Arts ©Entertainment Wednesday, August 23, 1993 Page 12 Courtesy of EleWra PHlSH Hookedfans feed on band's big success By John FulwkJer Staff Reporter The beginning was not unusual. Phish was the product of flyers posted around a Vermont college campus. But the band’s success — not the quadrillion-selling album, all-over the-airwaves success, but rather die hard-fan-base success—is some thing few others have achieved. The group played 100 shows in 1994 to more than 600,000 fans. It sold out New York’s Madison Square Garden in four hours; Boston Garden in an hour. Call it a phenomenon. Call it results of hard work and long tours. Call it what you will. The band has achieved a cult following so dedicated, many have drawn comparisons to the Grateful Dead. Phish’s latest tour will land the group in Lincoln’s Pershing Auditorium Oct. 21. And local fans couldn’t be happier. Standing in line Saturday to buy tickets to the October show, Luke Ed son, a Lincoln fry cook, summed up the reason why Phish has such loyal fans. “Nobody sounds like Phish,” he said. Eric Olson, a graduate of UNL, agreed. “Their music is so big,” he said. “It encompasses so many styles of American music, from bluegrass to weird jazz” Dan Kubicki, a senior computer science and philosophy major, has never followed the band around. But he, like many other Phish fans, has gone to great lengths to see the band. He and three friends drove 14 hours in “a big red thing from the seventies” to get to a Phish concert in Colorado’s Red Rocks Amphithe ater. Well, sort of. Eleven of those hours were spent driving to Sugarloaf Mountain in Wyoming. Kubicki and his friends met four other friends there, and after three days of hiking and camping, drove down to the Colorado concert. After the concert, they spent the night in a hotel, then drove yet another 12 hours back to Lincoln. But Kubicki said getting to see the group’s attitude on stage—one of humor and spontaneity—made the trip worthwhile. “They don’t take themselves totally seriously,” he said. At the two concerts he’s been to, Kubicki has seen smoke bombs, giant beach balls, trampolines — and 6,000 people bouncing. “At Red Rock they were playing ‘Bouncing Around the Room,’ and 6,000 people were bouncing around in circles to this song with crazy lights and smoke,” he said. “It wasn’t quite the same as a mosh pit.” Kubicki and others have com plained that today’s alternative bands try too hard to push social messages in their songs. And the lack of that trait is exactly why Kubicki and many others like Phish. “Most of what they sing is pretty ridiculous, actually.” ^_ 1. 1 \w The top 10 TV shows from Aug.14-20 fp* are below, along with their networks and B^ ' _ m m m _ Aaron Steckelberg/DN Concerts rock on despite injuries By Jeff Randall Senior Reporter In the wake of injuries at the Aug. 14 Soul Asylum ana Matthew Sweet concert at the Pershing Auditorium, a number ofsecurity questions have been raised by local concert goers and, more often, their parents. But DougKuhnel, executive direc tor of Pershing Auditorium, said no complaints had come his way since last week’s show. At that show, five people were transported from the auditorium to local hospitals for what Kuhnel called “precautionary treatment.” All five, including one Pershing employee, were released the same night. “We’ve received no harsh phone calls or anything like that,” Kuhnel said. “In fact, most of the reaction seems to be from the media.” In the last week, Kuhnel said, the only calls of concern have been from people who were checking on rumors that concerts would be eliminated from Pershing’s schedule. “We plan to continue with the same events we always have had,” he said. The injuries at the Aug. 14 concert came as adirect result ofbody surfing, a now-popular activity at rock con certs in which people are carried around the crowd by other fans’ up lifted arms. As far as security goes, Kuhnel said, there were no problems at the Soul Asylum concert. “It (body surfing) is a form of en tertainment for people nowadays,” he said. “We in no way condone or en courage it, and we have posted signs to let tne people know that any injuries that result from it are their responsi bility.” Security guards at Pershing have been told to stop body surfers when ever they are spotted, Kuhnel said. Those who are caught are removed from the facility, he said. Fan reaction since the concert has been supportive, Kuhnel said. “We have received calls complimenting the security and have a letter on file from a fan who was by the stage at the concert,” Kuhnel said. “He fully complimented the security guards for trying to stop any prob lems.” Pershing’s next scheduled concert will be the Oct. 21 show by rock band Phish. The show will go on as planned, Kuhnel said, despite any rumors to the contrary. “We have to deal with the same problems as any concert venue, whether it be in Omaha, Kansas City, or wherever,” he said.