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Review by MrPalmers1000DollarQ
That said, all the rules of the coloring book are broken as soon as Set 2 begins. Even Funky Bitch proper is a spectacle of Phish at its peak. You could cut the song off right at 6:45 and it would still be one of the greatest version of the tune out there. Instead, the band gives the tune the Mike’s second jam treatment and drop down a half-step, a maneuver so smooth I have to imagine it was planned backstage. The first segment of this jam honestly sounds so ahead of its time, or at least would fit really well in a 3.0 show for its heavy focus on syncopation and groove; very Tube vibes on this one at first. But soon all semblance of groove is lost as the band takes into a dark, disorganized, and swirling segment with each member noodling in his own corner of the stage. It fits well for moment, but then stops on a whim. A soft drone of feedback and organ crescendos to a slow, looming riff from Trey, which is backed by a brooding rhythm section. Where it goes next is almost reminiscent of a Tweezer jam in groove, and features plenty of dissonant patterns and riffing. A frenetic few minutes lead us to the end of the Funky Bitch jam and into a dark vocal jam and -> Yerushalayim Shel Zahav. Similar to the one that follows Reba on 7/8/94, this song serves as a sick code for a ridiculous jam. The band revisits some White Album tunes quite nicely, with a strong Curtain Without sandwiched in between. The Runaway Jim -> BBFCFM duo is ridiculous on a number of fronts, and includes one of the more wild iterations of the latter tune. The acoustic segment of this set features three of the rarer bluegrass tunes, and a special treat with Trey on fiddle. A fan-requested Harry Hood fits well in the penultimate slot with a nice intro section, a beautiful quiet jam, and a peak as magnificent as ever. Though relatively contained, this is Hood in its golden era. Closing out with Highway to Hell and delivering a rare Lizards encore, Phish finishes tearing down Jesse Auditorium.