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Review by fhqwhgads
Down with Disease stays in Type-I territory for a while before evolving into a kind of Floydesque slower-tempo jam that eventually finds its way into the long-lost Olivia's Pool (Olivia's Pool was reworked into Shafty by the time the Island Tour happened.) Johnny B. Goode's composed portion is interesting--and I'm gonna make the dreaded comparison here--in its contrast to Grateful Dead renderings of the Chuck Berry classic, but the Denver Jam (as it's labelled on the Live Phish release) is also quintessentially Phish, and again, fonk be hangin'. The funk is nimble and tight before giving way into some Fall-'94-esque deconstruction, and in my opinion an early glimpse of what one reviewer called the "twinkling psychedelia" of Big Cypress. Legitimate segue into Jesus Just Left Chicago, which proves a PTer whose handle I can't remember, wrong, when he or she claimed that "Trey can't play blues." Page's vocals are on point, per usual. Circus bridges the exploratorier portion of the set with the set closer, YEM. Few countoffs elicit the certainty of reaction that Trey's "1, 2, 1, 2, 3, 4" for YEM does amongt phans. Not exactly a YEMmer's YEM, as there are a few flubs or fudged notes, but the bass & drums segment showcases the Fall '97 cowfunk to a T. The encore has zero character, it's just really unpersonable. Just kidding, of course! Character Zero's a great, fist-pumping victory lap on most occasions, and this one seems to have a more laid-back feel than some I've heard, but I'm not watching Trey probably jump off his amps and play behind his back with his teeth and so forth, so YMMV. Live Phish 11 contains the 11/19/97 Wolfman's -> Makisupa, which is a great extended Wolfman's and definitely worth purchasing this show for (the filler is included in the LivePhish.com download.) Amazing show, and many would contend that it's not even their favorite of the tour! What does that great, gaping grin portend? Stay tuned if you're listening through the tour for chills and thrills.