New City And Colour Album Features Gord Downie Cameo

New City And Colour Album Features Gord Downie Cameo

New City And Colour Album Features Gord Downie Cameo
Tuesday December 04, 2007 @ 06:00 PM
By: ChartAttack.com Staff

City And Colour
Dallas Green, Chart’s 2006 artist of the year and half of Alexisonfire’s vocal/scream team, will showcase more of his dulcet tones on the sophomore effort from his hugely successful solo project, City And Colour.

The 12-song Bring Me Your Love, coming on Feb. 12 from Dine Alone Records, was co-produced by Green and Dan Achen and recorded live off the floor at Hamilton’s Catherine North Studio.

Tragically Hip singer Gord Downie lent his distinctive vocals to “Sleeping Sickness.” Green’s friends and labelmates Dan Romano and Spencer Burton of Attack In Black also contributed to the cause.

City And Colour’s 2005 debut, Sometimes, exceeded Green’s commercial expectations and was certified platinum last year after selling more than 100,000 copies in Canada. It earned this year’s Juno Award for best alternative album and a 2006 MuchMusic Video Award for favourite Canadian artist.

Although no dates have been set yet, a cross-Canada tour is planned for the spring. City And Colour will perform at Soundwave in Australia in February.

Here are the songs on Bring Me Your Love:

“Forgive Me”
“Confessions”
“The Death Of Me”
“Body In A Box”
“Sleeping Sickness”
“What Makes A Man?”
“Waiting…”
“Constant Knot”
“Against The Grain”
“The Girl”
“Sensible Heart”
“As Much As I Ever Could”
—Moya Dillon

TORRENT: 2006-06-21 – Belleville, ON DVD

The Tragically Hip
June 21, 2006
The Empire Theatre
Belleville, ON

DVD (2.35:1, NTSC, Widescreen, Anamorphic)

Video Sources:
Left – Sony HDR-HC1 (HD 1080i) to HDV Tape (Adrian Burden)
Right – Panasonic PVDV102K (Chris Kirkpatrick)

Audio source:
Microphones: Sound Professionals Deluxe Audio Technica Cardiods (AT831’s)->Sound Professionals Otter Box (pre-amp)
Recording Device: Gmini 402 @ 44.1khz
Source: Gmini 402->(USB)PC->Audacity(track seperation)->FLAC
Recorded/Transfered By: Steve Stroud (dreyfuss/silentbob)
Recorded from front leftside of soundboard

DVD Edited: Chris Kirkpatrick
Final Cut Express

DVD & Assembly: Chris Kirkpatrick
iDVD

Menu photos by Trevor Connell

——————————————–
This was a “fan club” show with tickets only available through thehip.com to registered members.
The venue is a comfortable, soft seat affair that accomodates approximately 700 people; The acoustics were fantastic!
The setlist was killer, and the band really seemed to be having a great time

Setlist
——————————————–
01: Fully Completely
02: Summer Is Killing Us
03: Twist My Arm
04: Fly
05: Ahead By A Century
06: Gift Shop
07: Something On
08: Dire Wolf
09: The Drop Off
10: Daredevil
11: Poets
12: Titanic Terrarium
13: 100th Meridian
14: Springtime In Vienna
15: Fireworks
16: Lonely End of the Rink

Encore
17: Use It Up
18: Gus, The Polar Bear From Central Park
19: Long Time Running

————

iPod ready version

(Torrent)

TORRENT: 2007-10-07 – Boston, MA

27Oct07 The Tragically Hip
Orpheum Theatre – Boston, MA

Recording:
Neumann KM184s > Lunatec V3 > Kimber Kable (SPDIF) > Microtrack 24/96

Transfer:
Direct to compact flash

Conversion:
Originally recorded at 48.0kHz/24-bits
Dithered down to 16-bits using Sound Forge 8.0
Re-sampled down to 44.1kHz with anti-alias filter using Sound Forge 8.0
Individual tracks cut up using CDWave 1.95 with DirectWAV conversion
WAV MD5 checksum created using MD5Summer v1.2.0.11
FLAC Files created using FLAC Frontend version 1.7.1 with level 8 encoding
FLAC Fingerprint created using FLAC Frontend version 1.7.1
FLAC MD5 checksum created using MD5Summer v1.2.0.11

Recorded/Transferred/Encoded by: markslog@hipfans.com

Freq.: 48.0 kHz
Bitrate: 16-bits
Time: 110:43

Notes:
front row balcony; mikes slightly suspended over railing on a clamp; DIN

Setlist:
t01 – Yer Not The Ocean
t02 – New Orleans Is Sinking
t03 – Fully Completely
t04 – Escape Is At Hand For The Travellin’ Man
t05 – Family Band
t06 – Ahead By A Century
t07 – Gift Shop
t08 – In View
t09 – Courage
t10 – Pretend
t11 – Fireworks
t12 – At The Hundredth Meridian
t13 – Fiddler’s Green
t14 – The Drop-Off
t15 – Poets
t16 – Locked In The Trunk Of A Car
t17 – Fire In The Hole
t18 – **encore break**
t19 – The Lonely End Of The Rink
t20 – Bobcaygeon
t21 – Little Bones

FLAC Fingerprint:
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tragicallyhip2007-10-27neumannkm184t20.flac:2552993a2509ebd6f832573661c645fa
tragicallyhip2007-10-27neumannkm184t21.flac:5ba4b6f6815115f39eaf105dfc784d12

(Torrent)

TTH: 2006-05-26 – Vancouver, BC

THE TRAGICALLY HIP
Commodore Ballroom – Vancouver, BC
Friday May 26, 2006
———————————————————————————————–

SP-CMC-2 > SP-PREAMP-9 > Archos400 GMini (Levels 50% / Switch 0dB)
BOH / Balcony / Center Table

Archos400 via USB 2.0 (48000Hz) > Cool Edit Pro 2.1 (44100Hz)
CDWave Audio Editor 1.94.8 > MD5summer 1.2.0.5 > FLAC 1.1.2a (1.7.1)
———————————————————————————————–

– FLAC 605mb / WAV 925mb
– no Digital Audio Extraction – FLAC files encoded from original PCM WAV source
– WAV & FLAC MD5 files with test logs included
– FLAC encode/test/fingerprint logs included

———————————————————————————————–

Recorded & Transfered by Adrian Burden (BigA)
Edited & Encoded by Tony The Lost Barilko (TLB)
===13-Nov-2006===

———————————————————————————————–

==Disc One=Main Set==
===== (75:24) =====
01 – 03:59 – The Lonely End Of The Rink **
02 – 04:29 – Fully Completely
03 – 05:26 – Twist My Arm
04 – 04:58 – Lake Fever
05 – 04:03 – The Drop Off **
06 – 05:26 – Poets
07 – 03:23 – No Threat
08 – 05:29 – Bobcaygeon
09 – 05:41 – Nautical Disaster
10 – 05:22 – Fireworks
11 – 03:47 – It Can’t Be Nashville Every Night
12 – 03:06 – The New Maybe
13 – 07:13 – At The Hundredth Meridian
14 – 03:39 – Fly **
15 – 03:47 – My Music At Work
16 – 05:36 – New Orleans Is Sinking

==Disc Two=Encore===
===== (16:09) =====

01 – 01:58 – Crowd Chant
02 – 03:55 – We’ll Go Too
03 – 04:23 – ‘It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken’
04 – 05:53 – Little Bones

** live debut

———————————————————————————————–

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tth2006-05-26_d2t04.flac:9595105c1096016c22d3a9b69a08acca

———————————————————————————————–

(Torrent)

TORRENT: Gord Downie & The Sadies – 2007-11-17 – CBC Radio 3

Gord Downie is best known for his work with the Tragically Hip, but for Fuse he’s willing to branch out on his own. And the psychedelic country sounds of The Sadies are playing the part of backup band. With a little poetry from Gord, and a lot impeccable Sadies riffs, it’s sure to a be an organic Fuse of essential Canadiana.
From: http://www.cbc.ca/fuse/

(Torrent)

Wintersleep – Weighty Ghost

On Friday night I checked out Wintersleep at The Mod Club here in Toronto. Wow. Despite many/most of the ticket holders showing up after the mid-point of their set, Wintersleep put on a solid show that held our collective attention from the opening notes. (The tickets said “Doors At 8pm” which most people take to mean that the headliner will not be on stage until 10pm. This may be true sometimes, but the lesson from Fridays show is to not make assumptions. Fans showing up at 10pm only enjoyed 15 minutes of Wintersleep goodness as they went on at 9!)

Their current “single” was a real highlight for me, and seems to be gaining momentum as I heard it on Edge 102 a couple of times this weekend. Here’s the brand new video.

Dishing out $250,000 to get up close with your favourite band

By ANDREW WILLIS
From Friday’s Globe and Mail
November 16, 2007 at 9:48 AM EST

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20071116.wlwealth16/BNStory/lifeMain/home

If you missed seeing Celine Dion during her five-year run in Las Vegas, fear not. The chart-topping Quebec chanteuse may be coming soon to a living room near you.

From $1-million personal concerts by Ms. Dion to a rousing backyard set from aging rockers Trooper or Loverboy, big-name musicians are showing up at intimate gatherings of deep-pocketed Canadian fans.

Burton Cummings pounded out classics this summer to celebrate an investment bank chief executive officer’s 50th birthday at his cottage in Lake Simcoe, Ont.

Blue Rodeo crooned at the wedding reception for an up-and-coming money manager, staged atop a skyscraper at Toronto’s Canoe restaurant. There’s a delicious, but unconfirmed, rumour that U2 banged out a few hits at a mansion on the city’s Bridle Path last year.

Okay, Neil Young is still a holdout (as is Bruce Springsteen). But any other Canadian act that tours – the Tragically Hip, Rush, Great Big Sea, Holly Cole – likely does six to 12 private concerts a year.

They’ll perform 45-minute to hour-long sets at a mixture of corporate gigs, charity concerts and an increasing number of events for individuals.

The ticket price on these one-night stands typically ranges from $10,000 to $250,000. An event producer, along with sound, lighting and catering, will add anywhere from $2,500 to $50,000 to the bill.

“You’ve seen more of these private events, such as concerts in homes, every year for the past decade,” said Shaw Saltzberg, Vancouver-based senior vice-president of S.L. Feldman & Associates.

He says artists recognize that music is a business, and are now comfortable with playing these smaller venues.

When it comes to audiences, Mr. Saltzberg says: “Baby boomers have both the resources and the interest to continue their love affair with music as they grow older and wealthier.”

Given the boomers’ affection for the tunes they grew up with, it’s no surprise that classic rock draws the greatest interest at private parties, along with acts that have cross-generation appeal.

The wife of one financial executive is trying to recreate teenage years spent rocking in arenas by hiring eighties band Styx to play her husband’s 40th birthday – a $200,000 (U.S.) proposition – and said: “For a landmark occasion, you want to stage a real event, and a great band can be the centrepiece.”

As audiences come calling, bands are becoming increasingly interested in private gigs that pay serious amounts of money and help build fan loyalty.

“Artists tend to keep it quiet, but private engagements have become a big part of the business,” said Steve Herman, CEO at The Agency Group, which represents Nickelback, Great Big Sea and a host of other talent.

He says musicians are selective, but generally open to approaches, explaining: “You have to realize that the artists look to live performances for at least 75 per cent of their income.”

The times they are a changin’ in part because of the popularity of downloading, which puts far less cash into musicians’ pockets than traditional record or CD sales.

Artists are realizing they need to take advantage of every opportunity to be paid for performing and build bonds with audiences.

Bob Dylan did a corporate show in the 1990s for California chip maker Applied Materials that swept away the last industry taboos around artists playing to select crowds.

Acts that fit intimate surroundings also get frequent calls. Jann Arden and Diana Krall occasionally do an acoustic show for about 25 people in upscale living rooms. Agents are loath to discuss the price of such appearances, but these shows would probably cost $20,000 (Canadian) to $30,000 to stage.

More typically, private concerts see 100 to 200 friends gather in hotel ballrooms or a bar that’s been rented for the night. Such events require three to six months of lead time, and are easier and cheaper if staged when the band is already touring.

Mr. Herman says the price of an event can easily double if an otherwise idle musician has to assemble a backup band and entourage, then rehearse for just one show.

Front-row seats at these sessions bring special privileges. Hire the Barenaked Ladies for a 50th birthday, and they’ll work funny riffs on your advancing years into one of their songs.

Just don’t get pushy on requests or ask for covers of that chicken dance song. “You can have input on the song list, but the artist maintains control,” Mr. Saltzberg warns.

He adds: “For the artists, the downside of these events is that not everyone who attends is likely to be a fan, so the atmosphere isn’t always what they might like.”

At the top end of the private-party circuit are a handful of Canadian bands capable of commanding fees of up to $500,000, acts that could also fill an arena.

And as she departs Caesars Palace casino after a five-year run, Ms. Dion is alone among domestic talent at the $1-million mark. However, move outside Canada and it’s easy to spend far more to set the night to music.

Prominent musicians can’t make money touring in countries such as Russia, said Mr. Herman, who is based in Toronto but does business in foreign locales such as Moscow.

But Russia’s emerging billionaires will drop huge money to stage concerts for friends: George Michael was paid a reported $3-million (U.S.) by an oligarch for a 75-minute New Year’s Eve set.

In the United States, a defence contractor in Long Island, N.Y., dropped a reported $10-million in 2005 on his daughter’s bat mitzvah at New York’s Rainbow Room by hiring an all-star lineup that included rapper 50 Cent, Aerosmith, Don Henley, Tom Petty and Stevie Nicks.

Another $10-million night reported in The Los Angeles Times featured the Rolling Stones, John Mellencamp and comic Robin Williams playing for a private-equity billionaire in Las Vegas.

If a billionaire fan can entice Mr. Young or Mr. Springsteen to pick up a Fender and drop by their living room, that eye-popping fee might just get topped.

TORRENT: 1991-11-15 – Amsterdam NL

The Tragically Hip
November 15, 1991
Paradiso
Amsterdam, Holland

“This is a song for a guy who believes that prostitutes should wear wedding rings, because they get way more business. This is Long Time Running, O.K.”

Source: Aud Mics > ?

Transfer: First gen cassette > Technics cassette deck > SB Live card, 24bit/48khz >Cool Edit Pro > CD Wave > FLAC level 8

Transfer and Mastering Notes:
The source tape is from Sixer in the Netherlands. When the tape was examined, some wrinkling and a splice were found(remember tape splices)? Some warbling exists, and about 2 seconds of “Little Bones” is missing due to the splice. The show was transferred to hard drive by recording through a Sound Blaster Live sound card at 24 bit, 48 kHz. Cool Edit Pro was used to restore clipped sections, reduce noise, and remove DC offset. All processing in Cool Edit Pro was done at 32 bit resolution. Noise shaping and triangular dithering were used to convert the wav files to 16 bit, 44.1 kHz. This is a very good sounding audience recording. The first track is a little rough due to the age of this first
generation cassette.
(tomcat9)

Show Notes:
This is a very good audience recording of the never before circulated complete show from the Paradiso. The band and Gordie are in rare
form for this one! I believe this to be the first time “At The Hundredth Meridian” was played as a stand alone song. The chord changes are slightly different, and the lyrics are not quite finalized. The “If I die of vanity……” line is not even there yet. It is a classic moment in the development of the Hip. “Trickle Down” and “I’ll Believe In You”, which are played to close the show, are played with a fervor and passion I’ve not heard before. A must have for any Hip fan. Enjoy, peace. Hipman332001

Set list:
Disc 1
1. Little Bones
2. Three Pistols
3. Twist My Arm
4. At The Hundredth Meridian*
5. Everytime You Go
6. The Luxury
7. Bring It All Back
8. Boots or Hearts
9. Cordelia

Disc 2
1. Long Time Running
2. New Orleans Is Sinking
3. The Last of The Unplucked Gems
4. Another Midnight
5. Blow At High Dough
6. On The Verge

Encore 1
7. 38 Years Old
8. Fight

Encore 2
9. Trickle Down
10.I’ll Believe In You, or I’ll Be Leaving You Tonight

* First Time Played

Transfer, mastering, and seed by tomcat9.
Show notes and listening test by hipman332001.
Thanks to Sixer for the great tape.

FLAC finger prints:
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(Torrent)