Commenting on posts

It was brought to my attention this week that the commenting feature does not work properly, if at all, for some users. Sadly it appears that it is the theme we were using that was causing the commenting feature to not work. The theme that Ben Grubb made the custom headers for.

So… please bear with me as we try some new themes in an attempt to figure out why the comments do not work with the K2 theme we were using.

We’ve Gone Green!

That’s right fans, www.hipfans.com is now a green site – meaning that we are carbon neutral. Our hosting company guarantees it!

Read more about it here:

Green Web Hosting! This site hosted by DreamHost.

40 Years

It’s been that long since The Toronto Maple Leafs won the Stanley Cup. Forty years ago today.

It’s good to see that Leaf fans don’t actually care about winning, as they continue to snap up tickets, paraphernalia and memorabilia at an alarmingly fast rate.

New York Press – JON LANGSTON – Hip Check

New York Press – JON LANGSTON – Hip Check
The biggest band in Canada is not from Montreal
By Jon Langston

Canada’s favorite band doesn’t garner four-star reviews in Rolling Stone. They get no fawning fluff jobs in indie rags, no name checks at cooler-than-thou music websites. No, the biggest band in Canada is not some quirky-cute hipster collective from Montreal (neither is it an aging power trio that admirably churns out albums year after year). It’s a quintet called The Tragically Hip, and they’ve just released their 11th album, World Container, which was produced by veteran twiddler (and fellow Canadian) Bob Rock and is a welcome return to form.

The Tragically Hip’s early sound, bluesy and tinged with twang, was an immediate hit up north. By the early ’90s, the band had matured sonically into a more polished rock that maintained its wry lyrical hues, and The Hip endured a groundswell of popularity, cementing their status as Canada’s favorite sons. To date, they’ve sold more than six million albums worldwide, have won more Juno awards (Canada’s Grammys) than anyone ever and have been inducted into the Canadian Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. They routinely sell out arenas from Vancouver to Halifax. But The Hip, which still boasts its five original members—vocalist Gordon Downie, guitarists Rob Baker and Paul Langlois, bassist Gord Sinclair and drummer Johnny Fay—have never ventured past cult status in the U.S. And after 25 years together, they’re just fine with that.

“Something as mundane as ‘breaking’ in the States is certainly not an ambition of ours at this point in our career,” says Downie. (Indeed, on playing the SXSW Festival earlier this year, Downie said the band felt decidedly un-hip: “That slouch,” he says with a laugh, “comes straight out of some manual that I sure didn’t get.”) When touring America the band plays smaller, midsized venues, and Downie admits that he and his mates relish the intimate challenge.

“When you’ve been doing this as long as we have, you take a certain amount of pride in being able to play anywhere, at any time—on the ass of an elephant, if need be,” says Downie. The Hip’s live shows are legendary in Canada; the band’s versatility and Downie’s onstage antics and peculiar banter make every performance distinctive. The band squelched a black market early on by allowing the recording of its shows; the Internet is rife with fans’ dubs, which these days include numerous digi-vid files as well as audio clips. The band embraces the new technology and Downie, for one, doesn’t mind the effect downloading has had on the music business.

“I don’t lament it or despair for the industry,” he explains. “I’ve always felt that rock ’n’ roll is just melodious air. I get perplexed when music gets blunted at the border by some artificial demarcation line—whether a corporate border or a technological one. Music, or any kind of art, is like water, and it needs to be able to find its way. Fifteen years ago, we would have needed a licensing deal, some kind of emissary to chaperone our music into the same kinds of places that it’s getting to naturally these days. It’s fluid; it’s just doing what it should be doing.”

As for the recent popularity of Canadian bands such as Arcade Fire and Broken Social Scene, Downie understands the appeal. “Those bands are exuding exuberance and enthusiasm,” he says. “People want authentic, organic music these days. As the old model of the music industry shrinks daily, there’s so much more room to make it up. And given the opportunity to make it up, what do you do? You speak from the heart. Kids want to hear the sound of guitars going through amps. They’re sick to death of being virtualized.”
April 24-25, Fillmore NY at Irving Plaza, 17 Irving Pl. (at 15th St.), 212-777-1224; 9, $25 (SOLD OUT).

SETLIST: 2007-04-22 – Lancaster, PA

Chameleon Club, Lancaster, PA

01: Yer Not The Ocean
02: New Orleans Is Sinking
03: Grace, Too
04: It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken
05: Family Band
06: Ahead By A Century
07: In View
08: Twist My Arm
09: World Container
10: Wheat Kings
11: At The 100th Meridian
12: Springtime In Vienna
13: Luv (Sic)
14: Bobcaygeon
15: The Lonely End Of The Rink
16: Blow At High Dough

Encore
17: Fully Completely
18: COVER “The Last Time” by The Rolling Stones
19: On The Verge

Setlist scan provided by Tom Parker aka The Camel
SETLIST: 2007-04-22 - Lancaster, PA

New Jersey Record article

New Jersey Record

Friday, April 20, 2007
By MIKE KERWICK
STAFF WRITER

Mug shots, he confides. Gord Sinclair is getting mug shots taken.

Sinclair is not at a police station. And he doesn’t really mean mug shots. He is busy posing for ID photos for The Tragically Hip’s upcoming trip to the Cayman Islands.

If you do not recognize the face in the photos, don’t be alarmed. Most Americans wouldn’t. The Tragically Hip (or simply “The Hip,” as they’ve come to be known) have always had far more popularity north of the border.

“It was a little mysterious when we were around our second, third or fourth record,” Sinclair said during a recent phone interview. “We were still with Universal at the time, MCA in the States. They were pulling out a lot of stops, trying to run us up the media flagpole. It never seemed to take off. You kind of learn not to get frustrated with it. The road is littered with media casualties.”

The Kingston, Ontario-based band is not one of those casualties.

Stars up there, familiar down here, The Hip are popping by for two sold-out shows at Fillmore New York at Irving Plaza on Tuesday and Wednesday. The group’s new album, “World Container,” is a socially conscious offering, but Sinclair doesn’t think it’s any more socially aware than previous Hip albums.

“I think there’s always been a social consciousness to what [Hip frontman Gordon Downie] writes,” Sinclair, the band’s bassist, said. “Over the last three or four years, if you weren’t aware of your relationship to where you live and your planet and your environment and who you are, you certainly would be now. It’s become such a huge concern for everybody that, God, even politicians are beginning to talk about it.”

No song personifies that ideal more than the title track, the final song on the album.

There’s a world container with your name on it

And a billion ways to go berserk

When the country quits on you it must be dinner

And the Himmler on this one is there’s no dessert

(He’s the one who couldn’t imagine all the people living life in peace).

“It’s actually one of my favorite songs to play live now,” Sinclair said. “We ended up using the title of the song as the title of the record because it encapsulated loose themes that [are] running [through the album].”

Reaching for a singular theme that connects the 11 tracks, Sinclair zeroes in on love.

“When it comes time to start writing for a record,” Sinclair said, “we literally sit around in a circle, and take turns throwing out ideas.”

What they came up with this time around was an album of love and maturity, an album tweaked by former Metallica producer Bob Rock.

It is an album Canadians love, an album some Americans love, too.

Copyright © 2007 North Jersey Media Group Inc.

SETLIST: 2007-04-20 – Boston, MA

Avalon, Boston, Massachusetts

01: In View
02: My Music At Work
03: Grace, Too
04: It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken
05: Family Band
06: Ahead By A Century
07: Yer Not The Ocean
08: Courage
09: Bobcaygeon
10: World Container
11: At The Hundredth Meridian
12: Boots Or Hearts
13: The Kids Don’t Get It
14: Springtime In Vienna
15: Scared
16: The Lonely End Of The Rink
17: New Orleans Is Sinking

Encore
18: Escape Is At Hand For The Travellin’ Man
19: COVER: “Is This Love” by Bob Marley & The Wailers
20: Blow At High Dough