Trey teased Buried Alive in Split Open and Melt. Hood contained a We're Off to See the Wizard tease. Possum included Simpsons, Oom Pa Pa and Random Note signals. The encore was performed with John Popper on harmonica.

Jam Chart Versions
Teases
We're Off to See the Wizard tease in Harry Hood, Buried Alive tease in Split Open and Melt
Debut Years (Average: 1988)

This show was part of the "1992 Spring Tour"

Show Reviews

, attached to 1992-03-14

Review by Stumpy

Stumpy My First Show.

So this cute girl with green eyes and freckles from school asks me, "hey want to go in to the city to see this cool band I've been listening to?" I went mostly b/c I liked the girl... and I knew how to get to the Roseland Ballroom so if the band sucked, I would just go to Times Square or Chinatown and cause some trouble.

I stayed for the whole show. It never panned out with that cute girl, but I got a new favorite band out of the deal, so it wasn't a total loss.
, attached to 1992-03-14

Review by Faht1

Faht1 This was a fantastic show in my personal opinion. I believe its a poorly rated show here on dotnet. You will not waste your time listening to this show. Only setback was the first half of the second set was pretty standard for 1992. First set was very solid. A lot better overall than set 2 . You had a nice Runaway Jim>Cavern. Solid Reba. Nicely played Rift. Very tight Mikes->H20->Paug. Second set was a slower start but this had a very very good Hood at its worth a listen. A very fun encore to close out this show. 4/5 stars.
, attached to 1992-03-14

Review by MrFoot

MrFoot Amazing first Phish show, changed my life...
, attached to 1992-03-14

Review by babaskate

babaskate My first show - what an experience! I just got into the band the previous fall and missed the Port Chester show, so the anticipation of catching them for the first time was huge. NYC was still a relatively new place to me coming from Long Island and I was so confused on how to get to the venue (even though it was so easy to get to from Penn Station). Vague memories of the color red, Fish's crash cymbals during Cracklin', and John Popper. I remember being so pumped and yelling like a little girl at the beginning of the Jim opener where the people in front of me were asking me to chill out - youthful exuberance I suppose. Back in the early GA shows, set breaks were always interesting trying to move through the crowd sitting on the floor, reconnecting with friends.

Re-listening to the show now brings a lot back - these early shows were so different and felt so raw, you can hear how young the band is at the time, even though it's 8 years into their career.
, attached to 1992-03-14

Review by Mergz

Mergz My phirst show and and it was a dandy. What can I say, it was at that time Phish's peak or close to it - Winter 92, spring 93 probably was for that era. And now a-days, Phish is re-peaking. Anyway it was just a lively show, the crowd was awesome, and just party-like all the way around. I do not remember the performance by memory, but from what I do remember, the band was just having a lot of fun with the songs, and the atmosphere of the ball room.
, attached to 1992-03-14

Review by DollarBill

DollarBill Good show for this time period. You can actually hear Trey calling out the songs on the bootleg. Nice encore with John Popper.
, attached to 1992-03-14

Review by Rumpofsteelskin

Rumpofsteelskin Fun show. But our audience tapes sound very very bad.

Roseland was first place I ever went where the Heineken bottles were $8. And this was 1992! I remember that we went to the Cafe Wha before the show and were dumbfounded that the pitchers of Budweiser were $17! Was a very expensive drink night for low quality swill.

John Popper hit a stride during GTBT. Too bad that was end of the show. Where was my Don't Get Me Wrong this night?

Haha!
Add a Review
Setlist Filter
By year:

By month:

By day:

By weekday:

By artist:

Filter Reset Filters
Support Phish.net & Mbird
Fun with Setlists
Check our Phish setlists and sideshow setlists!


Phish.net

Phish.net is a non-commercial project run by Phish fans and for Phish fans under the auspices of the all-volunteer, non-profit Mockingbird Foundation.

This project serves to compile, preserve, and protect encyclopedic information about Phish and their music.

Credits | Terms Of Use | Legal | DMCA

© 1990-2024  The Mockingbird Foundation, Inc. | Hosted by Linode