Word: phishã
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...last sounds of Trey Anastasio’s guitar faded and the stage was emptied, a mass of 70,000 who had been followers of Phish stopped and wondered what they would do with the rest of their lives. It had been Phish??s last show at their final festival, and even the schlumpy presence of Danny DeVito in the audience wasn’t enough to console the Heads. Among them was one Michael Vankoski, a young man from Burlington, Vermont’s upper-west side. He had deserted his place at Hampshire College to pursue...
...20th century. Michael’s great-great-grandfather had followed Mozart’s tour-horse-and-carriage all over Europe when the young genius gigged as a child. For the past 15 years, Michael had followed in his great-great-grandfather’s footsteps by following Phish??s tour bus. Michael respected his ancestor’s way of life, but he was convinced that there was no way Mozart could have jammed the way that Trey and Page could. Sure, Mozart could write an Alberti bass, but could he play a convincing cover...
Trembling with genius and rich with remembrance, Trey Anastasio’s newest album bursts into uncharted territories. At just 29 minutes long, the lead singer of Phish??s brief fugue distinguishes itself from the group’s well-established jam-band essence and crafts a genre...
...album’s music, though not entirely classical and certainly far from rock, manages to blend the orchestral approach of Trey’s earlier solo work with the crunchier flavor of Phish??s songs. Anastasio, who is known for his serious devotion to composing, wrote many of Phish??s songs as orchestral miniatures...
...Anastasio’s emotive expression. Where “Prologue,” formerly known as “Nothing But An ‘E’ Thing,” pulses with woodwinds, the reconstruction of “All Things Reconsidered” from Phish??s album Rift whines with strings...