this area code. More to come tonight...

INDEED!!!!!
, attached to 2016-06-24

Review by G0NEPHISHING

G0NEPHISHING Phish were set to play their second and third shows of Summer Tour 2016 at Wrigley Field in Chicago on June 24 and 25. To some informed ears, tour night one up in Minneapolis had confirmed two pre-tour rumors: the band had new material to test-drive live, and they would shoot slowly out of the gate, measuring out carefully the energy and the experimentation.

Riding along in the rocket ship were three good friends. We slid into our seats twenty-five rows up from third around 7:00 PM CST. Lights at 7:38, as the sun slipped behind left field. 79 degrees and a light Lake Michigan breeze blowing in from right. Bad night for lefty longballers. Perfect night for anything else.
Even Bartman couldn’t mess it up.

Set I

Sample: Slow and languid, yet perfunctory and straight-forward at the same time. Safe but familiar way to start the show. Band felt engaged but nervous and holding back. Same for the crowd. Sound isn’t bad back where we are. Three speaker stands are scattered around the outfield at eye level (ear level?). Not sure how the upper decks fared, but from our vantage point, upstairs was cocked, locked and ready to rock.

2. CDT: Same. Type 1 all the way.

3. Martian Monster: such a great tune. This and “Your Pet Cat” are far and away my favorites from Halloween 2014. Tragically short, though, clocking in at 4:46. The Vegas debut was almost 10 minutes longer. Just as we were sliding into the groove, Trey fades out into the opening notes of “Rift.” Things beginning to get real for our crew and compatriots.

4. Rift: It’s not my favorite tune musically, but I’ve grown to appreciate the lyrics. It also isn’t the easiest song to dance to. So this was a great chance to watch with my ears for a few minutes, disengage from the stage and look around. A sudden tap on my shoulder from the walkway behind me. It’s a colleague of mine who works in federal government I.T. We had spoken on the phone a few times, but I had only met him in real life two nights prior. Phish never came up. And yet, there he was parked on my six, having a ball. Only at Phish.

5. Yarmouth Road: I like the key changes of this song, and the reggae beat. I also like it when Trey gives everyone a turn at the mic. But…well, meh.

6. Sand: popped up earlier in the show than normal, or at least earlier than it has in recent years. Always a great tune with an inviting opening to experiment, both on the dance floor and on the stage. At 9:49, the longest show of Set I. Jam stayed Type 1, without a whole lot of divergence from a standard “Sand” groove. But this was the first song after the sun had dipped below the walls of Wrigley, so we got to see Kuroda’s new rig emerge in the gloaming. I absolutely love the additional panels and screens…it allows for such a greater range of effects, video clips and animations. Not sure where CK5 got the inspiration, but the new flat screens behind and flanking the band look suspiciously like section versions of what you’ll see at a GirlTalk “concert.”

7. Miss You: new Phish! 7:46 of repeating a standard three chord progression, sorta-pretty solo like every other new-ish Trey Ballad. As @HeyScotty wrote in his recap, “Unlike The Rolling Stones’ song of the same name, Phish’s ‘Miss You’ is a slow burning ballad in the same vein as ‘Show Of Life’ and ‘Joy.’” But do we really need another “Joy”? Was this written in acknowledgement that an aging fan base needs more bathroom breaks than they used to? If that’s why it came to be and popped up when it did, then Phish, I salute you for your fan-focused sensitivity. I think Trey, though, picked up on the crowd’s reaction to “Miss You.” As the final notes rang in the cool midsummer’s eve, Trey mentioned that the band is, “Working’ on a new album. That was one of the songs from it, so we might play a couple more. We don’t know yet. You guys are the greatest…ever. Thank you for giving us the confidence to try out these new tunes. Really means a lot.” Can’t say I’ll be missing this one, Bob.

8. The Wedge: Sun slips further down as Fishman starts the always-amazing syncopated intro to “The Wedge.” This song has grown on me a lot over the years. I used to — don’t laugh — confuse this with “Rift.” Dropping into the semi-composed solo section around 2:30, the Chairman of the Boards starts getting up, so we can start getting down. Wonderful if abbreviated pastiche on the grand piano. Side note: I thought throughout the two shows Page and Fishman were the standouts (Page on night one, Fish on night two), with Mike virtually absent, and Trey taking home a solid B average across the weekend (C+ on night one, A- on night two).

9. Free: standard as they come. Not a whole ton of hammer-down on what should be a hammer-down song.

10. Blaze On: The midnight banger from New Years 2015 sets the standard in my book. And every fresh-faced, wide-eyed fan gets to snicker at the double entendre smoldering in the title. Good, punchy build baked into this song’s structure. Why they didn’t take this one for a ride in Atlantic City during Halloween 2014, I will never know. This is heaps better than 2/3 of what the played during the “Wingsuit-Proto-Fuego” set. Clocking in at a shade under 8 minutes, this closed a totally Type 1 opening set that contained but a few minutes of jamming scattered across its 70 minutes.

Set II
1. DWD: Lights at 9:26 CST for the 10th DWD second frame opener I’ve seen. La Decima Disease. Though many think it could use a little relocation, I love it here. Perfect launchpad. 5 minutes in and the jams starts. Page continuing his lovely grand piano fills from Set I. 6:55, he slides to the organ, then back to the ivories a few measures later. 8:30 he’s back on the organ with one hand, piano with the other as Trey starts quieting it down. 8:45: that’s my MuTron! Love how Big Red has worked this distinctively Jerry effect into his chemistry set. Adds a lovely new layer, rounding off and softening the edges of plinko-y rhythmic passages. I wish we heard more of it. 9:15: Fishman starts transitioning to a more driving, high-hat-heavy backbeat. Fighting Trey initially, who seems like he wants to take this to a super spacy, dirty late 1.0/trademark 2.0 place. But no, Fishman is emphatic that we aren’t revisiting the Oxy Years tonight. 11:20: there’s Mike. Surfacing to join Fishman in pushing the beat forward, faster and fuller. Trey and Page jump in the life boat, though Page is clearly digging a funkier direction, smattering 2001-ish fills throughout. 13:45: Trey flips to a majestic progression, moving up the fretboard with calls then responding to himself lower down. Still feel like they’re searching for something to hold onto. Save a brief few passages, there isn’t much direction to this Disease. No one is stepping up to point out the pathway. 15:50: fade to a classic 3.0 ambient washout, which is such a lovely new gear to their music. But in this case, it was a call to the bullpen. Given the alternative, I’ll take an ambient segue over a ripcord any day. The relief pitcher? A fire-breathing heat-hurler named…

2. Fuego: Fun to hear the crowd chant the chorus. Trey clearly likes this tune, at least singing it. (Must be a screamer?) The breakdown coming back into the main Fuego theme is a nice, I’m-in-the-garage-wailing-with-the-boys-and-just-discovered-distortion way. During the “rolling” outro, another nice laugh for the crowd. 5:50: they drop out of the composed section but still stay in Type 1 territory. 6:55: another pretty and purposeful melodic progression from Trey that vaults them allllmost into Type 2, but Mike keeps it pinned to the “Fuego” bass line. 8:35: Trey briefly echoes the main melody. Effortlessly nails it without missing a note. But a minute later we get the full on “Fuego” chords, and another fast fade to an ambient transition to Twist. These segues are like you would find on a studio album: 10 seconds or so on each end of the divide, like the producer just knobbed down the volume so he could get on with the session.

3. Twist: This is another lyrical Marshall masterpiece, and one of my favorite vehicles for exploration. I also love the sultry, slinking swing of it. Santana could absolutely wail on “Twist.” Anyone who can pluck a pentatonic scale can wail on it. This song has changed significantly since its debut back while Phish was busy destroying America in 1997–1998, and I wish they would bring back the patient, stripped-down opening from those days and from the album version immortalized on Farmhouse. My favorite “Twist” remains the epic Island Tour cut, painted by an equally watershed performance by CK5. 6:25: Mike, is that you? Can you speak up? You ready to take the scarf off and start something? 8:00: I believe we now have a pulse from Cactus. Locks with Fishman to pick up the pace, taking us smoothly to a brief taste of Type Two…until Trey veers back to what I think is the G#M main theme. 9:25: dirty Trey returns with heavy distortion, middle reverb and a light touch on the MuTron. Side note: throughout the two shows, Trey was definitely toying with the dirty-dirty from the old days, especially a heavily distorted reverb. The acoustics of the ballpark battered around his echo effects to great…effect. 11:25: Trey leads us into a new, descending progression. Fish and Mike jump right on it. 10 seconds later, Page is there. And we are on a whole new plane, one of the now-familiar 3.0 major key happy plateaus built by the relentlessly back-beating octopus arms of Jon Fishman. Now, we are hearing solid creative purpose emerging, along with an increasingly apparent level of comfort and wordless communication on stage. 14:45: Another swift studio segue.

4. Twenty Years Later: If one had to use the restroom, this would’ve been the moment. All I’ll say about this cool down song is that a) I’m glad we got Fish a rest, and b) does Phish have the most kayak-themed originals out there? Off the top of my head, there’s Twenty Years Later and PYITE. That’s two, which actually does not mean a lot. Know of any others? Could be a slick co-branding opportunity. Or not. To be fair, the song’s guitar breakdown/outro is nice and hard-rock in the best way.

5. Waste: a perfectly-placed treat. One of my companions was dying to hear it live, so I was even more glad it popped up. Sure, it’s not on most jaded vets’ second set wish list, but so what? A pretty, interesting chord progression and lovely, simple solo for the guitar and for the keys, whether it’s off an album or live, though I think that Trey has struggled hard to sing the “come waste your time with me” outro since at least the version on “Bittersweet Motel.” Just hard to hear him try to hit and hold those notes. Too much time spent hanging with Kid Rock took its toll on the vocal chords? Recognizing things have perhaps gotten a tad too feelings-y, they slammed down into one of my all-time favorites.

6. 2001: the argument could be made that, if you are making the case to a skeptical civilian to both appreciate the singular musical skills of the Boys from Vermont AND convince them that these are the funkiest bunch of white guys around, “2001" is a great Exhibit A. It also happens to be their most flat-out danceable jam in my book. I would donate a kidney to see a vintage Great-Went-style “2001" some day. This baby could be 6 minutes (like the Wrigley version), 16 minutes or 60 minutes and it would still get even the most rhythm-less hips gyrating. Alas, tonight would give us a brief dip into THE FUNK BAG.

7. Backwards Down the Number Line: before the show, in discussing the songs we wanted to hear and NOT hear, this was near the top of the list for the latter. Yes, I get how the song means to Trey and Tom and ultimately the whole band. And yes, I have heard a few ripping, extended versions live and a few more on couch tour. Just isn’t for me…though I have yet to encounter a fan who puts this in their top five. But, given the sprawling Phish oeuvre, I guess there are many that don’t crack top fives. My peace has been made. Let’s move on.

8. Loving Cup: an energetically played version that stayed in its lane. Did its job. Wham, bam, thank you ma’m. A lower-case exclamation point on a second set, and a show, that so far had some fun moments but no real must-listen highlights. As we awaited the encore, I ruminated on the old saw about golf: that a bad day on the golf course is better than a great day anywhere else. The same fully applied to June 24, 2016 at Wrigley. Until…

Encore
1. Space Oddity: the band came out but skipped their instruments and strolled straight to the front of the stage. “Grind”? “Hello My Baby”? “I Didn’t Know”? Love Phish a-capella, which in this slot usually means we would get two tunes before bedtime. With the HARD 11 PM CST curfew looming ever larger, that was a pretty safe bet. But wait.

No idea what was about to happen. Then, with Trey in the lead, they dropped into the David Bowie all-timer. As the boys belted out “Ground Control to Major Tom…” the roar that went up from Wrigley rivaled any I have seen in 60 Phish shows, any live sporting event or any concert. Such a surprise to us all and a touching tribute to the late, great Ziggy Stardust. These guys have spent 30+ years as a band, and I have spent 16+ years a fan. The fact that they can still throw the most unhittable of sonic knuckleballs is awe-inspiring. And they absolutely nailed the entire tune, instrumental sections and sound effects included. Threw their backs into it and clearly practiced for hours and hours. Spine-tingling shivers when the whole stadium joined in for “The stars look very different tonight.” You bet your spacesuit-wearing ass they looked different. I hope that Bowie’s loved ones hear this, for I don’t think you could dream up a more fitting, Phishy and appropriately off-beat expression of admiration and appreciation for the musical genius we lost earlier this year. My two hopes are that a) “Space Oddity” reappears [Note: it did to close out Set I at Mansfield] and b) the band has an equally original, meaningful plan in the works to honor the Purple Man from Minnesota, who passed away with way too much music yet to make.

2. Antelope: An always fun cap to a set or a show. Tucker us out by demanding our best running man dance moves. Not going to say no to free baseball, or bonus Phish. But I felt then, and still do now a few weeks and re-listens later, that ending with “Space Oddity” would have been perfect.

Coda
As we made our exit/escape back to reality and a friend’s fantastically close Wrigleyville pad to cool down and process the past three and a half hours, it became clear that for at least a few nights, there would be little to no law enforcement in the area. Chicago’s finest stood at street corners and, at Addison and Clark, sat mounted on horseback. But they were focused less on cracking-down and more on keeping the civilians and the cosmic soldiers separated, moving along and filtering out into the night. Into this permissive void we strolled, surrounded by what sounded like every car in the city simultaneously getting its tires slashed. The hiss was deafening.

In the 5 blocks from the show to the safe house, we passed no fewer than 7 roving bands of the infamous Nitrous Mafia, each trailing a wake of balloon-huffing boys and girls. As a showmate, who is newer to this hilarious-if-seriously-shady aspect of the scene, observed: “This is scary, right?” It wasn’t quite like the post-show, post-apocalyptic lot in Camden, NJ, but it was damned close.

A weird and wild end to a weirdly tame Friday night spent with great friends and the best band in the world. We collapsed into bed like kids on Christmas Eve, wound up and giddy.

What would we find under the tree on Saturday?
, attached to 2016-06-24

Review by ramblonroze

ramblonroze No scene allowed outside, a lot of fans wandering around with no focus. Phish had good vibes, they played like troopers. They had fun, I had fun.
Show started late, very short break, short 2nd set – neighborhood curfew. I’ve been to many Chicagoland shows, this was the worst sound system. Wrigley is old and all metal girders.
It was really fun, my nephew is tops, a perfect concert buddy. I am so lucky. We did CTA and Uber. Could not understand a word of the music. Said as soon as we get home I’ll tell you what we heard. Played the show on LivePhish+. Excellent. My favs were rift, sand, free and blaze. And then twist, backwards, living cup and 2001. I still love covers.
, attached to 2016-06-24

Review by fhqwhgads

fhqwhgads The two most notable things about this show to me are the debut of Miss You and Trey's gratitude for our open-mindedness and support of the band, and of course the a cappella debut of Space Oddity. This posthumous David Bowie tribute was very touching for me. Martian Monster had a nice synthy type of outro, as well as an interesting synthy bass effect from Mike during the song proper; Yarmouth Road was well played and nice to hear (Mike is really a great songwriter); and Trey has obviously been praticing, judging by the trills and mastery of the end of The Wedge. I like how the Echoplex is integrated into Free, giving it a different feel than the yorefound straight-ahead rawk. Blaze On is still growing on me: I didn't like it all that much at first--though I was glad that Phish is writing new songs--but I'm beginning to warm to it. ;) This version certainly pleased the crowd, if my viewing of the webcast says anything. We're all in this together, after all. Also I'll take a moment to observe that the new LED screens are being used very tastefully by CK5 and I'm refreshed by the addition of them to his rig.

Nice dark Wurly work from Page in the Type-II portion of the DWD jam. I like the tonality of the Fender Rhodes better than the Wurlitzer, but electric piano is like pizza: even when it's bad, it's good (and the Wurlitzer is certainly not bad!) This Down with Disease jam shows how versatile Phish are, I think. That's always been a facet of their jams: that they are open to interpretation and can go anywhere. You may be listening to a jam and there're like four or five apparent directions that the jam could take, and then a few seconds later a whole new vista opens up, with its concomitant intimations. For that reason, longer jams are divisive amongst phans (let's define longer as 20 minutes or more.) They may end up missing their mark if the band chooses to focus, or they may never really choose a theme. Personally, I'm just excited by the adventure (the means justify the ends) and I fall pretty squarely into "gimme long jams all over every show." (Then again, my all-time favorite Phish jam is Type I.) But I digress. Great group-built peak to the end the DWD before it settles into Fuego. I highly recommend the Twist that follows. Great to see 2001 starting to return to its stretched-legs state from years ago, and Space Oddity is just really sublime. Thanks, Phish!
, attached to 2016-06-24

Review by panda

panda This is what seeing the Phish is all about, fun high energy first set with a touchy new balad called Miss You - we Blazed On to Blaze On and the fun was just getting started!

Second set started with a blazing Disease into a fairly standard, but fun Fuego. Twist is something that dreams are made of, they pulled no punches with that jam. Could have done without the Twenty Years later, but love me some Waste into the 2001 funk dance party! Number Line is usually placed in the wrong spot, but this was a nice breather before an always rocking Loving Cup set closer.

Never been a big Bowie fan, but most people were losing their stuff to Space Oddity and it was a nice risk taken. Can never go wrong with an Antelope encore either!!!!
, attached to 2016-06-24

Review by AZ_Fluff

AZ_Fluff First time seeing the boys since fall '14 and they brought the absolute heat the entire night. Fun, flowing first set with a funky Martian monster and raging blaze on. Then the jams were insane in the 2nd set way too many moment's to recall right now!!!!! Best shown I've seen in the 3.0 era!!!
, attached to 2016-06-24

Review by Calibornkush

Calibornkush Any show with Rift is an automatic favorite for me! Yarmouth 2001, The Wedge? FREE???? Closing with Run Like an Antelope?!?!? Ok I'll stop there.. You get it. EPIC. Adding Bowie made everyone lose their shit the crowd was already crazy and that was just the icing! Wrigley Field was beautiful the sun setting was not in my eye, my granola bars made it in but not my water and at $5 a piece I highly recommend bringing your own phish themes water container tonight :)
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