My Year in Music 2014
Raw Statistics
This
was supposed to be a year of hiatus to fix things around the house and more or
less that happened. However it didn’t
quite happen to level we expected so 2015 might be another lean year as far as
shows go. The good news is that 2016
should see us back to gallivanting around the county with a completely finished
house.
Phish
Shows – 6
Other
Shows – 16
Studio Albums
I
only bought two official live releases in 2014 but there were a plethora of
good studio albums that didn’t make the cut for my Top 5. Mike Gordon, The New Mastersounds, Chris
Robinson Brotherhood, moe., Rich Robinson, Phish and Dopapod (in order of
release date) all put out discs that are worth checking out, but I had to draw
the line somewhere.
5)
Leftover Salmon – “High Country”
This
is the first LoS album to feature drummer Alwyn Robinson and Little Feat’s Bill
Payne on keys. Vince Herman
contributions “Home Cookin’” and “Finish Your Beer” feature comical lyrics and
Drew Emmitt does his thing on “Western Skies” and “Two Highways.” Andy Thorn supplies instrumental “Thornpipe”
and the Drew sung “High Country.” Payne
and Robert Hunter penned “Bluegrass Pines” might be the highlight of the entire
disc and Feat’s “Six Feet of Snow” seems made for bluegrass.
4)
New Monsoon – “Diamonds and Clay”
Some
might think I’m partial to NM’s first studio album in seven years because my
name is in the liner notes for contributing to their Kickstarter campaign (3rd
one too). While that may be somewhat
true the disc actually does rock from start to finish. There is no letup during the first five
tracks with highlights being “Light of Day” and “Tower” (my fave). The second half of the album is mellower but
songs like “Positive Days” and “A Good Man” grow on you. “Time Won’t Wait” is the final rocker on this
fine record.
3)
Medeski Scofield Martin and Wood –
“Juice”
The
first studio release in eight years from MSMW is their best effort since 1998’s
seminal “A Go Go.” From the opening
groove of Eddie Harris’ “Sham Time” it’s unmistakable who you are listening
to. The covers don’t stop there as they
also give The Doors’ “Light My Fire,” Cream’s “Sunshine of Your Love” and Bob
Dylan’s “The Times They are a-Changin’” their instrumental treatment. Chris Wood’s “Helium” is a highlight as is
“Juicy Lucy” which was loosely based on the riff from “Louie Louie” per John
Scofield.
2)
Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe – “New
Ammo”
This
is the first KDTU release to feature guitarist D.J. Williams who contributes
the title track and “Everybody Knows That.”
Karl D himself only has two writing credits and “My Baby” with Nicki
Bluhm guesting on vocals is a highlight.
There’s a whopping six covers on this album but they don’t seem out of
place, especially the instrumentals “Grenadiers,” “The Duel,” and “Après
Ski.” If you stick with this disc all
the way through Chris Stillwell’s “Malgorium” and ancient KDTU tune “Odysseus”
bring it home in style.
1)
Greensky Bluegrass – “If Sorrows Swim”
From
the opening notes of Paul Hoffman’s “Windshield” through the end of the album
your ears are thoroughly entertained.
Hoffman is one of my favorite current songwriters and he delivers on
“Burn Them,” “In Control,” “Forget Everything,” (lyrical fave) “Demons” and
“Leap Year.” Dave Bruzza also
contributes winners like “Worried About the Weather,” “Kerosene” and “Wings for
Wheels.” This is truly a band in their
prime and if you don’t already own this record do yourself a favor and go out
and buy it.
Top 5 Non-Phish Shows
I: Jumping, Radar Blip,
Jones > Spiral, Spock’s Brain, Twist and Bends, Angatta, She Said She Said,
Tiny Little World
II: Surface > Meat
> Long Black Line, Peel, Another Door, Mississippi > Morphing Again, Hand
in My Pocket > Soulfood Man
E: Yarmouth Road, Skin
it Back
I
was oh so psyched up for my first MGB show in two years. Maybe a little too psyched as the wine went
down like water (literally) during our pregame at Toro Bravo. Once inside the Wonder it was all smiles at
my favorite venue in PDX bumping into random phriends that we only see at such
shows.
I
wasn’t enamored with the opener but all was forgotten when “Radar Blip”
dropped. The next highlight of the show was
the song I wanted to hear most. When the
unmistakable bass line from “Spock’s” started up I may have injured a few
people around me I was going so wild (sorry if you are reading this). Keyboardist Tom Cleary’s “Twists” was a nice
interlude before percussionist Craig Myers picked up the n’goni for “Angatta.” I have heard MGB rip The Beatles’ “She Said”
several times and this one was no different with guitarist Scott Murawski
building up a big jam.
The
second set took off like a rocket with nearly 22 minutes of “Surface > Meat
> Long Black Line” and it never let up.
“Peel” was the longest jam of the night at 13 minutes and its creepy
vibe, for lack of a better term, is pure Mike.
“Another Door” straight ripped as usual and Mofro’s “Mississippi” was a
good change of pace after so much intensity.
The segue into “Morphing” was seamless and I’m not sure this band gets
enough credit for their quality segues.
Anyway, “Morphing” was another highlight and Alanis Morissette’s
“Pocket” was just a setup for the biggest treat of the night, the first “Soulfood
Man” since 12/10/11.
“Soulfood”
was the proverbial song I wanted to hear that they would never ever play, so
yeah, I was pretty happy. The encore was
18+ minutes of awesome with a nice jammed out “Yarmouth” and the first MGB
version of Little Feat’s “Skin it Back” since 3/18/12. Considering that one of their tour busses
broke down on the overnight drive from San Francisco to Portland, forcing two
busses worth of people on to one, the band showed remarkable energy and
fluidity under the circumstances.
I: Radio Blues, When
Doves Cry, Foggy Mountain Special, Better Off, Broken Highways, White
Freightliner Blues, 200 Miles to Montana, All Four, Road to Nowhere
II: Depot Bay, Coming in From the Cold, Train Junkie, Into the Rafters, I’m Still Here, Through the Trees, Gold Rush, Gumboots, Tarpology, Bringing in the Georgia Mail
II: Depot Bay, Coming in From the Cold, Train Junkie, Into the Rafters, I’m Still Here, Through the Trees, Gold Rush, Gumboots, Tarpology, Bringing in the Georgia Mail
E: Drink Up and Go Home
I’ll
always remember this night since earlier that day we had to put our long time dog
Althea down. Obviously my mind was in a
very weird place for this one but when they busted out a 16+ minute version of
Prince’s “Doves Cry” I temporarily forgot my grief. Flatt & Scruggs “Foggy” was the absolute
perfect comedown after such a powerful opening jam. “Broken Highways” was a very fitting song
considering the day we had and somewhat put my grief in perspective. “200 Miles” came next and I was able to
forget again since I love that song.
“All Four” stretched to 17 minutes and The Talking Heads’ “Road to
Nowhere” closed a strong set down properly.
“Depot
Bay” was on the list of songs I really wanted to hear and made for a great
opener. Bob Marley’s “Coming in From the
Cold” was a nice setup for the nearly 16-minute “Train Junkie.” “Rafters” was another tune on my “list” and
at this point it seemed like they were tailoring the setlist to my
preferences. Dave Bruzza did a really
nice job handling the vocals on John Hartford’s “I’m Still Here.” Paul Simon’s “Gumboots” was a great call late
in the show and set up the final big jammer of the evening, a 13-minute version
of “Tarpology.” Reno and Smiley’s
“Georgia Mail” and Freddie Hart’s “Drink Up” were solid closer and encore choices
respectively since the real business had already been taken care of. It was a very fitting way for Althea to be
remembered.
3)
10/30/14 • theNEWDEAL • Las Vegas, NV • Brooklyn Bowl (2nd show)
setlist unknown
If I had a dollar for every person that said to me “You
are doing a late night show prior to three nights of Phish?” I’d have been a
rich man. 40 is just a number
people. Anyway, without the setlist it’s
really hard for me to break down this show.
Suffice it to say tND brought some extreme heat over their two sets, the
first of which started just after midnight.
One takeaway from this show besides the music was that the Brooklyn Bowl
is a top notch venue. If you are ever in
Sin City you should check it out, even if you aren’t seeing a show.
2) 9/9/14 • Trey Anastasio • Portland, OR •
Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall (1st show)
I: First Tube, Frost, Divided Sky, Brian and Robert, Stash, Time Turns
Elastic
II: Guyute, Architect, Petrichor*, You Enjoy Myself
E: Water in the Sky
* debut
I’ve seen Trey in several configurations but never
before with a full orchestra backing him.
I rolled solo for this show although I knew plenty of people in
attendance. There’s something I really
enjoy about seeing shows alone and being completely in charge of my own
destiny, but I digress. I had second row
seats for this one just off center to the right and I couldn’t have asked for
anything better. All the post-show
reports of chattiness and rude phans not paying attention had zero affect on
me. I literally did not hear them at
all.
When “First Tube” dropped I immediately understood
this would be a different, almost once in a lifetime, experience. The power of the full orchestra was truly
something to behold, especially from so close up. “Divided Sky” worked as perfectly in the
orchestral setting as “First Tube” did.
“Brain and Robert” was the biggest surprise of the evening in terms of
songs that I never thought I’d hear with an orchestra. “Stash” brought things back to the “composer
level” and I even saw some of the players shooting glances at each other like
“this is more difficult than I thought it would be.”
Everyone knew “TTE” was coming and I guess a good
portion of the crowd didn’t even give it a chance. From my seat I totally enjoyed it and got a
full understanding of how Trey really did write it for this setting. “Guyute” also shone brightly with bits of “My
Friend” worked in here and there. The
highlight of the night by far for me was the debut performance of “Petrichor.” I could not believe how good it sounded and
it gave me a new appreciation for Trey’s musical genius. Just the fact that he could think up
something like that is impressive enough, much less pull it off with
aplomb.
“YEM” was as good as you’d expect it to be but
“Petrichor” almost made “YEM” anticlimactic, if that’s really possible. “Water” was mailed in to me but a lot of the
players looked tired by then so I understood.
A good friend of mine stealth recorded this show and I’ve heard that it
came out pretty good. Here’s to hoping
he (cough::Dean::cough) finds the time to post it this year. It’s really too good to never hear again.
Baton Rouge, The Sun is Shining Down, Back to Mississippi,
The Meeting, Shine, Hide & Seek, Another Way to Dance, Karmic Debt, Let Me
Leave, Brighter Days, Marmalade > Jamaica Nights > Marmalade, Yard Man,
Home, She’s on Fire, Summertime in New Orleans, Shake > Mannish Boy >
Shake
E: Annabel, ???, Lochloosa, For All We Know
This was my first fully seated show at the
McDonald…in maybe ever. It really didn’t
detract from the show at all, in fact, it probably enhanced it. I had no expectations for what SSA would
bring to the table and that’s probably a factor in why I was so blown away, but
let me backup a bit.
SSA is J.J. Grey, Luther Dickinson, Anders Osborne
and Marc Broussard. The story goes that
it was Grey’s idea to get some of his fellow Southerners together to try and
capture the ambiance of sitting around a campfire, telling stories and singing
songs. Well let me tell you, it worked,
and probably better than J.J. could have ever imagined.
Broussard was the only guy that I wasn’t familiar
with and he opened the festivities with a cover of Frankie Miller’s “Baton
Rouge.” He pulled it off so perfectly
that the audience was immediately drawn in giving the stage their full
attention. The guys on stage were
equally impressed since Marc had just heard the song for the first time earlier
that day. Grey went next but Anders
stole his thunder by claiming he was sick (he did sound terrible) and then
absolutely belting out “Back to Mississippi.”
To hear him talk and sound like death and then sing like a complete mad
man and sound so good was amazing. That
made two big highlights for me in the first three songs if you are keeping
score.
Luther went next and that is how they proceeded all
night until the encore, Marc > J.J. > Anders > Luther. Osborne and Dickinson were the clear MVPs
since they were constantly changing instruments to back the others up. Luther played a lot of bass, some mandolin and a single
string on a can thing while Anders switched between electric axes. The chatter amongst the musicians on stage
was pretty funny at times and they weren’t afraid to involve the audience in
the banter either.
The next big highlight for me was Luther doing “Yard
Man.” Let me just say that I can relate
to the story he told prior and to the lyrics of the song. It’s almost like he wrote it about me! Anders’ “Summertime” was also good but his
voice started to fail a little toward the end.
The “Shake” sandwich around Muddy Waters “Mannish Boy” was really a nice
way to close it out with Grey killing “Boy.”
The encore started with Anders doing his second
ballad of the evening and then moved to Luther doing an instrumental. J.J. saved the best for last absolutely
slaughtering his anthem “Lochloosa.”
It’s not a stretch to say that Broussard has the best sheer pipes of the
bunch and he decided to show them off for the final tune of the evening. He stepped to lip of the stage without a mic
and belted out John Coots’ “For All We Know” straight a cappella without any
instrumentation from the other guys. It
was a ballsy move but he managed to pull it off.
Overall I’d say Anders won over a ton of new fans in
Eugene and he’d be wise to come back soon to capitalize on that. The peeps of Eugene already loved Luther and
he only enhanced that reputation with his versatility and showmanship. Marc was the most unknown of the group (to me
at least) and he made a definite impression with his string of heartfelt
songs. The biggest kudos have to go to
J.J. though. Not only was it his idea,
but he handpicked the players and made it happen as well. He also was able to supplant his ego being
that he wasn’t the most talented guy on the stage by any means. I feel fortunate to have seen this bunch of
guys in this setting. It’s not something
I’ll soon forget.
Top
2 Phish Shows
I:
Sample in a Jar, The Wedge, 555, Heavy Things,
Wolfman’s Brother, Halfway to the Moon, Bouncing Around the Room, Kill Devil
Falls, Train Song, Waiting All Night, Axilla, A Song I Heard the Ocean Sing
II: Birds of a Feather, Ghost > Theme From the Bottom > Cities >
Chalk Dust Torture, Martian Monster
III: Dem Bones* > Auld Lang Syne, The Dogs, Tweezer, Simple > Limb By
Limb, Bug, Backwards Down the Number Line, The Horse > Silent in the Morning, Julius
E: Golgi Apparatus, Tweezer Reprise
* debut
It was great to be back in Miami for the third time
on New Year’s Eve. There’s something to
be said for seeing a show in shorts and a t-shirt while everyone back home is
freezing. We had great seats straight on
in the lower bowl just left of center (thanks Dean). The first set really didn’t have much to
write home about other than a phunky mid-set “Wolfman’s” and a top-notch
version of “ASIHTOS” to close the set.
When “Birds” kicked off set two it seemed like maybe
NYE wouldn’t pack that much punch but then “Ghost” started up and that notion
went right out the window. This “Ghost”
featured two distinct jam sections over its 16+ minutes before a buttery smooth
segue led into “Theme.” This was no
ordinary “Theme” though as the boys created a rocking jam after the composed
section and took it for a nice ride. As
the jam was winding down you could hear Trey was trying to lead the rest of the
band somewhere and the transition into The Talking Heads’ “Cities” was expertly
pulled off (again). After a nice phunk
workout the boys had one more solid segue left in them and “Chalk Dust” closed
down 48+ minutes of “Grade A” Phish. The
set could have ended there and most people would have been happy but the second
ever version of “Martian Monster” was a much better choice to get people ready
for the countdown to come.
James Johnson’s “Bones” was used as the setup for
the NYE “gag,” if you want to call it that.
After singing “Bones” barbershop quartet style Fish stepped up to the vacuum
for a solo only to have his Electrolux get stuck to his face. After a few minutes of trying to pull it off
Mike had the idea to flip the switch on the vacuum “from suck to blow.” As luck would have it that worked and there was
a big explosion and then a giant balloon of Fishman ascending to the ceiling of
the arena during “Auld Lang Syne.” When “The
Dogs” started up a massive amount of balloons dropped from the ceiling creating
a classic NYE scene all over AAA.
The meat of the third set was a 17-minute “Tweezer”
that had the whole place moving in unison.
“Simple > LxL” was the last highlight of the evening as the rest of
the third set kind of fizzled from there with several questionable song
choices in a row. That said, the run from “ASIHTOS”
through “LxL” was high-quality Phish well worth the price of admission. With a visit to the rage cage and a Heavy
Pets sunrise show yet to come the night was still young as we exited on to
Biscayne Boulevard.
I: Buried Alive, Ghost, Scent of a Mule, Sample in a Jar, Reba, 46 Days,
Big Black Furry Creature From Mars, Lawn Boy, Saw it Again, Tube, Wolfman’s
Brother
II: The Haunted House*, The Very Long Fuse*, The Dogs*, Timber*, Your Pet
Cat*, Shipwreck*, The Unsafe Bridge*, The Chinese Water Torture*, The Birds*,
Martian Monster*
III: Punch You in the Eye, Golden Age > Tweezer > Heavy Things, Guyute,
Sand > Tweezer Reprise
E: Is This What You Wanted*, Frankenstein**
* debut
** last time played 7/1/12 (100 shows)
Any write up about this show has to start with the
madness that was getting in. It was like
three huge lanes of people that had to merge into one check point, just utter
chaos. Our delay getting in caused us to
miss out on getting a Phishbill but luckily for me Angel had an extra that she
was willing to part with post show. Once
inside we settled into our straight-on seats in the lower level (thanks Mom)
and were ready to rock.
As opposed to the first set from 10/31/13 this show
got started right away with Halloween themed tunes. “Buried Alive” was a very fitting opener and
the second slot “Ghost” almost reached 10 minutes. You could kind of already tell that something
special was afoot and the antics in a 10+ minute “Mule” did nothing to derail the
momentum. “Reba” was well placed and
juxtaposed a hard rocking “46 Days” really well. The first “BBFCFM” in 87 shows continued the
Halloween theme and by “Lawn Boy” we needed a break.
I was totally pumped to hear “Saw it Again” and even
though I wish they would have stretched it out some the drop into “Tube” made
me immediately move on from that thought.
A 10+ minute and very strong version of “Wolfman’s” made it five
Halloween themed songs in set one so I was satisfied on multiple levels.
At set break we borrowed someone else’s Phishbill
for a minute but somehow all we got out of it was that Phish was improvising a
score to a fictitious haunted house. “Cool”
we thought, but not really someone else’s album. It wasn’t until after the show that we
realized they actually covered “Chilling, Thrilling Sounds of the Haunted
House,” a Disney album from 1964. It
didn’t really matter because once the stage was transformed into a graveyard
with a giant haunted house in the middle that was all we could talk about.
The musical cover set started with a creepy voice
over about a haunted house delivered by a ghoulish lady that emerged from
Esther’s tomb. When the band started
playing “The Haunted House” you could tell they were inside the house on the stage
but we couldn’t see them…yet anyway. It
wasn’t until the end of “The Very Long Fuse” that the top of the haunted house collapsed
to reveal the band inside. They were
wearing zombie makeup, white tuxedos and performing facing each other rather
than the crowd.
After everyone was done cheering like crazy the in
between song narration started up again and they tore into “The Dogs” and it
was really on. During all these songs
Page was triggering the actual sound effects from the album on his keyboard at
various strategic points during their playing and it worked really well. When the screeching of “Your Pet Cat” started
up I have to admit I was thinking “Wild dogs and now cats, how cheesy.” But I was very wrong as “Cat” erupted into a
straight up dance party. The entire MGM
could not get enough and it was during this song that a switch flipped in my
head and I “got it.” I fully understood
what they were doing and appreciated it even more.
The closing trio of songs really brought things home
in style. “The Chinese Water Torture”
was the somewhat mellow setup for the power of “The Birds.” “The Birds” hit hard and kept on hitting with
many well timed “They Attack” effects from Page. By this point EVERYONE in the place was going
absolutely bonkers and “Martian Monster” would take that energy and double down
on it. The sound bite in its entirety was
“Due to the incredible speed of your rocket, your trip is short.” Trey decided to vamp on the “Your trip is
short” portion and he did it oh so well.
All the other songs were between 4-6 minutes but “The Birds” went to 9+
and “Martian” made 14. The band was
having so much fun with our trip being short that it seemed like they didn’t
want to leave the stage, and we didn’t want them to either, but as with all
things it had to end.
At set break looking around the arena all there were
was jaws on the floor and people looking at each like “What just happened?” and
we still had another set to go! It’s
been a while since I was at a Phish show were I knew history was being made in
the moment and what made this show different was that EVERYONE knew the same in
real time.
“PYITE” was the perfect third set opener taking the
crowd’s intensity and boomeranging it around the intimate MGM. TV on the Radio’s “Golden Age” transformed
the place into a dance party and then “Tweezer” straight up imploded the
building. I have to admit I was hoping
for something better than “Heavy Things” next but the band pulled off the
transition so smoothly that I couldn’t complain. “Guyute” was another questionable call to me
but there was no questioning that they played it well and kept the energy
pulsating.
When “Sand” started up I had high hopes and “The
Phish from Vermont” delivered a version that was better than I could have expected. Clocking in at 18 minutes and featuring two
distinct jam sections it seemed like boys didn’t want to stop playing it, which
would have been fine with me and everyone else in attendance. Eventually they segued into “Reprise” and
anything that was left of the roof was completely blown to bits.
The encore of Leonard Cohen’s “Wanted” probably looked better on paper than it came off but it does contain the line “Is this what you wanted, to live in a house that is haunted” so I smelled what they were cooking. Edgar Winter’s “Frankenstein” was a perfect capper to the evening before hitting the sheer madness that was the MGM casino floor on Halloween.
The encore of Leonard Cohen’s “Wanted” probably looked better on paper than it came off but it does contain the line “Is this what you wanted, to live in a house that is haunted” so I smelled what they were cooking. Edgar Winter’s “Frankenstein” was a perfect capper to the evening before hitting the sheer madness that was the MGM casino floor on Halloween.
Back at Kenny’s Sky Loft after the show all the talk
was animated as everyone there realized what had just gone down. There was some best show ever talk, which may
have been a bit too far, but my favorite Halloween experience out of the five
I’ve been to was right on the money.
Even after all this typing I don’t think words can ever truly do the second
set justice so if you have 1:09:16 to spare check out this YouTube video of the
official second set webcast. You won’t
be disappointed.
> The winner of this year’s prestigious and
highly coveted NBA-Jam band on the rise award goes to TAUK from Oyster Bay, NY. They don’t sing but their brand of heavy
instrumental rock fusion will you get out of your seat and moving.
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