Re: sometimes it's nice to listen to phish
Posted: Fri April 10, 2020 3:40 am
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tragabigzanda wrote:I'd maybe bump Life & Limb for Epic Problemtragabigzanda wrote:Top 10 maybe?
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LoathedVermin72 wrote:I don’t want that life doug I DONT WANT IT
knee tunes wrote:LoathedVermin72 wrote:I don’t want that life doug I DONT WANT IT
LoathedVermin72 wrote:knee tunes wrote:LoathedVermin72 wrote:I don’t want that life doug I DONT WANT IT

These both flirt with getting dicey for me as well but I really like the surprising heaviness that shows up a bit in “Thread” - with just a few minor tweaks there are parts of that song that could be Tooltragabigzanda wrote:LoathedVermin72 wrote:“Shade” is really niceThe only two I don't like are Steam and Thread, both of which sound a lot more like the jammy Phish stuff I've never enjoyed.
tragabigzanda wrote:I'd maybe bump Life & Limb for Epic Problemtragabigzanda wrote:Top 10 maybe?
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“The Lizards” contains a lengthy narrative that describes Colonel Forbin’s entrance into the land of Gamehendge and his encounter with Rutherford the Brave, a knight errant. Rutherford explains the sad history of the Lizards and their subjugation by the evil King Wilson, who keeps them in check by preventing them from gaining access to the Helping Friendly Book, the sacred tome of Icculus, their god. In a state of overzealous fervor while engaging the Colonel’s promise to help, Rutherford jumps into a river and sinks, forgetting that he was encased in metal armor. As the story goes, Tela and the Unit-Monster show up just in time to save Rutherford from the watery peril, and Colonel Forbin is thus introduced to the land and inhabitants of Gamehendge.
In the Gamehendge story, Wilson is a traveler from another land who arrives in Gamehendge looking to take over the entire land from the largely communist Lizards. Mighty lofty ambition for a single person, you may say, but these Lizards are pretty stupid. Wilson realizes that the Lizards rely almost entirely on the Helping Friendly Book, a single, mystical volume given to them by their god, Icculus, and that contains all of the knowledge inherent in the universe. Wilson is a keen thinker, and he steals the book, putting the Lizards at his mercy. He swings his heavy, domineering hand in vicious, sadistic circles over the entire land of Gamehendge. He tears down a huge chunk of the forest and builds an immense, glowering castle, naming the city that encircles it Prussia. He enslaves the Lizards both physically and mentally, and maintains this control by stowing the Helping Friendly Book in the highest tower of his new castle. At one point, Wilson hangs a young revolutionary for treason. This young rebel was Roger, the son of Errand Woolf, the leader of the rebellion against Wilson. The song "Wilson” is sung (read: angrily yelled) from the viewpoint of Errand Woolf, in a fit of rage at the rebel camp, shaking his tightly closed fist at Wilson’s castle looming in the distance.
I will not be silenced! You're worse than Wilson.bodysnatcher wrote:Someone temporarily ban ST for posting that bc now we know it exists.

tragabigzanda wrote:I'd maybe bump Life & Limb for Epic Problemtragabigzanda wrote:Top 10 maybe?
Hello Morning
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The Kill
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Do You Like Me?
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Nightshop
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Life & Limb