Skip navigation

Reunited Phish comes home to Bonnaroo

‘I’m so incredibly happy to be here,’ Trey Anastasio says to giant crowd

Image: Phish
Phish singer Trey Anastasio performs with the band at Bonnaroo on Friday in Manchester, Tenn. The band will also headline the festival Sunday night.
Amanda Schwab / AP
  Interviews, performances  
  
  Obama skips Nobel celebrations
Dec. 10: President Obama skipped some traditional Nobel Prize events including a celebratory concert that included in its roster of performers Toby Keith of "We'll put a boot in your ass" fame.

updated 7:33 p.m. ET June 14, 2009

MANCHESTER, Tenn. - Phish might technically be a Bonnaroo rookie, but the band’s first performance at the Tennessee music festival had the feeling of a homecoming.

Phish performed a highly anticipated 3-hour set Friday night, playing until the early morning hours. The Vermont-based band, which reunited earlier this year after a five-year hiatus, is a double headliner, also performing Sunday evening.

“I’m so incredibly happy to be here,” said singer and guitarist Trey Anastasio, beaming in front of the giant crowd.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

All of the members of Phish — Anastasio, Mike Gordon, Jon Fishman and Page McConnell — have previously played Bonnaroo. In fact, festivals in 2007 and 2008 were the only times in Bonnaroo’s eight years that a member from Phish didn’t play.

Further, Bonnaroo — held annually on a remote country farm about an hour’s drive from Nashville — was in many ways modeled on the destination concerts Phish has hosted through the years in locales like an old airstrip in Maine.

“To have them finally appearing at the festival as Phish, it feels like something’s come full circle,” said Ashley Capps, the co-founder of Bonnaroo and president of AC Entertainment — which produces the festival with Superfly Productions.

Phish fans, among the most ardent in music, have come out in droves to see the band at Bonnaroo, considerably boosting the festival’s attendance. Figures for the festival have not yet been announced.

The crowd was immediately cheered with the band’s opener: the rocking fan-favorite “Chalkdust Torture.” Across nearly three hours, Phish performed a number of their classic, multipart jams, including “Harry Hood,” Divided Sky” and “You Enjoy Myself” — which included a sideways trek to their song “Wilson.” They encored with their frequently played Beatles cover of “A Day in the Life.”

Phish’s performance Friday capped the festival’s jam-packed first full day. The lineup included Al Green, Beastie Boys, David Byrne, Santigold, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, TV on the Radio, Lucinda Williams and Ani DiFranco.

Click for related content

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide