Phish's contribution and legacy are tough to overstate.
I agree that Phish will likely enter the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame close to their first year of eligibility. However, it is not a very exclusive club. I never listen to Phish, but know that Anastasio is a helluva guitar player.
If you don't mind, Jay, could you please try to explain briefly what you believe Phish's great contribution to popular music is. I don't see it. In general, I see popular music as an artform that was more or less fully explored by 1980 or so, and that it is very difficult at this point to reinvent the wheel. The great musicians in the last 30 years tend to be great practitioners, but not innovators, of a mature art.
It's an interesting exercise, since we have our own criteria for comparing one musician with one architect. I don't care what Jay Flemma's criteria is; he prioritizes differently.
I like Willie Nelson as Bill Coore: peaceful, subtle, not flashy but distinctive.
Ben Crenshaw as his friend Waylon Jennings..."Are you sure Mac done it this way?"...that's kind of a joke.
We are talking about the greatest 30-40 golf architects in the last 150 years. Are we looking at the best and most important popular musicians of the 20th/21st century here?
I like David Kelly's analogy of Fletcher Henderson. It makes sense to me.
Virtually all my history books say that Louis Armstrong is not only the most important musician, but also the most important singer of the 20th century. He's the Babe Ruth, the game changer.
I like Tom Doak = Bob Dylan.