in the integrity or the essence of what we're after. ... When you get to the size of things as they are now, you'll play things that you know the crowd will like but that you wouldn't necessarily pick." But there's a flip side: "The situation we're in now almost pushes us more to do something different. I mean, what if we did something that made half our crowd leave? That'd mean we only had half a bazillion people. "The bottom line is, there is noth- ing to lose. The worst you can do is fall on your face. No one gets hurt." That adventurous attitude appar- ently is what spurred The Siket Disc, Phish's most recent album. The album is sold only through Phish's official Web site (www.phish.com ) and mail order service, by an unusual arrange- ment with the band's record label, Elektra. Siket (named for Phish's recording engineer) is an all-instrumental album that was recorded about the same time as the group's previous album, The Story of the Ghost. It's more ambient and less rhythm-oriented than most Phish records, and Fishman says it represents a new direction for the band. "It felt like, All right, we're taking a chance here!' It wasn't really catering to anything but itself. It was just this weird plant that we put out. The atti- tude was, 'Quick, get it out before we can analyze it!'" Phish's improvisatory style and the ardor of its tie-dye-flaunting fans, who follow the band around and set up makeshift villages at each tour stop, has led to inevitable and endless com- parisons between Phish and the Grateful Dead. So it's a surprise when Fishman actually brings up the subject of the late, lamented San Francisco band, without any prompting. "A lot of people compare us with the Grateful Dead," he volunteers. "And I will say they had an influence on what we do. "But one thing I don't want to do is get fat and lazy and rest on my laurels for my last 10 years. It's sad that this thing that was important to American culture for so long just became [uncomplimentary four-letter word]." "The Beatles taught us not to sell our publishing rights. And the Dead taught us not to rest on our laurels." Considering the energy Phish brings to its new work, the band won't be slowing down anytime soon. The group, whose members — r Fishman, Gordon, guitarist Trey Anastasio and keyboardist Page McConnell — got together in Burlington, Vt., in the early '80s, is putting out more adventurous music than it was four or five years ago, when it was struggling to deal with growing fame. Fishman is a fan of the Residents, a Bay-Area performance group known for its oddball exploits and for scrupu- lously hiding the identities of its members. Phish's members no longer have the luxury of obscurity, but the band. does like to indulge in Residents-style stunts — jumping on trampolines during concerts or breaking into a sudden barber-shop-quartet number. Once, the band made its entrance rid- ing atop a giant replica of a hot dog suspended from the ceiling. Over the past few summers, Phish also has staged a series of vast, one- time festival concerts with fanciful names such as Lemonwheel and the Great Went. And it recently announced plans for a three-day New Year's blowout to take place on Florida's Big Cypress Seminole Indian Reservation. How does Phish pull off these giant concerts peacefully, when an event such as Woodstock '99 degen- erates into chaos and violence? Ask Fishman for a 10-word answer, and in his typically verbose manner, he rattles off a 10-minute treatise. The essentials: "When we approach these festivals, we think of the things we didn't like when we went to festivals as concert goers. And we've paid a lot of atten- tion to the feedback we've gotten on them. "After the first one, the feedback was that it was great but hard for handicapped people to get back to their campsites. So we started a shuttle service. "Woodstock's approach was, 'How can we make as much money as possi- ble?' I thought the guy from MTV said it right: 'If you treat people like animals, they're going to act like ani- mals.' "But you're investing in your future if you do it right." fl Phish performs 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 2, at the Palace of Auburn Hills. $25 advance/$27 day of show. (246) 645-6666. John Tanktsychtik Detroit Free Press January 8th, 1999 • Pasta Specialties • Pizza • Steaks • Chops • Poultry • Seafood • Cocktails OPEN DAILY - LUNCH & DINNER OPEN WEEKDAYS UNTIL 2:00 AM WEEKENDS UNTIL 3:30 AM A Ferndale Favorite Since 1961 OUTDOOR PATIO?! at 9 mile Family 5 R 4eta 8s .sou o rant 5 Woodward Featuring wonderful, traditional favorites... a superb variety of dining specialties The only Chinese Pestaurant open until 2:00 a.m. 6407 Orchard Lake Rd. (In The Orchard Mall) (248) 626 8585 - Hours: Monday thru Sunday 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Excellent Thai Food As You Like It ... 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