Runaway Gin Returns to the 8×10 in Baltimore

Jason Herman
September 18, 2017

Runaway Gin Returns to the 8×10 in Baltimore

Jason Herman
September 18, 2017

Sometimes when attending a concert you receive subtle but distinct cosmic message that tonight you are going to see a tremendous show.  When entering the venue tonight to see Runaway Gin, The 8x10 placed an admission bracelet with the message "Trust In The Music."  Tonight we trusted our concert experience to Runaway Gin for our musical experience and they did not let us down.

Formed in 2014, Runaway Gin, is the most active Phish Tribute Band and just this week completed their 250th performance.  

Runaway Gin is not just a "tribute band" in the conventional sense.  They truly capture the essence of the Phish experience and the bands performance; amazing musical interchanges and subtle musical communication  between band members, Type II Jams, and unexpected antics on stage.  

In so many concerts in the past, keyboardist John Fitzgerald, and guitarist Andy Greenberg playfully adjusted Fitzgerald's Mr. Potoato Head's eyes in between songs.  Tonight was serious business and there was hardly time for band members to interact with  Mr. Potato Head.  The band ​started with a blistering "Blaze On" and did not stop for another few hours.  Runaway Gin's 251st performance was no doubt a special one indeed.

Runaway Gin's concert experience is filled with so many delightful moments that their setlist are almost always littered with performance notes.  Tonight was no exception as the band had several amazing Type II Jams, most notably in "Rock and Roll."  During "Bathtub Ginl" lyrics from "Rock and Roll" were tossed into the song and at  the end of "The Squirming Coil" three out of four members of the band switched instruments, Andy Greenberg switching to drums, drummer John Pope switching to bass, and bassist Bobby Hogg switching to the guitar, the later delivering a blistering guitar solo.  The instrument change was pure magic as each band member seemed to be at ease on the new instrument and Andy Greenberg sharing an ear to ear grin as he played the drums.  Audience members felt as if they were at a Phish concert, experiencing the unexpected and loving every note of it.

It was only after an exceptional "Bathtub Gin" with an ambient jam, that Andy Greenberg did touch Mr. Potato Head's eyes.  It was only deserving that Mr. Potato Head became a little bit "Crosseyed and Painless" after all.​  We suspect Andy Greenberg's spirit totem, Gandalf had something to do with this.

Throughout the night Runaway Gin left audience members turning to one another asking "Did they just tease that song in there?" and beaming ear to ear.  Above all else, Runaway Gin, left the audience in a state of complete musical bliss and feverishly dancing throughout the venue.​

Performance 251 is in the books and we look forward to celebrating their 500th, 750th, 1000th performances in the many years to come.

Click here to see Runaway Gin's Setlist

Click here to watch the Pro-Shot video from tonights performance (Courtesy of Runaway Gin)

Photo Gallery

Photo Gallery

Photo Gallery


Enjoy photos by our photographer Jason Herman of Jason Herman Photography.


About the author

Jason Herman

A 24x7 member and Photo Editor of DC Music Review. Jason has been passionate about music since his earliest days and is especially excited about the music scene around his adopted hometown, Washington DC.

Capturing the magic of hundreds of concerts and countless music festivals under his belt, you can find him at concerts around the country but especially in his adopted hometown of Washington, D.C. Before turning his lens to music, Jason followed professional cyclists around the U.S. Domestic Circuit and tallest mountains of Europe.


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