Dogs in a Pile Bring Electrifying Jams and Alligator Antics to Denver
- Jessica Blue Smith
This April, Vermont-based neo-psych band Phish and their legions of dedicated phans descended on Las Vegas for a four-night concert run at the new immersive venue simply called Sphere. This revolutionary round room opened in September 2023 with a forty-show residency by Irish band U2, with Phish staking their claim as only the second band to ever perform there. This reviewer attended the bandās April 19th āBicycle Dayā performance at Sphere, my 48th Phish show which fell on the same weekend as my first concert by the band way back in 1993.
Arriving on foot at Sphere on East Sands Avenue was not unlike attending a concert at an arena, with the impressive yet imposing visage resembling Epcot Center at Disneyworld, and the requisite confusion of crisscrossing lines entering the venue. The inside experience was more streamlined, with escalators guiding concert-goers to the proper levels to their seats. Although some attendees expressed trepidation about ascending and descending the steeper stairs, the aisle stairs were just around a 45-degree angle as is common in the upper levels of hockey arenas.
Familiar Phish sounds were audible moments before the band members appeared onstage, with a pre-recorded instrumental emanating from the speakers throughout the Sphere. The recording was very similar to the bandās song āFreeā but with electronic drums that sounded a bit like techno-Phish. As the lights dropped, the Phabulous Phour took to the stage and promptly kicked off the show with a full version of the liberating launchpad āFree.ā
Suddenly, the vast backdrop of the 367-foot-tall venue erupted into a cascading rainbow of colors that dripped down the interior wall of the Sphere like technicolor lava. The āFreeā-flowing jam accelerated in pace, with the band members clearly energized by the panoramic visuals and crowd awe, lasting nearly ten minutes before reaching its conclusion.
After catching their breaths, the band started into āThe Moma Dance,ā with Mike āCactusā Gordon and āChairman of the Boardsā Page McConnell holding down the groove on bass and clavichord respectively. A round fish-eye lens of the band and crowd was projected immediately above the band while the bandās lightman āfifth memberā Chris Kuroda took more of a back-seat role, limited to accenting the band with six vertical light towers instead of his customary mammoth light rig that typically accompanies Phishās live performances.
āAxillaā got the crowd dancing and head-banging. The Sphere nearly spun off its axis on this foot stomper, accentuated by monochrome stripes which rotated through every conceivable angle. As the band continued into a spacey jam, it became clear that this was actually āAxilla part 2ā from their album Hoist, even rarer in their live performances.
The first ballad of the night came next in the form of āmercy.ā The spotlight turned back to the bandās frontman guitarist/vocalist Trey Anastasio, giving him a chance to showcase his introspective, sentimental side. As the Sphere visage transformed into an oceanic underwater view, animated seabirds began to swim and fly through, up and over the water.
āBathtub Ginā used to be one of my favorite Phish songs to see performed live. However, I couldnāt help but groan as its opening notes rang out, due to seeing them play it so often in recent years ā including three out of my last four Phish shows. āBeen there, done that,ā I mused during its intro, although I couldnāt have been more wrong. The deep-sea view was suddenly filled with images of people haplessly wafting on pool floats, morphing in and out of focus into a vast, swirling cascade of ascending and descending columns of multi-colored hues. As was the case with āFree,ā the jam quickened in pace and intensity in a frenzied foray of psychedelia. Although Iāve seen the band play āBathtub Ginā nearly twenty times, I had never heard the centerpiece jam performed with such speed and vivacity, proving me wrong about the validity of the songās inclusion.
The aquatic motif continued as Pageās piano rang in the opening notes of āTheme from the Bottom.ā Suddenly the stage sank to the bottom of the ocean, providing a dazzling display complete with undersea plant life, scuba divers, and yes, fish. The patiently-played āThemeā dipped into a dark, trippy Type II jam, musically delving into minor chords for the first time in this concert of mostly dominant major chords.
Speaking of themes: the four nights of the groupās Sphere run were tied together by a unifying theme, with each night depicting an elemental state of matter. By this point in the show, it was evident that this eveningās concert was represented by liquid / water, the most apropos of the elemental states for a band named Phish.
Itās like seeing your favored band inside of a planetarium; however instead of merely displaying stars, Sphere is an imaginarium that can conjure any setting or place that the mind can conceive. It is a world of pure imagination, like Wonkavision for concert-goers.
āSplit Open & Meltā concluded the first set with another favorite that Iāve seen performed live more often than I can count, a welcome addition on this night as well. As the band voyaged into the āSO&Mā jam in near darkness, a series of iridescent wormholes began to open on the curved visage above the stage, warping the Sphere into interstellar bliss and providing the eveningās trippiest moments for the ears and eyes.
The group returned to the stage after intermission with the happy-go-lucky āA Wave of Hope,ā an uncommon set-starter which the band first debuted a few years ago. The celebratory middle segment was accentuated by geometric shapes resembling flowers and ghastly apparitions, giving way to a blue haze as the foursome took the jam into unfamiliar territory that ebbed and flowed before swelling to a gorgeous conclusion after eighteen minutes.
Up next was āWhatās the Use,ā a poignant instrumental highlighted by Anastasioās yearning guitar lead containing hints of āThe Curtain With.ā Magnified images of the band bathed in blue appeared above the stage behind a sublime starscape.
āRuby Wavesā followed as another relatively new addition to the bandās vast catalog. While the jam didnāt quite reach the legendary status of their expanded version from Daytonās Nutter Center last fall, its peak yielded one of this eveningās most lauded and applauded segments under a magenta rainbow. āLonely Tripā has an arrangement reminiscent of the Temptations and early R&B but with less soul, presented here in a sedated format sans drums.
Following four uncommon songs recognizable only to the most ardent Phishheads was āA Song I Heard The Ocean Sing.ā The Sphere plunged back underwater amidst bioluminescent jellyfish, kelp and sub-aquatic life as the musical tension increased then released, turning the minor-driven āASIHTOSā into a blissful Type II jam of suspended majors. Anastasio utilized delay and doubling effects during his zany lead, eventually segueing into the fanciful āPrince Caspian.ā
During āCaspianā the venue was transformed into a majestic Olympian Colosseum with gigantic columns of ancient Greek architecture, while remaining underwater. After the requisite sing-along refrain, Trey dazzled the crowd with rapid-fire hammer-ons while dueling with Pageās piano at the songās peak. The dynamics faded to near silence for a moment, before Gordon and Anastasio commenced with the introductory notes of āYou Enjoy Myself.ā
āY.E.M.ā is a rollicking rollercoaster from Phishās first album Junta, one of their oldest songs described in detail in previous reviews. When played accurately as on this night, the composition is typically uniform and unvarying, rarely if at all differing until its closing section.
What set āY.E.M.ā apart on this night was the vivid visual of the screen transforming into a giant car wash named the Tunnel of Luv, with the entire audience riding along as passengers in the car. Trey and Mike momentarily levitated on trampolines as they are typically inclined, with Gordo laying it heavy on the flanger during his bass solo. As they reached the a capella āvocal jam,ā the drying phase of the car wash was assumed by a giant black dog ā its head three hundred feet tall ā with its enormous tongue licking the screen clean. Of all the memorable visuals created by Moment Factory for display at Sphere during Phishās run, this was the most humorous and pictorial.
After slipping off-stage momentarily for a quick encore break, the band returned with āWading in the Velvet Sea.ā Anastasio mercifully lent the lead vocal duties to McConnell for a ravishing rendition of this ballad. Pageās vocals used to be much more commonplace in Phish shows; however over the past decade plus it is typically all about Trey, who sang lead on every other song in this setlist.
Just when their phans were ready to head for the exits, the quartet catapulted into the reggae intro of āHarry Hood.ā This song about a Lothario milkman is one of the groupās oldest songs dating back to 1985, rarely varying in its form and presentation from night to night, similar to āY.E.M.ā However as with most songs performed on this night, the band added a little special sauce to compliment the impressive visuals. Drummer Jon Fishman was particularly percussive, adding polyrhythmic flares to the centerpiece jam. It was a triumphant and rip-roaring finale to an exalted, exceptional night, lauded as the favorite of the four Sphere concerts by many in attendance.
How is the Sphere concert experience different from a regular arena or concert hall? Itās like seeing your favored band inside of a planetarium; however instead of merely displaying stars, Sphere is an imaginarium that can conjure any setting or place that the mind can conceive. It is a world of pure imagination, like Wonkavision for concert-goers. The sound itself was exceptional and crystalline even in the 400 level, owing to hidden speakers in each row, an impeccable improvement over the boomy sounds audible in the upper levels of most concert venues.
In an interview with CBS News conducted on the same day as this performance, Anastasio referred to live concert experiences at Sphere as an āentirely new form of entertainmentā with the objective to āshow, not tellā the stories behind the songs. This description is completely accurate to this reviewer after experiencing the most stunning and artistically inventive Phish concert Iāve ever witnessed over three decades.
As Phish takes a brief pause to prepare for their upcoming tour, the Sphere spotlight turns to Dead & Company as they embark on a twenty-four show residency that started this past weekend. Stay tuned for a Psychedelic Scene review of an upcoming Dead & Company concert at Sphere.
Anastasio is currently on tour with his eponymous project Trey Anastasio Band, with Phishās next concert scheduled for July 19th at Xfinity Center in Mansfield, Massachusetts to begin their 2024 summer tour.
– Bill Kurzenberger
PHISH 4/19/2024 Sphere, Las Vegas, Nevada
Set I: Prerecorded Free intro(2) -> Free (9), Moma Dance (9), Axilla part II (17), mercy (6), Bathtub Gin (14), Theme From the Bottom (15) -> Split Open & Melt (15)
Set II: A Wave of Hope (18), Whatās the Use? (8) -> Ruby Waves (12), Lonely Trip (7), A Song I heard the Ocean Sing (11) -> Prince Caspian (9) -> You Enjoy Myself (17)
Encores: Wading in the Velvet Sea (12), Harry Hood (13)
Sign up for our mailing list to receive updates on trending stories, featured music articles, artist highlights and much more!