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Has the scene changed a lot?

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ivy_light Permalink
ivy_light I just watched Bittersweet Motel for the first time yesterday. I'm a product of 3.0 so I have no idea what the scene was like in the previous versions. I get the impression from Bittersweet Motel that it has changed quite a bit though.

Has it? If so, what are the good and bad things about the 3.0 scene versus the previous versions?
Score: 2

chrism27 Permalink
I'd say the scene has evolved over time. From my impression when I started seeing the boys in the summer of 93 things were a little more laid back. Shows weren't crowded and it was easy to get tix. 93 to 95 maybe then they really took off and venues got bigger and bigger and it was much more difficult to get tix. Alot more people would show up to the lot without tickets just to party and hope for a miracle. The crowd got younger and younger also. In my opinion, the scene developed an edge to it. The partying was almost out of hand and that's alot coming from me. 3.0 seems different. Better, it seems like a good chunk of fans either didn't come back or matured since then. I like the scene again. It's fun and the band is playing great.
Score: 13

IenjoyMyself Permalink
IenjoyMyself That documentary was filmed in 97. I was 10 years old so not a first hand witness to the scene then, but from the video and my experiences at shows I don't think the scene has chaned to drastically. Still seems to be a mix of all different types of people from hippies to frat boys to lawyers. Dominated by males and people looking for a good time.

Couple of thoughts on things that have probably changed. Personally I do get a sence that people on lot and in shows genuinely feel lucky to be at any given show thy are at. Whether it is someone who saw 1.0 and 2.0 and thought phishs days were over, or someone like me who was too young to see them and never thought he would get to. That feeling matched with the obvious happiness of the band creates an energy that I don't know could've been present even in 97 when the music itself was top notch.

Party scene...probably a few new drugs around since 97, but I don't think too much has changed here. Maybe more pharmy rats as benzos and painkillers have certainly bbecome the drugs of this decade. Also most people within 2-3 ears of my age for some reason think drinking and getting blacked out drunk are the same thing. with that said I think there are a ton more people getting stupid drunk at shows.

again wasn't around in 97 so pure speculation here.
Score: 2

BajaPhish Permalink
BajaPhish @chrism27 said:
I'd say the scene has evolved over time. From my impression when I started seeing the boys in the summer of 93 things were a little more laid back. Shows weren't crowded and it was easy to get tix. 93 to 95 maybe then they really took off and venues got bigger and bigger and it was much more difficult to get tix. Alot more people would show up to the lot without tickets just to party and hope for a miracle. The crowd got younger and younger also. In my opinion, the scene developed an edge to it. The partying was almost out of hand and that's alot coming from me. 3.0 seems different. Better, it seems like a good chunk of fans either didn't come back or matured since then. I like the scene again. It's fun and the band is playing great.
So true, well put
Score: 2

Slothberries Permalink
Slothberries in the mid to late 90's, i used to go to shows without a ticket and ALWAYS get one for face value. it was never a problem. those days are gone. i paid a lot to see them at the garden last weekend.
Score: 1

yoursongtoo Permalink
yoursongtoo That it has become a "scene" is a change in and of itself. Check out Trey's interview with Charlie Rose. He talks about the fact that they didn't like how every show was becoming a party instead of about music. I know it's always been a part of "the scene" (they started playing in bars after all, and while the drugs probably weren't there in the very beginning, I have to imagine it didn't take long), but when shows became about the individual and not about the music, things changed and the band took notice. Just one aspect of it, but certainly worth noting.
Score: 6

bouncintophish Permalink
bouncintophish The scene I've seen is 3.0 to, and boy, its the best bunch of people I've ever seen.

Someone was giving out free hugs after the show!
Score: 4

docbh Permalink
docbh It got a but ridiculous to get tickets in the 2000-2004 era everything just seemed tough and a process. I feel like since the breakup and return the "scene" has definitely shed a lot of leeches...i mean how many shows were not sold out this fall? I think some of the external hype has dropped away and you see more dedicated (wrong word i think) folks at shows.....i feel like the caring has come back into it and the reward is widespread throughout....It still is and always will be a party, but when you leave a show there are a lot less people hanging out outside that opted not to go in or just show up for the scene. I feel things have regained a little more control, for a while the boys were banned from some of our favorite venues much the way it had happened to the Dead. I LOVE whats happening now :)
Score: 3

weaselnamedfee Permalink
After being at MSG last week, i can definitely say that there are more and hotter women going to shows. I think the break-up enabled some dudes to grow up and get attractive girlfriends/wives.
Score: 10

ivy_light Permalink
ivy_light I seems to me that the general type of Phan most prevalent at shows has changed. A lot of people that were around for 1.0 are now all grown up with families and such. As I mentioned in another thread, I recently found out that the average age of a Phan is somewhere in the 30s. In a lot of cases, that means that phans themselves have returned after a hiatus.

3.0 has a lot to offer. I think that as the general phan base has grown up, the scene has become more of a melting pot. At least, that's the impression that I get.

I wasn't into Phish in college (1996-2000) because they were a "hippie" band. And I was a card-carrying punk (green mohawk and everything). I feel that those days have changed. At Deer Creek this past summer I sat next to a pathologist on the lawn. He told me that the scene was not what it used to be but that some of the attributes hadn't changed. There are those there for the music and those there for the party.

I guess what I'm saying is that phans grew up. And the new group of phans (you young ones) has a bit of a different outlook perhaps. I sat next to someone at Worcester who hadn't been to a show since 2000 and she said that touring back in the day was a lot more about the party than the music. Has that really changed? I'm not so sure.

Perhaps that's a bit rambling. I apologize if what I've said doesn't make sense.

I'm really curious to see how, if they have a Phest this summer, it compares to Clifford Ball and The Great Went.
Score: 1

Furry_Thug Permalink
Furry_Thug I too feel that the "scene" has not so much changed, but like someone else said, evolved. These days it's an amazing mix of young and young at heart. It reminds me of '95-'96 when I first started seeing Phish, in that there is more of a community feel that seemed to be lost when they blew-up from '97-'04. Those years did seem to have a rash of "party first, music second", and I'll admit that I was part of it which sucks because there was some amazing stuff being done on stage. The "break" did allow them to shed some of the rif-raf that was around before, those who had to continue the party and latched-on white knuckled to something else (thank you electronica for taking them). It's a bit more pure now with those of us who waited it out side-by-side with those of you who have recently jumped in head first.

The biggest difference I see is in the expectations of the band amongst the crowd, having everything to do with this inter-web thing. Not saying its a bad thing, just that going to a show in the middle of a tour having no idea what had been played or how it was played the previous few nights seemed to bring a collective anticipation and excitement throughout the crowd strictly based on what was happening right then, more-so than there is now. With instant access to everything it's amazing these guys can come out and sound fresh, fairly unpredictable and leave us in awe night after night, tour after tour. I love being able to listen to a show instantly from a thousand miles away because it feeds that Phish jones more days out of the year, but the next time I have tickets to a show I may ban myself from places such as this and livephish.com a month or so before hand just to see if I personally get that amazing lift of anticipation as I walk through the turnstile. It's still there, just not as high. Don't know if it would be possible, but might be worth a try.

All-in-all I love it still, maybe more than ever. Positive vibes and high-fives all around.
Score: 12

forbins0218 Permalink
forbins0218 Yes, yes it has. Some good, some bad.

But it is a scene, always has and always will. It is what you make of it.

If you partake in the nastiness, then the scene will be nasty. If you partake in the headiness then the scene will be heady.

I make it work for me in what ever capacity I can.
Score: 8

ivy_light Permalink
ivy_light I guess what I'm truly amazed by is how the band can attract new fans. It's a timelessness that I think few bands could ever have.
Score: 1

Aloicious4 Permalink
Yes, the scene has changed many a lot....into a street. a Shakedown street. With balloons.
Score: 4

Jayem Permalink
Jayem GApparatus, well done. You hit it on the head. In particular your points regarding the internet. While the internet does create higher expectations from night to night it had also helped bridge the gap during the break up. Fans like Ivy_light and thousands of others would have had a very hard time getting so into the scene. I remember being lost at my first show in 96 and the only way to learn anything was word of mouth. And we all know that fans are not always welcoming to noobs. Regardless, I think the scene is fairly healthy. The shorter tours with longer breaks are welcomed by this guy. It will help keep the rats away!
Score: 2

jackl Phish.net Staff Permalink
jackl To be contrarian, I would say the scene has not changed very much since I got on the bus (Spring '93). At my second show, and my first with my wife, I figured out that the reason that they put the time lots open on the ticket was that the lots were intended as a four hour pre-show party. (That was a revelation, even from a "Deadhead" ;) .

Yes, there are more fans now than then, but I'd argue that the "scene" by and large has not changed. It's still a lot of people who really, really like good music/phish and are mostly nice people (compared to the average stranger). I don't get many negative or indifferent vibes from anyone in a Phish crowd; the "general public", not so much.
Score: 5

ivy_light Permalink
ivy_light Was it really not all that welcoming? I feel welcomed with open arms. But then again, maybe it's just the amazing phish.net :)
Score: 1

Jayem Permalink
Jayem It was welcoming for the most part. I was 16 when I went to my first show and 13 when I got Lawn Boy. I couldnt just google something I wanted to know. I was a part of a lot of awkward conversations. Whos Wilson? What the hell are they saying in YEM? ETC..other than that it was great. As Jackl said, not really too much different
Score: 2

ivy_light Permalink
ivy_light Has the type of phan changed much? Has it always been a mixture of hippie kids and frat boys and lawyers?
Score: 1

PhishSince94 Permalink
@bouncintophish said:
The scene I've seen is 3.0 to, and boy, its the best bunch of people I've ever seen. Someone was giving out free hugs after the show!
I like to say I invented that. Starting in 1999, back in 1.0...just myself or some friends and myself would start free hugs and high fives locations. It worked especially well in Florida NYE 1999 and Hartford 2000....hundreds participating, enthusiastically.

The scenes the same everywhere at it's core. Take a guy who's your average run of the mill loner, quiet guy, even someone you know as an asshole...and see him on Phish tour and he's cool.

Expectations of behavior exist, a code to follow on how to treat people...almost everyone becomes cool at Phish shows. The problem is drunken poeple who get belligerant, and drug addicts that get too spun and unpredictable.

The crowd looks to me to get younger every year, but that's because I'm getting older (first show, age 14...now Im 31)...

but the faces are always smiling and the energy and love truly does echo an eternity from the parking lots and venues.

No matter how nasty and stressful my life has been at times every time I went to a phish show....often by myself...I felt loved, even if just for 4 or 5 hours.
Score: 7

MJZ1974 Permalink
MJZ1974 All great points made so far. Most of my shows (40 or so) were in the "1.0" era so I feel someone should acknowledge the proverbial "big white elephant in the room". Which is...

At the beginning there was a definate Grateful Dead Shadow hanging over the whole scene. Don't get me wrong, there were plenty of Phisheads who didn't care for The Dead at all, but especially in the early '90s when both bands were touring simultaneously, many Phish shows resembeled mini-Dead lot scenes. A glaring example is when they played Deer Creek in '95. That was only 2 weeks before The Dead hit Deer Creek. There were people at that show trying to score tickets...for The Dead. Half the shirts, stickers, hell even the people, were ping-ponging back and forth between the 2. Alot of my friends "switched alliegences" in '95 and started to follow Phish out of disdain for the changing Dead scene (something I'd never do but whatever).

After Jerry died, it kind of went from being a Grateful Dead Shadow to almost a Grateful Dead Hangover of sorts for many people my age (roughly). There was a sentement that Phish was "all that was left" or "the next best thing" or whatever. Long story short there were still a slew of Deadheads (real-time Deadheads if that makes any sense) following the band. No surprise that the whole feel of the scene still had that "Grateful Deady" feel to it.

By 2000 it seemed like the scene was more actual Phisheads (this is starting to sound borderline stupid here I know) and less Deadheads following Phish. Take this for what it is, but this is about when I started to notice Opiates (painkillers mostly) and Extacy taking over the spot LSD and Voomers used to hold (balloons were always there from day one).

By "2.0" The Grateful Dead shadow/influence/cross-polinization/whatever seemed to be almost gone for the most part (I'm talking about "origional" Deadheads following the scene and bringing their "influence" ;) . But the drugs were more part of it. The yucky drugs too, not the "good" psychedelic drugs. Oh they were there too...but not the main thing.

Today? I've only been to 2 shows in "3.0" but I noticed everything that was already said. More "mature" crowd, less scuzzy tour rats going from town to town, and in general a more mellow, fun, "responsible" vibe around the whole thing. Also higher ticket prices and for some reason more alcohol consumption (maybe because for many people who had to "grow up and settle down", alcohol became "the next best thing"...or "the only drug left" ;) . But that's another discussion for another time (and another forum I'd hope).

Mind you this is just my opinion/observation which was made thru Skull and Rose colored glasses so feel free to disagree. Just my 2 cents on 3.0.
Score: 18

Jayem Permalink
Jayem Um, thats a tough one. It seems that the hippe aspect grew after jerry died from what I understand. I didnt see Phish while Jerry was around. The general scene to me has always been hippie/prep types. Bottom line is regardless of title the majority of fans are white, middle to upper middle class educated guys. Thats the 'demo' so to speak
Score: 1

Furry_Thug Permalink
Furry_Thug As @Jayem said, the internet has absolutely leveled the playing field for everyone going to a show whether it's your 1st or your 101st and that's a great thing. It was a bit intimidating trying to figure out the intricacies of the band back in the day. There wasn't a FAQ so you had to ask someone or ease drop a conversation, and a few of those in-the-know did have an arrogance when asked.

And yes, it's always been a melting pot. At any time you could find someone from any walk of life. Though in the late '90s it seemed that there was a bit more conformity, myself included.
Score: 1

lumpblockclod Phish.net Staff Permalink
lumpblockclod The main difference between today (or any era) and what you saw in Bittersweet Motel can be chalked up pretty much entirely to selective inclusion.

Other than that, the "scene" is probably a bit older today than it was then, but it's filled with the same types of people, good and bad.
Score: 1

mgh2001 Permalink
mgh2001 @IenjoyMyself said:


Couple of thoughts on things that have probably changed. Personally I do get a sence that people on lot and in shows genuinely feel lucky to be at any given show thy are at. Whether it is someone who saw 1.0 and 2.0 and thought phishs days were over, or someone like me who was too young to see them and never thought he would get to.

This is very true. Whether you're a band member, roadie, attendant or bus driver, i'm sure they all feel lucky to be where they are. It also seems like the band has grown up immensely from the mid 90s. Trey doesn't have the ego that appears in some earlier interviews, the band seems much more happy, and clean at that.
Score: 1

jackl Phish.net Staff Permalink
jackl @lumpblockclod said:
The main difference between today (or any era) and what you saw in Bittersweet Motel can be chalked up pretty much entirely to selective inclusion.

Other than that, the "scene" is probably a bit older today than it was then, but it's filled with the same types of people, good and bad.
Yeah, that's a good point, Steve. "Bittersweet Motel" pissed off a lot of fans at the time (me included) because many of us felt it was a deliberate "hatchet job" on Phish fans. Like reality TV show producers, the Bittersweet Motel people went out and found the biggest spun out dumbasses on the lot and presented them as the "average Phish fan". For those of us who were working on serious projects like the Phish Companion books or this website, the Bittersweet Motel portrayal of "fans" was a poke in the eye that was unappreciated by most. I hate that movie and found it unrepresentative of the fans then and now, although corresponding to the lazy "hippie" journalistic trope.

I don't understand why the Phish org cooperated with Phillips in the making of that film. The things I remember about the band (cutting off people's heads in photos, "piss in the fans ears" ;) were not particularly flattering, and I thought somewhat selective and meanspirited.
Score: 4

IenjoyMyself Permalink
IenjoyMyself @jackl said:
@lumpblockclod said:
The main difference between today (or any era) and what you saw in Bittersweet Motel can be chalked up pretty much entirely to selective inclusion.

Other than that, the "scene" is probably a bit older today than it was then, but it's filled with the same types of people, good and bad.
Yeah, that's a good point, Steve. "Bittersweet Motel" pissed off a lot of fans at the time (me included) because many of us felt it was a deliberate "hatchet job" on Phish fans. Like reality TV show producers, the Bittersweet Motel people went out and found the biggest spun out dumbasses on the lot and presented them as the "average Phish fan". For those of us who were working on serious projects like the Phish Companion books or this website, the Bittersweet Motel portrayal of "fans" was a poke in the eye that was unappreciated by most. I hate that movie and found it unrepresentative of the fans then and now, although corresponding to the lazy "hippie" journalistic trope.

I don't understand why the Phish org cooperated with Phillips in the making of that film. The things I remember about the band (cutting off people's heads in photos, "piss in the fans ears" ;) were not particularly flattering, and I thought somewhat selective and meanspirited.
Couldn't agree more. That movie comes up short in so many ways. I'm waiting for some phans with filming backgrounds to document a tour. Phillips couldn't even get good music clips from shows during arguably there best tour.
Score: 2

ivy_light Permalink
ivy_light So what I'm catching here is that Bittersweet Motel ain't all that great of a representation of the scene back in the day. That's exactly why I asked.
Score: 1

lumpblockclod Phish.net Staff Permalink
lumpblockclod @jackl said:
I hate that movie and found it unrepresentative of the fans then and now, although corresponding to the lazy "hippie" journalistic trope.

I don't understand why the Phish org cooperated with Phillips in the making of that film. The things I remember about the band (cutting off people's heads in photos, "piss in the fans ears" ;) were not particularly flattering, and I thought somewhat selective and meanspirited.
I won't go so far as to say I *hate* it. There's some good footage, interesting parts, etc. But you're right of course about the reality TV techniques. As for the cutting off of the people's heads.....I always like to think that that's one of those moments they wish they could have back. The other stuff (the chicks in the front row, pissing in the fan's ears) all had an element of humor to it, albeit with a bit of an edge. But the cutting off people's heads has always just seemed mean-spirited to me.
Score: 1

phishybanjo Permalink
phishybanjo I agree that the scene was more "hippie" in the mid 90's than it is now. Of course, for every "kind" of fan you find nowadays, you could find the same then, but the relative proportions have changed. There was always an age diversity, but back then the older people were mostly aging deadheads who had crossed over. Now there is a large group of people in their 30s who have grown up and turned into responsible white-collar-job adults but who were flirting with hippiedom in college (I speak from experience here). In the 90s, there were plenty of ex-hippie working adults around, but they weren't into Phish. You might have seen them at an Allman Brothers show though.

And maybe it's my just my own personal history coloring my view, but it seems like the crowd is richer now. I didn't go to a lot of shows in college, because traveling was expensive and I didn't have any money. When I did go, there was a lot of camping out, sleeping in cars, grilled cheese, peanut butter, etc. Pretty different from today when I stay in a motel and eat out at restaurants. You know, because now I'm a responsible adult with a reasonably paying job and I can afford modest middle class luxury. It seems like most of the people I met at shows this year are living fairly similar lives. Whereas in the 90s I felt like people were scrounging a lot more to get by and get to the next show. I'm sure my own life trajectory is influencing my impression, and there were always plenty of people in both camps, but I do think that the decline of the deadhead scene and the rising of the 90-s college kids turned into 00's thirtysomethings has made the Phish lot a little more mainstream Americana than hippie counterculture. Not that that's a bad thing. But I'm pretty sure there are many more doctors and lawyers at a show today than there were then.

Score: 6

jackl Phish.net Staff Permalink
jackl @ivy_light said:
So what I'm catching here is that Bittersweet Motel ain't all that great of a representation of the scene back in the day. That's exactly why I asked.
Well, it was representative of **part** of the scene, then as now. But it would be like presenting Antelope Greg as the average Phish fan. The "truth", sort of, but not the "whole truth", so possibly misleading?
Score: 1

phishfoodeater Permalink
technology has changed the scene. it has its benefits. the internet and this forum are great for keeping up on shows and meeting people but the cell phones have to go. they are great for finding people in the show or outside the venue but put them down when the show gets going. i cant believe the number of people texting away during the entire show. what a waste of a ticket. if i didn't have two kids to worry about, i would leave mine at home. i only carry it for family purposes. other than answering it, i can barely work it.
Score: 2

IenjoyMyself Permalink
IenjoyMyself It is super disapointing because I think the mission of this documentary for Phish was to explain themselves and "the scene" and I think that maybe why they agreed to do this with a non Phan, because there would be no bias. However this guy seems like he just wanted to make a movie about people getting fucked up and going to concerts.
Score: 1

757phan Permalink
757phan @bouncintophish said:
The scene I've seen is 3.0 to, and boy, its the best bunch of people I've ever seen.

Someone was giving out free hugs after the show!
Amy always hugs those guys.

Sorry made me laugh. Now back to reading this thread as I stopped at Sam's post.

Oh and this was the "Free Hug" guy on 12/30 she hugged. Yeap. This guy.

Image
Score: 1

Sundance48 Permalink
Sundance48 Being 34 and from Germany I had not so many chances to see the band live but I was able to catch shows in all 3 phases. 3 in 1.0 (97/98) - EU shows so very relaxed and cool crowd as you can see in bittersweet. 6 in 2.0 (03/04) - not so cool as the crowd was young and crowdy especially in vegas. seems like not many people came for the music (which wasnt the best either). nevertheless it blew me away because seeing them in huge arenas was so different to my previous EU shows in front of 500 people. 9 in 3.0 (09/10) - I think they are awesome and the scene is quite ok. good mixture of phans from all phases. music and party goes hand in hand. one thing to add: I dont like the "anti-noobs talking" you hear from the old dogs as its a good thing new fans keep coming in. everyone who loves phish should be welcomed. its stupid to say that if you did not hear phish in the 90s you are not a true fan. those days wont come back and my feeling is that Phish has a long future so lets just enjoy they keep delivering great stuff...
Score: 4

buffalobill4 Permalink
buffalobill4 I totally agree with the anti-noob mentality. I love finding out at shows that it's someones first show, it's our responsibility as veteran fans to teach them the subtle ways of the phish community. In the Phish biography it talked about our crowd being the rebellious teenager that didn't know how to take care of each other in the 90's, and how we didn't have a "father figure" the way the grateful dead did. I believe what you're seeing now is a grown up crowd that truly respects and is thankful for what we have; which is a sober band that focuses on the music, and a crowd that respects their surroundings and each other. I personally enjoyed a lot of the music from 2.0 but the scene was so dark and disconnected by drugs and ill intent. I love being apart of the new transition and sharing the scene with all people with good intent. Happy new year, and can't wait til the summer!
Score: 5

johnnyd Phish.net Staff Permalink
johnnyd I'd say the scene is much more the same than different comparing from 94/95 through current. @Furry_Thug first post nails it, imo. Some variations over time, a bit more sketch in the late 90s, but not strikingly different in any way.

There is less mystery around the lore of the band due to the internet. Gamehendge seemed like a much bigger deal to me back then. I mean, what other bands had a whole friggin fairy tale set to music? (Excellent music?) It was goofy, deep, and awesome all at once, and you had to put in some serious effort to figure out what the hell was going on. Tapes were mislabelled, lots of people didnt know the names to new songs. There was a lot more uncertainty, which was kind of fun. I took more detailed notes at shows then, because I didnt have this place to recap the next day!

There was certainly more of a crossover from the GD scene back then, as @MJZ points out. But it wasn't all that overwhelming to us non-GD peeps. I (and most of my friends) was there for phish. We were doing our own thing, not intentionally trying to carry on a different tradition.

As for the party, well it was always a party. A great big party organized around the strong likliehood that you'd experience musical transcendence. An event, chance to escape, reunite, celebrate. That to me has not changed at all.
Score: 8

ivy_light Permalink
ivy_light Thanks guys! This has been a really good introduction to Phishtory for me.
Score: 1

boymangod Permalink
@johnnyd said:
I'd say the scene is much more the same than different comparing from 94/95 through current. @Furry_Thug first post nails it, imo. Some variations over time, a bit more sketch in the late 90s, but not strikingly different in any way.

There is less mystery around the lore of the band due to the internet. Gamehendge seemed like a much bigger deal to me back then. I mean, what other bands had a whole friggin fairy tale set to music? (Excellent music?) It was goofy, deep, and awesome all at once, and you had to put in some serious effort to figure out what the hell was going on. Tapes were mislabelled, lots of people didnt know the names to new songs. There was a lot more uncertainty, which was kind of fun. I took more detailed notes at shows then, because I didnt have this place to recap the next day!

There was certainly more of a crossover from the GD scene back then, as @MJZ points out. But it wasn't all that overwhelming to us non-GD peeps. I (and most of my friends) was there for phish. We were doing our own thing, not intentionally trying to carry on a different tradition.

As for the party, well it was always a party. A great big party organized around the strong likliehood that you'd experience musical transcendence. An event, chance to escape, reunite, celebrate. That to me has not changed at all.
true true well said.
Score: 1

YorkvilleBeerLover Permalink
YorkvilleBeerLover there was less nitrous when I went - and no one was on adderall, and I never head the words Molly, heady, wook
Score: 3

YorkvilleBeerLover Permalink
YorkvilleBeerLover there was less nitrous when I went - and no one was on adderall, and I never head the words Molly, heady, wook
Score: 1

MrJones Permalink
MrJones @johnnyd said:
There is less mystery around the lore of the band due to the internet.
I couldn't agree more with this statement. Not saying it's a bad thing but there was definatly a lot more work that had to be done to find out information and also to hear shows. I got into phish in '93 and saw them the first time in '95. I never really went to many shows but had a deep drive to hear shows and learn more. I think the quest for information was part of the fun at that point for me.

I remember when I first got my hands on a Pharmers Almanac, I thought it was the best thing in the world...all that info right there..!

I remember putting in alot of work to build a tape collection too and now you can just hop on the ol' interent and bango, you got yourself a fresh SBD from last nights show.

All in all I like how accesible the info and music is now as I probably wouldnt have the drive to keep up with the current "scene" now a days. And if you told me in '95 that 15 years from now I could just "couch tour" the shows I would have thought you were off your rocker.
Score: 3

Bamajama Permalink
Bamajama @YorkvilleBeerLover said:
there was less nitrous when I went - and no one was on adderall, and I never head the words Molly, heady, wook
I thought it was just my friends - when did everyone start taking adderall? And why? My guess is so they can drink more. Just curious.
Score: 1

mgh2001 Permalink
mgh2001 @Bamajama said:
@YorkvilleBeerLover said:
there was less nitrous when I went - and no one was on adderall, and I never head the words Molly, heady, wook
I thought it was just my friends - when did everyone start taking adderall? And why? My guess is so they can drink more. Just curious.
I don't think adderol is too prominent in the scene. It's widely used in college for students to gear up for finals or papers and I'd imagine this is where it crosses with the Phish scene. College kids who don't want to mess with cocaine will just do a little adderol. And yes, to drink more, have a little extra energy for the show, etc.
Score: 1

mgh2001 Permalink
mgh2001 @buffalobill4 said:
I totally agree with the anti-noob mentality. I love finding out at shows that it's someones first show, it's our responsibility as veteran fans to teach them the subtle ways of the phish community. In the Phish biography it talked about our crowd being the rebellious teenager that didn't know how to take care of each other in the 90's, and how we didn't have a "father figure" the way the grateful dead did. I believe what you're seeing now is a grown up crowd that truly respects and is thankful for what we have; which is a sober band that focuses on the music, and a crowd that respects their surroundings and each other. I personally enjoyed a lot of the music from 2.0 but the scene was so dark and disconnected by drugs and ill intent. I love being apart of the new transition and sharing the scene with all people with good intent. Happy new year, and can't wait til the summer!
Good post and I'm very glad the band decided to take initiative and clean things up a bit.
Score: 1

docbh Permalink
docbh And we used to carry setlist notebooks!! found mine in my closet about a month ago....oh and if you didn't have a pen or pencil to write with you were fucked....no wierd touchscreen thingamabobs hehe.
Score: 4

JayDubya Permalink
JayDubya Aside from the lot and fans, which for me seems more or less the same (except I'm in the "older crowd" now)

The biggest change for me is the technology. From cassette tapes to bit torrent downloads. Real time "Tweets" of setlists. All of that sucks for me (except the digital music part). It was more magical having to wait months to get a show. More anticipation of finally finding the show you want, and getting it in the mail. I miss that feeling, but I love easy access to the AUD recordings.
Score: 1

Mr_Miner Permalink
Mr_Miner Yes the scene has changed dramatically over the years. When I first started seeing shows the audience was primarily made up of college kids as that was where Phish was drawing its fans base from. They played many shows at colleges in the early 90's. Most of us who were following Phish at that time were seeing bands like the Grateful Dead and Phish was this band you would go and see in between Dead tours. There was no "Phish Tour" as they were always on the road. This scene didn't change much as they made the jump to theaters.

Around 94, when they started playing arenas and sheds the scene changed again with an influx of 12 and 14 year old kids who were being dropped off at shows by soccer moms. I started to feel like a fossil and I was only 24 or 25 at the time.

Then Jerry died and there was another wave of folks who jumped on the band wagon. By this time it was over for me. I attended a show here and there but it just wasn't the same.

3.0 is a whole different story. Everyone has grown up a bit and it feels like people are there for the music.....not the party....band included. Believe me, I like a good party, but you know what I mean. Last year’s Hartford show 8-14-09 showed me that they can still bring it and I've been hooked ever since.....just like the old days.

Finally, the new material is outstanding and it is good to see that they are serious about writing.....songs. I love songs like KDF, Ocelot. Some of the later efforts (Round Room, Undermind) just seemed forced and didn't do it for me at all.

In all I think it is more like it was and less like it is.

Score: 5

SageDabbler Permalink
SageDabbler i am a new fan and i have had nothing but great experiences with "vets" at shows. ive been offered beers, a hit here and there from them. i did use the internet to "understand" phish before going to a show, but the scene was completely new. i was so shocked by all the sharing, everyone was cool with everyone, it was great. and i would have to repsectfully disagree with feeling like its a young crowd. i thought it was an older crowd compared to other concerts i had been to(mostly DMB, so i learned a lot there).

another thing to add, i brought my friend to both our first shows at CMAC this summer. he had never listened to phish beofre. some comments he said:

"i felt like i was in the sixties"

"all they did was jam"
"during i am the walrus i felt like i was at a beatles concert"

^^all positive remarks^^

just a perspective from a "total noob"
Score: 3

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