A quiet january provides counterpoint to the intensity of the Big Cypress event. In February, Trey again contributes his participation to the Tibet House cause. March marks the band's second foray into digital distribution of official releases with the online offering of The White Tape via EMusic, and from the end of the month into April Pork Tornado tours in New England as well as further afield. Trey appears with Stewart Copeland and Les Claypool - collectively, Oysterhead - in New Orleans during Jazzfest in May. On the 16th of that month, Phish's 13th album Farmhouse is released, and the band celebrates with a pair of shows at Radio City Music Hall, plus an intimate appearance at Roseland Ballroom which is taped by VH1 for presentation in its Hard Rock Live series. US Summer tour begins close on the heels of a tour of Japan in early June, and continues through mid-July; immediately thereafter, the band performs for Austin City Limits to kick off the show's quarter-century-mark season. August marks the premiere of Bittersweet Motel; this feature-length documentary tracks the band over the course of a year - on and off stages across the United States and Europe and at home in Vermont. Phish then goes back on the road for their Fall tour, beginning in early September in Albany, New York and proceeding across the country to conclude at Shoreline Amphitheatre in California a month later. At the end of the tour the band embarks on a hiatus of undetermined length, with no additional shows planned for the remainder of the year, or immediately thereafter. A couple of bandmember side projects appear in November - Mike Gordon's debut film Outside Out, and Trampled by Lambs and Pecked by the Dove, an album of rough tracks recorded by Trey and his writing partner, lyricist Tom Marshall.