2007 US Tour dates

As posted on thehip.com:

The Hip - Live!
02/26/07: Long Beach Arena Long Beach, CA
02/28/07: US Airways Center Phoenix, AZ
03/01/07: ipayOne Center at the Sports Arena San Diego, CA
03/05/07: The Sears Centre Hoffman Estates, IL
03/06/07: Conseco Fieldhouse Indianapolis, IN

03/08/07: Harro East Ballroom Rochester, NY
03/09/07: Town Ballroom Buffalo, NY
03/10/07: Town Ballroom Buffalo, NY
03/13/07: Roxy Theatre Atlanta, GA
03/15/07: Scout Bar Houston, TX
03/16/07: Palladium Ballroom Dallas, TX
03/19/07: Gothic Theatre Denver, CO
03/21/07: House Of Blues Las Vegas, NV
03/24/07: El Rey Theatre Los Angeles, CA
03/26/07: The Fillmore San Francisco, CA
03/28/07: Roseland Theatre Portland, OR
03/29/07: Moore Theatre Seattle, WA
04/12/07: State Theater Detroit, MI
04/16/07: Higher Ground South Burlington, VT
04/17/07: Higher Ground South Burlington, VT
04/18/07: Northern Lights Clifton Park, NY
04/20/07: Avalon Boston, MA
04/23/07: Higher Ground South Burlington, VT
04/24/07: Irving Plaza New York, NY
04/25/07: Irving Plaza New York, NY
04/28/07: Theatre of Living Arts Philadephia, PA
04/29/07: 9:30 Club Washington, DC

Hip-notic performance, without hype

Hip-notic performance, without hype
Tragically Hip delivers, as always, with oddball antics, diverse playlist

Sandra Sperounes, The Edmonton Journal
Published: Monday, January 15, 2007
Gord Downie and The Tragically Hip perform Sunday at Rexall Place.
****
Where: Rexall Place
Opening act: The Sadies

They’re not the flashiest performers. Nor do they rely on costly gimmicks such as pyrotechnics or elaborate stage sets.Yet, after more than two decades, watching Gord Downie and The Tragically Hip rip through their repertoire of Canadian classics never seems to get old.For starters, even with the advent of the Internet, you never quite know which of their 100-plus songs they’re going to pull out of their pockets.New Orleans Is Sinking? Ahead By A Century? Poets? Fiddler’s Green?Yup, The Hip played all four nuggets — each accompanied by the smell of weed wafting through Rexall Place on Sunday night.(You could sort of judge the crowd’s faves by when they lit up their joints. Sadly, none of the group’s newest batch of songs, from 2006’s World Container, seemed to, uh, ignite such passion. At least not in section 101.)Photograph by : Greg Southam, The JournalThen, there’s good ol’ Downie, the nerdiest — and least self-conscious — of frontmen.Not only does he shake, shimmy, jump and pirouette like one of the unco-ordinated dancers in Fatboy Slim’s Praise You video, he rants and screeches like a mad man trying to purge his demons.”Where do you think you’re going? Who do you think you’re talking to?” he demanded after kicking and hip-checking his microphone stand during a fast, frenetic rendition of another oldie, At the Hundredth Meredian.No wonder the Hip don’t need to resort to using flashpots or dancers. (They only used lights and a few white backdrops, which doubled as video screens for their blurry images of trees, cars and water.)No wonder guitarists Rob Baker, Paul Langlois and bassist Gord Sinclair don’t really need to do much more than play their instruments and bob their heads.Downie’s endearing antics are enough for all of them.He seemed even more animated than usual on Sunday — perhaps rejuvenated by World Container, the group’s best album in years.The Kingston five started off their set with The Lonely End of The Rink — an appropriate choice for a hockey arena — featuring dance-rock rhythms and a crazy reggae beat.”You and me,” Downie bellowed, as 11,500 yous jumped to their feet.New Orleans Is Sinking was next — including a few tacit barbs leveled at George W. Bush’s reaction to Hurricane Katrina — followed by Grace, Too, a sombre, muted U2-ish number with an extended extro. Then came another downbeat song, It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken, and another new track, The Drop Off, with a wave of moody guitars and Downie pretending to swim.While water is obviously one of his favourite themes — most of his lyrics seem to reference skating, swimming, sailing or sinking — The Hip’s choice of opening act is never as transparent.Downie and his pals prefer to pick offbeat artists rather than the latest up ‘n’ coming act on Universal.A few years ago, Chris Brown and Kate Fenner opened for the Kingston rockers. This time, The Hip brought The Sadies on tour with them.The Toronto foursome usually play smaller venues such as New City or The Sidetrack, but they’re such impeccable musicians, they made the leap to Rexall with great ease.Think of them as Hawaii Five-O meets the Wild West, fronted by two brothers who look like undertakers from the 1800s.Dallas Good even sounded like one at times, using his deep, sinister, son-of-Johnny Cash voice to rattle our little bones.ssperounes@thejournal.canwest.com

SETLIST: 2007-01-14 – Edmonton, AB

Lonely End Of The Rink
New Orleans Is Sinking
Grace, Too
It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken
The Drop Off
Ahead By A Century
In View
Poets
Fiddler’s Green
World Container
Lionized
At The 100th Meridian
Bobcaygeon
Family Band
Springtime In Vienna
Scared
Yer Not The Ocean
Three Pistols
Blow At High Dough

Encore
COVER: “Summer Side Of Life” by Gordon Lightfoot
Locked In The Trunk Of A Car
Little Bones

CANOE — JAM! Music: The Tragically Hip have diverse fan base

CANOE — JAM! Music – Artists – Tragically Hip, The: Tragically Hip have diverse fan base
By YURI WUENSCH — Edmonton Sun
When Tragically Hip lead singer Gord Downie was in Edmonton last October on a national press tour for the band’s 11th full-length album, World Container, we got talking about the band’s sometimes maligned and misunderstood fan base.
Local “Hip Heads” will be pouring into Rexall Place tomorrow night to catch the object of their affection – and the Sadies. Tickets for the show ($39.50-$75.50) are available through Ticketmaster online or by calling 451-8000.
Not all Hip Heads, however, are alike, he told me, a fact supported by the diverse ways the band has touched people. Such tales are being shared on the band’s website through the Hip Story Project, where fans are invited to submit their tales related to the band.
“I don’t read them every day,” Downie said, “but I always find them touching, funny or sad – or all of the above. The project shows that – as much as they’re button-holed for their interests in a particular band’s music – that isn’t who they are.
“That’s always been the thing that’s sort of been raced over by people who take a view of the group, what it means and what it means to people. I’ve watched them painted with one brush and it never seems to quite cover the whole canvas.”
Who knew that disciples of the Canadian Music Hall of Famers were so stigmatized? But is there some kind of rock ‘n’ roll litmus test akin to racial profiling that would allow one to pick a Hipster out of a crowd?
Guitarist Rob Baker, on the road in Prince George, B.C., gave me the lowdown on what the ugliest and most egregious stereotype of a Tragically Hip fan might boil down to.
“There’s a certain depiction of our fans as being a very homogeneous group: thick-necked, rugby-shirt wearing, ball cap-wearing. They’re an element of the audience out there,” he concedes, adding that they seem that much rowdier when the band plays abroad.
“I think it has to do with nationalism. In some audiences, the most vocal are kind of the yobs. They’ve been preparing for the gig all day. They’ve had too many drinks and they’re pumping their fists. They’ve got the (Canadian) flag on their faces. They go crazy.
“It’s easy to say, ‘Oh, the audience is made up of all these people, Canadians chanting nationalist slogans.’ But that’s just lazy journalism or something.”
Noted. But there’s no denying the Hip’s seeming status as the quintessential Canadian band. The passion and devotion the Hip Heads faithfully heap on the group almost gleams more brightly than the Hip’s astounding collection of 14 Junos.
So, people “love” the Hip, though they probably don’t always “get” the Hip. Even Baker, at 44, and playing with Downie for more than 20 years, says there are certain Downie lyrics he’s never truly understood and will probably go to his grave never understanding.
Not that he’s ever really been inclined to ask for clarification, either.
“Gord writes to please himself. He’s very literate, so he loves that kind of density,” Baker explains.
“We don’t sit around and talk about what he’s written. I think he writes them that way so people can put their own stamp on it.”
Some of those people even hit the road, following the Hip around for multiple tour stops, the kind of pilgrimages that Dead Heads used to make to honour the Grateful Dead.
“Hip Heads are, generally speaking, cleaner and less stoned,” Baker laughs.
“There was one couple from Arizona who followed us around. I think in one year they saw about 55 shows and they’ve seen more than a hundred over the years.”
Didn’t they have jobs?
“You wonder. She was teaching skiing in Vail, Colorado. And, as far as I know, he was dealing dope. But he’s dead now.
“I don’t know the ins and outs, but we got the word about two months ago that he got shot in Phoenix.” (Here’s a video from a show where they dedicated Long Time Running to this fan…)
Because of dealing drugs?
“No, I think he kind of blew his mind on drugs and joined a religious cult.”
Speaking of fanatical obsessions …

SETLIST: 2007-01-13 – Grand Prairie, AB

Lonely End of the Rink
NOIS
Fully Completely
Gus
Family Band
Boots or Hearts
Putting Down
Courage
Long Time Running
Pretend
Something On
At the Hundredth Meridian
ABC
In View
Nautical Disaster
Wheat Kings
Yer Not the Ocean
50 Mission Cap
Fire in the Hole

COVER: “I Can Only Give You Everything” by Them
Fireworks
Blow

Setlist: 2007-07-12 – Prince George, BC

01 – The Lonely End Of The Rink
02 – My Music At Work
03 – Grace, Too
04 – Lake Fever
05 – The Drop Off
06 – Bobcaygeon
07 – In View
08 – Poets
09 – Flamenco
10 – World Container
11 – Fireworks
12 – At The Hundredth Meridian
13 – 38 Years Old
14 – The Kids Don’t Get It
15 – Gift Shop
16 – Ahead By A Century
17 – Yer Not The Ocean
18 – New Orleans Is Sinking
19 – On The Verge

Encore
20 – It Makes No Difference (The Band)
21 – Family Band
22 – Little Bones
Setlist: 2007-07-12 - Prince George, BC

Hip US Tour Dates

Here’s what we know/think so far:

March 8
Harro East Ballroom
Rochester, NY
on sale:

March 9
Town Ballroom
Buffalo, NY
on sale:

March 10
Town Ballroom
Buffalo, NY
on sale:

March 19
Gothic Theatre
Denver, CO
on sale: Sat, 01/13/07 10:00 AM

March 29
Moore Theatre
Seattle, WA
on sale: Fri, 01/19/07 12:00 PM

April 12
State Theatre
Detroit Detroit, MI
on sale: Fri, 01/12/07 10:00 AM

———————————-

As more dates are announced, we’ll have them for you!

Setlist: 2007-07-08 – Victoria, BC

1. LOTR
2. Courage
3. Twist My Arm
4. Gus
5. Luv Sic
6. Weaken
7. In View
8. Nautical Disaster
9. Long Time Running
10. Pretend
11. Fireworks
12. Hundredth Meridian
13. 38 Years Old
14. Kids Don’t Get it
15. Gift Shop
16. Scared
17. Yer Not the Ocean
18. Three Pistols
19. NOIS

Encore
20. C’Mon Everybody
21. Family Band
22. Locked

Two shows in a row that they’ve played a cover tune…