A Live One

Daft Punk, Alive 2007 (2007) - the “Rock List” yeah, I believe you Rolling Stone…

This was my first phish.
I still think its one of the best albums ever=)

whats funny is the way the montana goes into the yem was always what hooked me. When I first heard it I thought it sounded like part of the composition. I love that part so much.

Harry hood is my fav song (for the moment) and the one on that abum is atleast top three. The jam towards the end is so beautiful and everything that hood should be. To me that hood is the perfect length not too much and not too little and the way it goes into the “you can feel good” conclusion is perfect.
Where some versions are too noodley and can kind of meander and SOMETIMES take away from the up and down dynamics of it. Honestly as good as I think the lemonwheel hood is I think the alo version is more effective and epically arranged.

My first live Phish exposure was “A Live One” right after it came out.

Until a week ago, I always thought that this was the best show anyone could have seen. I had no idea it was a compilation album. I almost feel duped.

Best piano solo for Squirming Coil ever though. I too blast that one the way home on a late night all the while anxiously anticipating that final super low ending note followed by a most glorious roar from the audience.

yes! Lemonwheel Hood is probably my fav version.

ALO YEM ws the first phish song i heard and it is what got me hooked on phish. i also think the ALO hood is the best one i’ve heard

Wait…so you went almost 14 years thinking ALO was a complete Phish show?

On top of that, you were about 5 when you first heard ALO?

I am cornfused.

You’ll never get out of this Maize

this might be my favorite Slave ever, it was played on my 6th birthday :P, and Trey hits such cathartic high notes at the climax it just oozes emotion. Love it!

Ha!! I keep having to answer to this. I’ve been unable to correct my birthdate on my profile. I’m 29 and not 19.

And yes… I did go that long thinking it was a single show. Would have been a pretty rad show though huh??

Indeed!!!
When Trey hits that note in the jam and holds it for a bit and then continues, his guitar sounding like a trumpet and the whole band is chugging like freight train.
How can you not shed at least one? :’(

I actually owe so much to ALO, and to a phan named Jamie, for jumpstarting a stalled interest in Phish in 1995. Had purchased PON a few years earlier, but dismissed the band as not what I was looking for.

Heard BATR from ALO on the radio, and it encouraged me to buy the album. Didn’t “get” much of the album until I heard the Hood. I got so into the Hood, that that was all I played for a week or more. It was like I was a junkie, injecting that performance into my veins. I was definitely hooked.

If BATR beckoned me from the window to come in, and that Hood met me at the door and carried me through, the first song I connected to once inside was the YEM. From then on I was absorbing music at such an incredible speed and volume, like drinking from a veritable firehose. I was buying every available song the band had released because I was yet even remotely aware of what was introduced to me as “boots” from the shows.

That introduction came as what I would later learn were these random acts of kindness by Phish fans to connect with one another, and to promulgate the love for the music ,and the band, by making copies of the show tapes. It came as a complete surprise from Marie, who came home from work one day and handed me two cassettes marked Phish 4/21/90, Ft. Collins, CO, sets 1 and 2. She explained that she was talking with one of her co-workers at the office about my obsessive behavior over Phish music, and her friend commisserated with her because her son was a fan too. Marie said the next day the co-worker gave her the tapes for me.

All I knew was his first name was Jamie, and I scribbled a heartfelt note of thanks because I was completely impressed with his random generosity, the first of many such incredible connections that I would have with so many total strangers over Phish’s music. I was likewise taken by the emotional levels of understanding that I experience when I listen to these performances, and how they are pretty much recognized and felt by all of us. And connecting at that unimpeded emotional level is undeniably meaningful. Doesn’t matter how much of a asshole we may be in our daily lives as we struggle to deal with all there is with what we have, the recognition, that at those profound levels of understanding, we are not alone, we exist together in our kindest and happiest form of humanity, creates a community that I am still in wonder over.

A Live One is my album du jour, and hearing it again just stirred up all these memories about how it all began for me.

So I want to pick up a copy of ALO, but it’s not available on Dry Goods. Any ideas why?

ALO Hood was instrumental in changing my idea of what music is.

Its cool to hear so many people have the same experience with this hood. I have vivid memories of the first time I heard this hood, right down to the street I was on, what time it was, and who was in the car. It was by no means my first time hearing phish, but it was when I had my “holy shit” moment.

I wish I could remember it as vividly as you. I was likely laying on my couch stoned listening to my headphones. Not every hood gives me chills, but this one does 9/10 times I listen to it.

As for Stash, sometimes I catch myself gripping the steering wheel or holding my breath before Trey comes back to the Stash theme and I can finally relax.