Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Phish Berkeley 2010: Home of Elvis and the Ancient Greeks


The Phish shows in Berkeley at the Greek Theatre included probably the most ridiculous ticket debacle I have ever seen as people tried desperately to score tickets for the 8500 person theatre playing host to the only west coast Phish shows of the summer. I saw everything from $350 tickets to tickets that had been sold on Stubhub and subsequently canceled to people buying three fake Ticketmaster tickets outside for $250 each. $750 in fake tickets?!?! I think I would be deeply depressed had that happened to me. Luckily, I was able to get the first two nights on the initial onsale and trade a friend's extra for a Saturday. Tickets in hand, locked and loaded, I began my voyage down the coast to the Bay Area. After a stop at the Bier Stein and Ninkasi Brewing Company in Eugene, Mad River Brewing in Blue Lake, and Russian River Brewing in Santa Rosa, I was fully Pliny'd and ready to roll.

I arrived at the Greek around 3PM on Thursday to find line duty fully underway. When we got inside, I realized it was tarper city, with people for some reason thinking it would be OK to put tarps down on the best seats to save room for their 12 friends that didn't wait in line all day. I was in a good mood this night, so I took a first row lawn seat in the center (one of the only flat spots on the whole lawn - you need grappling gear to dance on the rest of it). Possum opener and the crowd was VERY energetic. The Wolfman's Brother had a nice jam in it that made me excited for the potential jamming to come the rest of the weekend. Divided Sky was nice as it was in such a great venue, and Funky Bitch and Haley's Comet were fun too. I found the rest of the first set to be a little boring, and the Antelope did not hit the peaks and valleys that it did in the ATL.

Second set opened with Down with Disease (surprise, surprise), and the Free that followed felt great after Hornings and the good drive to SF. More snoozing until Maze, which was high energy. Then came Joy, which I love. The funny thing is, seemingly, most other people do not care for it as the energy was quickly sucked out of the venue and everyone started chatting, sitting, heading for the bathroom, grabbing a beer, etc. Essentially, whatever it is you do when you are bored and unhappy at a show, everyone was doing during Joy except me. Which is fine by me, I can carry the load for a little while. The Tweezer had some decent jamming in it, and they closed the set with Fluffhead (always been a little too composed for my tastes). The Loving Cup encore apparently saw Trey on a new guitar, and the Tweeprise closed the show, of course. All in all a decent show, but not great. I would say it was about average for the Phish shows that I have seen with me being bored about 50% of the time. No late night for me that night as I really needed a good night's sleep.

Friday saw the same ticket and line insanity out front. Luckily I was able to score a couple seats in the concrete near the top on the left side. What a difference it made for the sound, sights, and overall experience. I had been to the Greek a few times before but never sat in those seats. Now, I will make it a point to try to get them every show. I don't know if it was me getting a better seat or what, but Friday's show was night and day with Thursday. I was only bored 15% of the time, and I was VERY impressed with the jamming coming out of the VT boys. Kuroda was amazing on lights all weekend, but I thought he particularly shined Friday night. The show opened high energy again with Chalkdust Torture, and then they gave us a two song pee break with Guyute and Ocelot. The It's Ice brought me back to my seat just in time for the Cities->Moma Dance->Bathtub Gin->Stealing Time. This segment could have been great. Like really, really, really great. And the Cities->Moma Dance were. But they kind of phoned in the Gin jam and rushed through Stealing Time. Still, the Cities->Moma and the jam in between had me ecstatic at set break. Finally!! A jam band that jammed!!

Second set on Friday opened with Rock and Roll (again, surprise, surprise), and quickly got very interesting. The Ghost->Mike's Song->Simple->Backwards Down the Number Line was again top shelf Phish, with an amazing jam coming before and after Simple. Trey destroyed any hope of a smooth transition between Ghost and Mikes by disregarding the rest of the band and beginning to play the next song (a la Caspian->Tweezer in ATL and I'm sure dozens of other times in Phish 3.0). Again, maybe I'm being overly critical, because the jamming took me to a place I don't know that I've gotten to in 2010. Show of Life sounded like a great song with awful, cheesy lyrics (par for the course these days I suppose). Seven Below was short (thank goodness) and segued into a decent Weekapaug. The You Enjoy Myself was awesome, and the drum and bass part before the vocal jam was especially funky. Good Times Bad Times encore, and I just saw my favorite Phish show out of any I've seen in 3.0 (Knoxville, Bonnaroo, Gorge, 8, ATL, Greek).

Since it was Friday night, and we were in one of the greatest cities in the world, I decided to run over to one of the greatest venues in the city and check out Bill Kreutzman's new band the 7 Walkers featuring Papa Mali, George Porter Jr., and some dude on piano. The band was OK, but the room was really fun and Greek->Great American Music Hall is a sick one-two punch. To everyone's (seemingly) surprise Jon Fishman took over drum duties for Deal and Morning Dew. A few songs later, Mike Gordon emerged to take over bass during Going Down the Road Feeling Bad. Neither of them rocked it like they had the previous few hours, but it was cool to see them out and having fun nonetheless. A quick bite at Tommy's Joynt, and that was a wrap on an amazing Bay Area day. Did I mention the weather was phenomenal the entire time we were in the city?

Saturday I was a little more disorganized and did not get to the venue in time to get a concrete seat. No way I was going back to Mt. Everest on the lawn again, so I got a nice spot on the floor. I braced myself for crowdedness, but it did not get that bad the whole show imo. Maybe I was just burnt out from such a good time the night before, but Saturday let me down a little bit, and I didn't feel like the jamming was anywhere near as innovative or deep as Friday. The first set bored me to tears, though the Reba had a decent jam.

The second set did not interest me all that much either. Of course there was a pretty jam out of Light, but that song is so bad imo that the jam can never make up for it (unless, of course, we're talking Gorge Light). Hood was good, and everything else seemed fairly well played. The Theme->2001 was good but not very experimental. I never liked Suzy, but it was energetic, and Slave was a good version to close the set. The Lizards encore was way cool, and (gasp!) they finished the show with First Tube. Again, the playing was good, but it seems like I see most of these songs every show and there is never any creative jamming (Type II) that differentiates one experience from another.

Since I had to fly out early on Sunday AM, I decided to pull an all nighter and check out the EOTO with Kang and Kyle and Hamsa Lila party in Richmond at the Craneway Pavilion. Again, I didn't bring my camera in (I definitely suck at that game come late night). After a short drive to one of the sketchiest cities in the country, I was pleasantly surprised to find a good sized venue nestled in the dock with a great view of Berkeley, Oakland, Bay Bridge, SF, etc. I got there just in time for Hamsa Lila, who I had not seen in probably five years. I thought they were as good if not better than they were back then. There were three large screens spanning the whole warehouse behind the band with decent visionary and psychedelic artwork projected on them. Hamsa Lila brought out Earnest Ranglin to play guitar. Jason Hann joined them for what might be the best 'Drums' I've ever heard, and Mike Kang added some guitar licks.

Next up was EOTO with Kang and Kyle (SuperEOTO). The first song was ambient and awesome, but the rest of the show seemed to alternate between superb and mediocre. To be honest, I do not like EOTO's music generally speaking, so anytime I thought it sounded like EOTO, I was bored. Kyle was the MVP as he could really make even the boring parts awesome. Kang had some nice fiddle work as he went through the themes to Valley, Rivertrance, and Bumpin Reel in the same song (I think...). The only other SCI part I definitely recognized was the latin breakdown in Texas. About 20% of the show was spectacular, meaning I would have been super stoked if it had come out as a jam at an SCI show. The rest was fairly mindless and uncreative imo. If you had told me 10 years ago that I'd be watching these guys play dubstep, I would have called you a liar (and asked what dubstep was). But, they are doing it now, and at least the vibes on stage seemed amicable with no Nershi. During the second or third dubstep jam, I was over it and headed to the airport.

Leaving the West Coast is never my favorite part of the trip, but at least I'm coming home with some beautiful memories. I ate my favorite burritos, drank my favorite beer, saw some of my favorite people, and went to some of my favorite venues. It is a bittersweet feeling to have to say goodbye to these things, but I know I will be back.

Such a long long time to be gone, and a short time to be there... Until next time. MB

1 comment:

  1. HAHAHAHAHAHHAHAH.... i feel so bad for you

    you write a blog for concerts from a band who's catalog bores you more than 50% of the time... and the songs you actually like dont get you off

    you have no clue what you are talking about, nor are you good at living your life

    everyone is not dumber for reading this blog, i award you no points, and may god have mercy on your soul

    ReplyDelete