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Friday, February 25, 2011

Phish and Judaism: Going to Synagogue at Madison Square Garden

Article By Josh Fleet
This article was originally published here.

For Phish fans, New Year's Eve is a High Holy Day. And in Phish lore, Madison Square Garden is a sacred temple -- perhaps the most sacred.

So what happens if you're diehard for both Phish and Judaism and one never-miss-it concert falls on the Sabbath? Do you skip synagogue? God forbid.

Yerachmiel Altizio, 35, is a devout Jew who has seen Phish perform more than 200 times, but because a live concert on the Sabbath presents a number of Jewish legal issues (traveling, carrying and listening to live music are prohibited) he was not able to attend the New Year's Eve extravaganza in Manhattan.

Perhaps now I should give full disclosure: I've seen Phish 12 times and though my standards for observance aren't exactly the strictest, I would also call myself a devout Jew.

It's in this context that I raise the question: Is the mind-altering environment of a Phish concert an appropriate place for a devoted Jewish seeker? And further: Is it, even on the holy Sabbath, perhaps the ideal environment?

The Duality of Phish

"The thing with Phish, why they're so unbelievable, is because everything about them has two sides. It's like a duality," Altizio says. "For a righteous person, it's a completely uplifting spiritual positive experience. ... For someone that's done something bad, it can be the worst trip."

Altizio has spent a lot of time thinking about what goes on inside a venue while Phish plays. After hundreds of shows and thousands of hours, he thinks he has an inkling of an answer: it has something to do with intentional ecstatic dance, pervasive communal joy and the unknown destination of Phish's improvisation. But most certainly, the fact that the rhythm section of the band is made up of two Jewish guys is key.

Every time I meet Altizio, like any good follower of the Chabad Hasidic tradition based in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, he wears black slacks, a white button down shirt and a black jacket. His beard is wispy enough to imply that he hasn't been in the Chabad world for too long (he traded in his secular life for Orthodoxy in 2001), but it is long enough to prove that he's fully committed. I sit in his apartment in Queens, asking him questions about mysticism and jam music and not laughing when he responds in biblical terms. The bookshelves in his room are brimming with Hebrew-inscribed leather-bound spines that conceal the more secular, even heretical, titles leftover from his youth. On his walls, for every picture of the late Lubavitcher Rebbe (the beloved rabbi of Chabad Jews) there is another piece of Phish paraphernalia. But it's his go-to guitar -- a hollow-body Ibanez electric -- that reveals just how central his experience with Phish remains to his identity. The guitar, which resembles the custom-made axes used by Trey Anastasio, Phish's guitar player, stands front-and-center on the cover of Altizio's first album, Merkavah. Walk the streets of Crown Heights and you can often find that same guitar adorning posters for upcoming shows of his band by the same name. On the album and on the posters, the guitar is topped by Chabad's iconic black fedora.

Here is a Jew who cannot escape Phish. Here is a Phishhead who cannot escape being Jewish.


A Brief Account of the Divine Chariot

When he was 19 years old, Altizio dropped out of college in Massachusetts and moved to California. He had dreadlocks. He'd been to countless Phish concerts. He was an uninvolved, unconcerned secular Jew. He was a wandering hippy. At some point he visited the Big Basin Redwoods State Park in the Santa Cruz Mountains. It was there, in an area called the Valley of the Lost Souls, Altizio says he had a vision. He had a friend with him. His friend saw the same thing. In the vision, a ring of seven clouds formed in the sky. The clouds were like cookie-cutter Stars of David. The clouds formed the Merkavah, the divine chariot. Now, far from the Valley of Lost Souls, after countless more Phish shows, after returning to college and studying jazz guitar, locks shorn and tzitzit adorned, Altizio cites this vision as the turning point, as the beginning really.

But despite the vision's ringing clarity, Altizio won't quite make the claim that what he saw was "the chariot." It would be a high claim. The Merkavah is one of the earliest recorded instances of Jewish mystical experience. It's the throne of God that Ezekiel saw. The first Jewish mystics, precursors to the Kabbalists, who were precursors to the Hasidim, were known as "descenders of the divine chariot." That is, through their mystical practice, these devotees aimed to draw the divine down into the world. Despite his apprehension, I think all the pieces are there.

Peering into the Void

For all the time I've spent in the world of this band and the world of this faith, speaking with Altizio gives me the feeling I've barely glimpsed the depths of Phish's music -- the Jewish depths.

In 2009, I attended a four-show run leading up to New Year's Eve in Miami, Fla. That is, I gladly went to see Phish perform four nights in a row, and when it was all over I wished for a fifth concert. I yearned to get back to that very real, very powerful feeling of spiritual elevation, the likes of which I've only felt through the music of this band and for fleeting moments while living in Jerusalem and New York City.

In Jewish thought, the Torah can be read or studied on four different levels. There is the simple meaning of a text (peshat), the allegorical understanding (remez), the deeper metaphorical interpretation (derash) and, finally, the secrets hidden deep beneath it all (sod). We can understand the story's obvious teaching, we can find its allusions and learn from its implied comparisons, we can parse each sentence, squeezing out every drop of meaning, and still there will be a depth to that story that we will never fully perceive.

This progression from peshat to sod, from definite meaning to endless mystery, is played out in full in the Phish experience. Phish's music is often derided as a self-indulgent, "mindless" drug soundtrack. Their lyrics have been called meaningless, nonsensical dribble. Phish fans are routinely lampooned as clueless, hedonistic hippies. But for those who "know," the music and the scene are so much more.

Descenders of the Divine Chariot

In Jewish tradition, a person does not study Torah alone, lest he or she come to an incorrect conclusion or find false meaning in a passage. The traditional solution is that you should have a study partner so that, in moving from peshat to sod, from simple understanding to underlying secret, you have a check against interpreting incorrectly.

Conversely, in Jewish law, any action that requires speaking must be done alone because when two people talk simultaneously, their messages cannot be heard. This has practical application when studying Torah. One person reads a piece of text and then his or her partner responds with a question or conclusion. But in music, the opposite is true. Two people can, and should, sing together. In music, Jews strive for harmony. And harmony cannot exist if you are alone.

To create the musical Merkavah -- that is, to become a vehicle of divine action through playing music -- you need two Jews. Not only does Phish have two Jewish band members, Altizio explains, but the Jews, Mike Gordon on bass and Jon Fishman on drums, create the foundation of Phish's music. They hold it down. They are the vehicle, the "chariot," that allows the rest of the band and everyone in attendance to fly.

There's a statistic out there, unverified as it may be, that roughly one-third of the audience at every Phish concert is Jewish. Gordon and Fishman, whether they choose to acknowledge it or not, have helped create a uniquely Jewish mystical experience to which an unusual number of Jews flock.

While Gordon and Fishman help build the chariot, a lot goes on at a Phish concert to keep the vehicle moving. The musicians on stage become vessels for energy to pass from the audience and out into the universe, and visa versa. The experience sounds like a traditional communal Jewish prayer service -- wordless repeated melodies, ecstatic dancing and the sweat of focused intention.

Singing with devotion is the greatest preparation for prayer. And intentional dance, like the circular Hasidic steps on a Friday night or the out-of-body contortions of a Phish fan, is also an appropriate preparation and necessary component of any "authentic" Jewish prayer experience.

Hasids and Phishheads dance the same dance. They sing the same song. They peer into the same void. They fill the void with the same joy and love.

While he wasn't physically at Madison Square Garden for New Year's Eve, he was definitely there in spirit. To sway and pray anywhere on a Friday night is to add one more blessing to the same cosmic stream.

"It has a endless positive effect on the world," Altizio says. "Like a spiral that never ends, it just keeps going and going and going."

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Summer Tour Announced

Phish - Rainbow Adult T-Shirt, Size: Medium, Color: NavyA limited number of tickets for the upcoming Phish shows are now being offered through the secure Phish online ticketing system via a ticket request period. Request tickets here! Requests for these tickets will only be available during a TEN-DAY PERIOD.  The request time ends: Friday, March 4 at 11:59 PM, EST. 




Phish 2011 Summer Tour Dates

5/27/11 Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Bethel, NY
5/28/11 Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Bethel, NY
5/29/11 Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Bethel, NY
5/31/11 PNC Bank Arts Center, Holmdel, NJ
6/1/11 PNC Bank Arts Center, Holmdel, NJ
6/3/11 DTE Energy Center, Detroit, MI
6/4/11 Blossom Music Center, Cuyahoga Falls, OH
6/5/11 Riverbend Music Center, Cincinnati, OH
6/7/11 Comcast Center, Mansfield, MA
6/8/11 Darien Lake Amphitheatre, Darien, NY
6/10/11 Susquehanna Bank Center, Camden, NJ
6/11/11 Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, MD
6/12/11 Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, MD
6/14/11 Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre at Encore Park, Alpharetta, GA
6/15/11 Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre at Encore Park, Alpharetta, GA
6/17/11 Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre, Charlotte, NC
6/18/11 Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion, Raleigh, NC
6/19/11 Ntelos Pavilion at Harbor Center, Portsmouth, VA

The request time ends: Friday, March 4 at 11:59 PM, EST.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Live Vinyl 'Two Soundchecks'

On Record Store Day, Phish will release TWO SOUNDCHECKS, a Limited Edition 7-inch vinyl record that will be available exclusively at participating independently owned record stores across the country. TWO SOUNDCHECKS marks the band's first ever live vinyl release and their first release in conjunction with Record Store Day.

This 7-inch is limited to 2,000 hand-numbered copies, and once they are gone they are gone. The A-Side is an instrumental jam culled from the soundcheck of Phish's third show of a sold out three-night stand at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley, CA. The B-Side is an especially exotic soundcheck from Hartford, CT in 2009, featuring Trey on Bass, and Fish on drums. This Limited Edition 7-inch was created exclusively for Record Store Day.

TWO SOUNDCHECKS will be available in stores only beginning April 16th, 2011. For a complete list of participating record stores, please click here.

Phish to Play Ohio in June

Phish - Rainbow Adult T-Shirt, Size: Large, Color: Navy

Cincinnati, OH’s Riverbend Music Center has confirmed Phish’s first official summer date. According to the venue, the band will perform on June 5. Tickets will go on sale on March 12. Phish’s only other appearance at the venue was on September 20, 2000. No official word from Phish on this, but the venue doesn't have much reason to lie so I think that we can confirm this as a leak!

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Hug Your Farmer Setlist & Video

The recent 'Hug Your Farmer' benefit featured two sets chock full of classic rock covers. The assembled musicians tipped their collective hats towards The Band with versions of Up On Cripple Creek, The Weight and Ophelia. McConnell and Fishman both joined in for a take on Shakedown Street by the Grateful Dead (watch video below). Page also lent a hand to a number of other tunes, namely Stealers Wheel’s Stuck In The Middle With You and The Beatles’ Taxman. Fish’s time on stage included a cover of Whipping Post by the Allman Brothers Band, Crossroads and Old Crow Medicine Show/Bob Dylan’s Wagon Wheel.

Pete’s Greens manager, Amy Skelton, is best known as Phish’s first fan and her subsequent tenure in charge of merch for the band. She was in attendance as was Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin, who introduced McConnell. Josh Panda of the Josh Panda Band led an ensemble that included Fishman through covers of The Beatles’ Oh! Darling and A Little Help From My Friends. The show ended with most of the musicians who took part as well as the event’s organizers joining in for a singalong of The Beatles’ Hey Jude. - This Info From Glide Magazine

Donate To Pete's Greens & Help Rebuild The Farm!


Page McConnell sits in at Hug Your Farmer Copyright All rights reserved by bennett2136

Rarely Seen Billy Breathes TV Ad

Check out this rarely viewed advertisement for the Billy Breathes album. Mike Gordon scoots around on a chair, jumps up and then gets up-close with the camera! Some lovely insight as to how this album cover came to be!



Billy Breathes

Monday, February 7, 2011

Gordo On Late Night With Jimmy Fallon

This Friday, February 11th, Mike Gordon will be the musical guest on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. This will be the band's first late night television appearance and they'll be promoting Mike's album 'Moss'. Friday's guests include Adam Sandler and Aziz Ansari. Check your local listings for air times.

Late Night is also offering fans a chance to win seats on their "band benches," which surround the stage during Mike's performance. To enter a chance to sit at the "Band Bench" visit http://www.fallonbandbench.com/ and include the following band code in your entry form: MIK

Saturday, February 5, 2011

CNBC Unknowingly Winks At Phans

CNBC may not have known it, but last week, the financial news network ran one of the greatest Phish shows in recent memory.

The band itself was nowhere to be seen. But Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Company and an occasional commentator on CNBC, gave fans of the jam band Phish a thrill when he appeared on “The Kudlow Report” on Jan. 24 to discuss the effect that global inflation might have on the American economy.

Mr. Greenhaus has become a folk hero among fans of the band for slyly working in references to its music during his media appearances. And that one was a standout performance. (watch the video below)

In seven minutes, Mr. Greenhaus ticked off references to Phish songs like “Backwards Down the Number Line,” “Fast Enough for You” and “Free,” each fitting enough to the conversation to glide right over the head of Mr. Kudlow. For example, Mr. Greenhaus characterized inflation as “going backwards down the number line for the better part of two years now.”

Reached in his office on Thursday morning, Mr. Greenhaus, who has seen more than 80 Phish concerts since 1995, said the references were just his natural way of speaking. Since 2009, he has surreptitiously quoted Phish on Bloomberg Radio, Fox Business Network and CNBC. “It’s second nature to a large degree,” he said. “It’s just part of my vernacular.”

But that does not mean it is not premeditated. Moments before appearing on CNBC, Mr. Greenhaus posted a thread on Phantasy Tour, an online forum for jam band fans where he is a regular, titled “Put on CNBC Now.”

CNBC declined to comment.

Reference times are: 2:05 FEFY, 4:50 BDTNL, 6:17 Free

Hug Your Farmer Features Fishman & McConnell

Phish members Page McConnell and Jon Fishman will be the very special guests featured in the February 3 Hug Your Farmer fundraising concert at Burlington, VT's legendary Higher Ground Ballroom.
The benefit aims to raise funds for Pete's Greens, a certified organic vegetable farm, which suffered a devastating fire earlier this month. One hundred percent of the proceeds from ticket sales will support Pete's rebuilding effort.

Beyond McConnell and Fishman, the lineup for the event will also feature Russ Lawton and Ray Paczkowski (Trey Anastasio Band), Bob Wagner, Clint Bierman and Peter Day (The Grift), Rich Price (The Sweet Remains), Jer Coons, Joshua Panda, Mike Clifford and Matt Hagen (Lendway) and Will Evans (Barefoot Truth).

Tickets are $35.00 in advance or $45.00 day of show. More information is available on the venue's website and on Pete's Greens' website.

Photo Courtesy of Pete's Greens