Colorado’s Phish Story Goes Back Many Years (2024)

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Phish's annual Labor Day weekend shows at Dick's Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City have become a beloved tradition.

August 1, 2024

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Phish, the beloved jam band, emerged from the college town of Burlington, Vermont, way back in 1983.

Founded by Trey Anastasio and Jeff Holdsworth on guitar and lead vocals, Mike Gordon on bass and vocals, Jon Fishman on drums and vocals, with Page McConnell joining on keyboards and vocals in 1985, the band delivered an eclectic blend of rock, jazz, funk, bluegrass and more, with the added draw of incredible musicianship and improvisational prowess. Holdsworth left the band in ’86, and the lineup has remained the same since.

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Phish began to rise in prominence, capturing the hearts of a growing fan base known as "Phishheads." The band’s live performances, characterized by intricate jams and seamless transitions between songs, became the stuff of legend. Much like the Grateful Dead, Phish fostered a sense of community among its followers.

Colorado holds a special place in Phish's storied career. Our state was the first outside of the Northeast that the band explored, playing small clubs across Colorado in 1988.

Phish's relationship with Colorado extends beyond Red Rocks, where the group first played in 1993. Its annual Labor Day weekend shows at Dick's Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City have become a beloved tradition. Since 2011, these performances have drawn thousands of fans from all over the country, who revel in the band's creative set lists and energetic shows.

Phish returns to Dick’s Sporting Goods Park August 29-September 1.

The synergy between Phish and Colorado's music-loving culture has solidified the band's status as a cherished staple of the state's live-music scene. Through its innovative sound and the vibrant community it’s built, Phish continues to captivate audiences, creating timeless memories one show at a time.

click to enlarge

Phish performs at Dick's Sporting Goods Park in 2023.

Alden Boncutter

And many of those Colorado performances are thanks to Don Strasburg, veteran concert promoter and recently named president of AEG’s Rocky Mountain and Pacific Northwest regions. Strasburg’s musical career has been intertwined with Phish’s since the band’s earliest days.

While a student at Colorado College in Colorado Springs, Strasburg lived with friends in Burlington during the summer of 1989 and got to see Phish perform in its hometown. He didn’t know the band had already toured Colorado’s mountain towns the previous year on its own, and decided he had to bring the band to Colorado College and elsewhere in the state, including mountain towns and Front Range rooms in Boulder and Denver.

“They were by far the most popular band in Burlington in the ecosystem that I was in at that time. You know, that meant they were the biggest band in the world besides the Grateful Dead,” Strasburg recalls. He went on to run the concerts at Colorado College and eventually opened the Fox Theater in Boulder, a showcase for up-and-coming bands.

The AEG executive reads from a framed letter on his office wall, which is the pitch he wrote to the college in January 1990 to bring Phish to campus on Earth Day in April. “Phish is a fresh and unique band. They're drawing huge crowds wherever they play. Relix magazine, the national music publication, recently named Phish the best unsigned band in the nation. The scheduled date is Earth Day, one day prior to Earth Week, therefore will be an excellent opportunity for Earth Week to pitch their coming events to a significant portion of the student body and therefore get a larger turnout.”

Strasburg went on to promote Colorado shows that have become legendary with Phishheads not just for Earth Day, but Halloween shows and special nights throughout the years at Colorado College and beyond. Fans still revere a November 17, 1997, concert at Denver’s McNichols Arena that featured a 21-minute version of the spacey, funky song “Ghost.”

click to enlarge

The crowd as Phish performs at Dick's Sporting Goods Park in 2023.

Alden Boncutter

As Strasburg’s burgeoning career led him to book larger venues and Phish’s popularity outgrew nightclubs across the country, the shows became larger events. When the promoter booked the band at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park for its largest audience yet (twice the size of Red Rocks), Phish began a quirky tradition of playing sets that spelled out messages with the first letter of each song. The first was “Thanks.” They’ve only done that at Dick’s, Strasburg says.

“I was in love with the band. We were all in love with the band,” he adds. Strasburg vividly remembers every Phish concert he’s promoted, naming off every club, hall, theater and amphitheater where he’s booked the group. He’ll be able to commit another four-night stand to memory when Colorado’s dedicated Phishheads come out to express their love for the band over Labor Day Weekend.

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Colorado’s Phish Story Goes Back Many Years (2024)

FAQs

Colorado’s Phish Story Goes Back Many Years? ›

Colorado holds a special place in Phish's storied career. Our state was the first outside of the Northeast that the band explored, playing small clubs across Colorado in 1988. Phish's relationship with Colorado extends beyond Red Rocks, where the group first played in 1993.

What is the longest Phish show ever? ›

It was also the longest Phish concert ever, culminating in a seven-and-a-half hour second set from midnight on New Year's Eve to sunrise New Year's Day. Phish was the only band at the event, performing five sets of music (nearly sixteen hours) over two nights. It was the sixth festival hosted by the rock band Phish.

Why did Phish go on hiatus in 2000? ›

After 17 years of extensive touring, the band just wanted a break—to write, relax, work on other things—so that they could come back to Phish better than ever.

How many times did Phish break up? ›

In October 2000, the band began a two-year hiatus that ended in December 2002, but they disbanded again in August 2004. Phish reunited officially in October 2008 for subsequent reunion shows in March 2009 and since then have resumed performing regularly.

How many years has Phish been a band? ›

Phish is an American rock band. They formed in Vermont in 1983, broke up in 2004, and reformed in 2009.

What was the largest Phish concert? ›

It was described as the largest concert on Earth to usher in the new millennium. An estimated 80,000 people with traffic jams that stretched miles and lasted hours. “Psychedelic gridlock” is how Tribune reporter Peter Gallagher described the congestion in a story. And it all happened on the Big Cypress Reservation.

What is the most played Phish song? ›

Another Phish classic from the group's 1989 debut, “You Enjoy Myself” has been played the most of any track by the band, having been played 33% of the time during their first 1,800 shows.

What are Phish fans called? ›

Fans of the band are sometimes called Phish Heads (also Glides or "aphishianados"), they congregate on (or in) the Phish.Net, tickets (abbreviated "tix" online) are thus pronounced like "fish sticks", and their jam progressions have been called (and their complex surface might be called) Phish scales, shows are Phish ...

Where is Phish banned from? ›

Phish were banned from performing at Red Rocks after they played four concerts there in August 1996.

Why is Phish called Phish? ›

The band was formed in 1983 in Vermont, while the members of the band were attending college. They created the name Phish as a play on drummer Fishman's last name.

How rich is Phish? ›

Phish Net Worth: Phish is an American rock band who has a net worth of $200 million. Phish formed at the University of Vermont in 1983 and their current lineup was solidified in 1986. The band is known for their musical improvisation and jams which makes them a popular live band.

Who are the famous Phish fans? ›

You never know who's going to turn up at a Phish show—the eclectic rock band's eclectic Rolodex of famous fans and friends includes everyone from Jay-Z to Kenny Rogers to Bruce Springsteen to Danny Devito to Tom Hanks.

Why is Phish spelled with a ph? ›

Name Origins

Some of the earliest hackers were known as phreaks. Phreaking refers to the exploration, experimenting and study of telecommunication systems. Phreaks and hackers have always been closely linked. The “ph” spelling was used to link phishing scams with these underground communities.

What is the longest Phish song live? ›

Runaway Jim. 11/29/97 at the Centrum. Clocked in at 58 minutes or so.

What 90s band was like Phish? ›

The style influenced a new wave of jam bands who toured the United States with jam band-style concerts in the late 1980s and early '90s, such as Phish, Blues Traveler, Widespread Panic, Dave Matthews Band, The String Cheese Incident, moe., and Col. Bruce Hampton and the Aquarium Rescue Unit.

How much does Phish charge per show? ›

An example fee to book Phish is in the starting range of $999,999-$1,499,000.

What is the longest jam in Phish history? ›

Runaway Jim. 11/29/97 at the Centrum. Clocked in at 58 minutes or so.

How long do Phish shows last? ›

The soundtrack to this chaos is the propulsive groove of Phish's intrepid quartet. Each show consists of two sets and an encore, with each set clocking in at around an hour and a half.

How long was Phish Big Cypress? ›

The three-day event had two days of shows, each with two sets, the second of the second show lasting from midnight until dawn. The first day featured an afternoon set and two night-time sets; the second day featured an afternoon set and a seven-hour-plus, midnight-to-sunrise set. (Sunrise was about 7:11 a.m..)

What was the best phish festival? ›

In a 2000 cover story for Entertainment Weekly, three of the four Phish members declared Big Cypress to be the greatest Phish concert ever. It was also voted as the most popular Phish show ever by fans in the final volume of The Pharmer's Almanac.

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