Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Phish


The band today know as Phish, began way back, up in Vermont in 1983. The group formed on UVM’s campus when lead guitarist, Trey Anastasio, really got the group together. Like the Grateful Dead, they are known for their extended instrumental grooves and a great deal of improvisation. They have released fifteen different albums over thirty years of making music. They are famous for selling out big arena venues and having amazing concerts that would last hours upon hours with no openers. In simpler terms, they were one of the most famous jam bands of their time.
            Even though they were all in the business of making music, they came from different backgrounds which allowed them to have such great performances and improvisations. They were individuals within a band, meaning they would bring their own spice while being a part of a larger band. Even in college, Page McConnell, keyboards and vocal, studied jazz piano while Anastasio studied composition. Jon Fishman, drums, wrote a drum instructional manual and lastly Mike Gordon, bass, got a degree in film. And then they added Jeff Holdsworth, guitar and vocals, who dropped out of college to find the Lord.
Moreover, their upbringings were vastly different. Mike Gordon had a mother who painted and specifically did abstract art. She even designed Phish’s backdrops for their concerts. Anastasio wrote and played songs with his mother. So you can totally see where their college degrees may have been started. McConnell and Fishman’s parents come from some type of medical background. So, now one can see that the members are diverse and not just all similar guys making things work. They each bring their different personalities to the music and it combats but also makes it work in the end.
However with collaboration, may come conflict. Phish suffered a big break up in 2004 where they seemed to be done. They had to meet almost like in a business meeting where they would lay out the terms of their reunion. The most important rule of Phish these day is a new ‘No Analyze Rule’ where bandmates are not allowed to comment on one another’s playing. This came about because a big problem happened in their fifteen minute break between sets. They would just chew each other out picking at each other’s performance. And rather than encouraging each other, they were just tearing each other down. With the rule enacted, they’ve reentered back to their former prowess where their long instrumental parts were much more enjoyed and band members felt much better.

So, it is interesting how collaboration is something that can produce amazing music and ideas and inspire creativity. But it is double-edged sword where it can cut down that inspiration and develop conflict and argument. I am just glad that Phish became aware of this and came together to form a way for good collaboration.
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1 comment:

  1. I will be completely transparent and tell you the only thing I knew about Phish was that Ben & Jerry's flavor Phish Food and even then it seemed to me they were a bit too fringe for their own (delicious) Ben & Jerry's flavor. But it is cool to see the no analyze rule be put into place in multiple settings. It reminded me instantly about the Ideo video we watched in class and how there were no wrong answers, only improvements to be made. The environment is so important in fostering creativity.

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