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The Mockingbird Foundation is a non-profit organization founded by Phish fans in 1996 to generate charitable proceeds from the Phish community.
And since we're entirely volunteer – with no office, salaries, or paid staff – administrative costs are less than 2% of revenues! So far, we've distributed over $2 million to support music education for children – hundreds of grants in all 50 states, with more on the way.
Most of the people at a show haven't heard every version of Tweezer, YEM, Mike's Groove, SOAM, Stash, Bowie, Antelope, etc, not to mention most if not all of the Phish shows in circulation. The folks reviewing shows for the Phish.net blog have a ludicrous amount of Phish listening experience compared to the average Phish fan at a show. For some of us, this was true even in the early 1990s. (And if you're reading this, you're not an "average Phish fan at a show" by the way. Phish fans who regularly visit online Phish websites make up a small percentage of those who attend Phish concerts.)
If a Phish.net blogger reviewed a Phish show from the perspective of a typical showgoer, nearly every review would be a rave about how wonderful everything was -- "energy" or "vibe," setlist, sound, lights, etc. If you want to read that, you'll likely find such a review elsewhere online. (aka the "It's All Hood" review) Go for it. The Phish.net bloggers necessarily criticize Phish shows from the perspective of not only a show-going vet, but a show-listening vet. Their experience is unlikely to conform with yours unless (at the very least) you share a similar base of Phish experience, but even then, of course, you may not see ear-to-ear with them on everything. The folks behind the scenes on Phish.net get into debates all the time about the music, unless something is demonstrably superior to most if not all of the versions of the song in question over the course of Phish history (e.g., SuperBall's Mound and Mighty Quinn).
We don't always agree with each other, of course, and don't expect everyone else to agree with us, either. And the blog posts are of course just the two cents of the blogger in question, and not that of "Phish.net." But unless you take an "It's All Hood" approach, I would bet $$$$$ that the more Phish experience you have, the more likely your opinions about the music will jive with that of a typical Phish.net blogger's more often than not. Your perspective will change the more Phish you hear and the more Phish shows you see. Thankfully we're all different, of course, and there's room under the tent for everyone's opinions -- no matter how profoundly ignorant they may appear to be to you.