[Thank you Dianna Hank user @Dianna_2Ns for recapping last night's show in Camden, NJ. -Ed.]
Several times over the course of my Phish-seeing career, the band has played a show that the vast majority of the fanbase has lost their collective (pebbles and) marbles over that I thought was just ok/good. Last night was one of those shows.
Now, before you tar and feather me and revoke my #RealFans card, hear me out. I liked the show! I had a great time, and I thought that “Mr. Completely,” “Twenty Years Later,” and “Tweezer” had some of the best jams of the run, if not tour. That being said, I felt that the rest of the show was up and down in terms of energy, song selection, setlist construction, and technical playing. Would I see it again if given the opportunity? Absolutely! Do I think it’s in the running for best show of tour? Not for me, no.
The show started off in a classically beautiful fashion with the first “The Curtain” of summer tour, building up momentum before dropping into the gorgeous “With” section, destroying any geeks’ excitement that they may finally be able to cross “The Curtain” off their “Most Common Not Seen” list. Mike dropped some core-shaking brown notes as Trey made it through the more difficult segments relatively unscathed. Things continued in a slower manner as the band dusted off the fan-favorite Rift ballad, “Fast Enough For You,” for the first time since Mexico ‘17, closing the longest gap in the song’s history (82 shows). As if they could sense that perhaps the start to the show was, in fact, not quite fast enough for some, the band lit into the ripping “Buried Alive.” Unfortunately, Trey may have gotten a little ahead of himself with this one, as the intro was fumbled quite significantly, which seemed hard to recover from.
The fast-paced energy that was built up by that heater was quickly extinguished in exchange for some slower, dirtier funk with the first “Camel Walk” of 2019. The boys “got funk” for sure, causing hips to swing and booties to shake all over Camden with this very solid take on this tune.
This summer’s second attempt at “Reba” followed which, similar to the first try, included both some flubbed composition as well as a very beautiful jam. Give and take here. The whistling ending led us into the interesting choice of “Sample In a Jar,” which got the crowd singing along and cheering, despite how so many complain about it. "Sample" does, in fact, often rip. However, once again, the energy built up from these peaks seemed to dissipate as Trey switched guitars ahead of the highly sought after Round Room tune, “Pebbles and Marbles.” While the beginning was a bit messy, the jam was quite nice and a perfect tune for dusk. Another rarity, the lovely “Tela,” made an appearance next, as the final bits of sunlight burned through the sky and brought us into the darkness. This year’s first “The Mango Song” got folks dancing again before this year’s first “Driver” had us docilely swaying back and forth yet again during this first set. Finally, those classic high-hat taps started off, and a raging “David Bowie” closed-out the set, breathing some serious fire onto the crowd, albeit a little too late.
After a regulation length setbreak, the boys returned to the stage with a seemingly renewed sense of energy, and treated the crowd to almost an hour’s worth of some serious, high-intensity jamming. Opening the set with the much-sought-after “Mr. Completely,” the band immediately had the audience captivated and hanging onto every note. Clocking in at over 17 minutes, Mr. Completely seemed as if it may be the obvious star of the show; then “Twenty Years Later” showed up. Despite its slower start, "20YL" began to get dark and dirty a mere five minutes in and continued this delightful weirdness for another 16 minutes after that. The jam was multidimensional with a lot of themes broken up into interesting, unique segments, which kept the audience engaged and the jam moving along nicely. It oscillated between beautiful, airy bliss, and dancey, booty-shakin’ grooves. Trey found a little riff that he latched on to, and also revisited often throughout the rest of the show, and the audience lapped-up every bit of it. Even before it was over, I was certain that this was a jam I would be revisiting for many years to come.
After an incredibly satisfying 20+ minutes, the band settled into a quiet, softer space before segueing nicely into… “Big Black Furry Creatures From Mars.” Obviously. This jarring transition in addition to Fish’s “Ass Handed” quotes and Page’s “Your Pet Cat” samples had me laughing quite a bit before that drop into darkness that everyone was waiting for: “Tweezer.”
Here was the energy I’d been longing for all first set! "Tweezer" packed a serious punch in its 13 minutes on this earth with us, featuring some heavy Trey and Mike interplay, as well as a driving beat from Fishman. Trey revisited that catchy riff from "20YL" he was having so much fun playing before Page and Fish settled into a groove which eventually fizzled into a mid-second set “Shade.” White a bit of a divisive tune, this well-deserved breather after those 54 minutes of intensity sat fine with your author. The Page-led “Most Events Aren’t Planned” that followed, however, was less appreciated. Something about the seemingly strained vocals during the 4 minutes of intro put me off my appetite. The jam, on the other hand, fit right in to the rocking, funk-heavy nature of the set. “Makisupa Policeman,” which came next, though, felt like an odd choice, while the subsequent “Chalk Dust Torture” felt reminiscent of the Bangor 2 Set 2 closer, showing up with a bunch of energy a little too late. “Suzy Greenberg” took her regular spot as set closer, as the crowd sang along and glowsticks sailed through the air.
After a short break, the band returned to the stage to treat the crowd to the first “Punch You In The Eye” opener-of-the-encore since 7/31/98, followed by a spectacularly beautiful rendition of “What’s The Use?” appearing in the encore for its first time ever. And then, instead of the “Tweezer Reprise” everyone was expecting and waiting for, the band broke into a standard version of “Julius” to end the show. The quartet left the stage as many sat there in disbelief, certain that if they cheered harder, the band would return to give us the "Tweeprise" we all thought we’d deserved. But, alas… That was unfortunately not the case. Oh well. You can’t always get what you want. Enjoy our Tweeprise, SPAC!
All in all, Camden3 felt like an above-average show that featured several rarities and a few very solid jams that will stand the test of time. Perhaps it comes down to song selection that leads me to favor Charlotte over it as the “show of tour” so far, but that’s what’s so great about Phish. Every show has something for everybody. Glad you all enjoyed it. I’ll see you at Fenway!
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I’m with you. This show was pretty great, but not on Charlotte’s level.
That being said, I'm going to ironically assert that I think last night set II was the best of the tour so far. And while you bring up the vocal strain in Most Events Aren't Planned, the dance party element of the song deserves recognition.
I do appreciate a zag review when I’m expecting a zig...I really do. So thanks. But big black furry was a great call.
EVERY NIGHT.
That's when it mattered.
That's when it was fresh.
Now? It's okay, but it's a profession.
Enjoy chasing your first good 1.0 show....You will never get there again with this band!
The Tweezer hosed us down...
God Bless the PHiSH.
It isn't nearly fast enough for you
It's what I was afraid of
The band sang this song about you
But it isn't nearly fast enough for you
It isn't nearly fast enough for you
I'm unsure why so many people expect an entire show to be a dance party. Sunday was a balanced show, and an incredible one at that. In the constant dance party mentality, there never is a good place for ballads and anything with a slower pace. They always ruin the "flow."
Shun those people. Do not let them into your hearts or your homes.
This was one of those shows where they could take no wrong turn, and just kept giving us what we wanted. Trey was playing with balls in that second set, which is something the Charlotte show lacked. Big peaks and dirty, crunchy guitar. Page was pushing jams all weekend, but he truly drove the machine during Completely and 20YL.
I left incredibly satisfied and dying to hear it again. When I got the chance to today, it took me right back to those moments of awe.
Reviewer must have had a bad headspace, because the only faces I saw were melted.
Perfect setlist construction pales in comparison to thorough shredding and calculated risks, which this show has in spades. This review, while well-articulated and entertaining, smacks of the pervasive one-upmanship I see so much of these days. Here’s one golden rule: if there is that one jam you’ll be “ listening to for years to come” it’s a damn good show and it deserves decent, non-hipster-jaded treatment. Camden 3 has multiple great, original jams and bust outs. I just can’t for the life of me understand downplaying the many upsides here just to make the very tired and self-evident argument that concert experiences are subjective.
I wasn’t in Camden, sadly, but even the most condescending “I’ve seen better” review can’t alleviate the deep sense I have of missing out on something massive.
ok, that's fine and all, but that's like 99% of 3.0 shows. were there some slow songs in the 1st set? sure, but i'll take fefy, driver, tela, pebbles and marbles, and mango song over literally every 1st set this tour. flubs? i think we've all realized they're here to stay and i honestly couldn't care less. slow? gimmie all the bomb ass slow songs in one show and i'll have a fuggin blast. toss in the mr. completely>20yl>bbfcfm>tweezer and this show is an obvious stand out for the year. as others have said, it's kinda weird to get such a contrarian review for an obvious heater.
2. why does it bother you and everyone else so much that someone says a show was good and not great? What on earth does that cost you?
3. Is groupthink ever a good thing? Would you be lining up to suck this show off if it had some GOFT or KV song deep in the second set you didn't like? Are we allowed to not like anything Phish does? If so, why isn't the reviewer allowed to be annoyed by flubbed songs?
4. I happen to think this show is bitchin' from top to bottom, but it's tiring reading these reductive comments shitting on reviewers for actually having an opinion other than "GREATEST SHOW EVARRRR!"
The fundamental point of this review seems to be “phish shows are subjective.” Yeah, we get that. What we don’t get is why you need to throw Shade on what is clearly a standout show in 2019 for fans and band alike. This is Phish trying their collective hardest to further that mystique of both Camden and Sundays in general. No big jams in first set because you have (count em’) FIVE very technical songs, two of which had to be soundchecked first! If you’re going to point out the mistakes (a copious task in 3.0), Mangos needs special mention for how clean a version this was. Don’t gloss over my Mangos! There are times to critique and times to bow down; Camden 3 is one of the latter.
Perfect setlist construction pales in comparison to thorough shredding and calculated risks, which this show has in spades. This review, while well-articulated and entertaining, smacks of the pervasive one-upmanship I see so much of these days. Here’s one golden rule: if there is that one jam you’ll be “ listening to for years to come” it’s a damn good show and it deserves decent, non-hipster-jaded treatment. Camden 3 has multiple great, original jams and bust outs. I just can’t for the life of me understand downplaying the many upsides here just to make the very tired and self-evident argument that concert experiences are subjective.
I wasn’t in Camden, sadly, but even the most condescending “I’ve seen better” review can’t alleviate the deep sense I have of missing out on something massive.
Well... no. The Curtain With has been played less times (40) than The Curtain (119), but The Curtain hasn't been played since
2012 and has only been played twice in 3.0. Subsequently, it's likely to be pretty high on any 3.0er's list.
Would you rate Camden3 higher than the best shows of 2018? I loved this show, but for me it would probably be on a tier just below the best shows of 2018. Which makes it above-average. And it does contain some excellent jams that many of us will revisit for years to come. You know ... like the review says.
The first set had ballads and high energy songs mixed in but the rarity of the ballads made it 100% worth it for. Not to mention a beautiful Reba jam and a high energy Bowie? Let's be honest, when's the last time they nailed the Reba composed section without a few flubs. It's just not going to happen anymore.
Everyone clearly recognizes how good the second set was but I can't agree that the CDT and Suzy were giving energy too late? Did you miss that Tweezer or Most Events Aren't Planned? You have to have some cool downs. Anyway great show.
Beyond that, it’s wtf else do you want out of a Phish show? Bust outs, big jams, huge peaks, risk taking, great energy, long encore, etc... as the one comments said “this just proves that Phishheads will never be happy”.
Honestly, if you took out his mission statement of being contrary and dinky complaints (“there were a few missed notes” and “Makisupa was awkwardly placed”), you would think it was a glowing review of a badass show. In other words, he’s reviewing the show in comparison with everyone else’s review and other shows, right off the bat. Which is naturally going to invite more of the same in the responses.
it is?
However, I have to heartily disagree with one particular "point" that was used twice. It is NEVER "too late," "a little," or otherwise, EVER, in a set/show for high energy.
What does that even mean? Reviewer's credibility notably in question.
For it's one by one a string of pearls we make.
Two n's are in Dianna and they're also in manners,
Both are dope for positive phanners.
Honest and true
Is all you can do
So keep that shit up
Cuz you're the best you
The world is dark,
But you are bright,
Thank you for sharing
Don't stop the light!!!!
PS. You made me want to listen to that 20YL and I cued it up right away. You brought good reviews!