SETLIST: 2007-09-13 – Halifax, NS

Metro Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia

01: The Lonely End Of The Rink
02: New Orleans Is Sinking
03: Grace, Too
04: Gus: The Polar Bear From Central Park
05: Yer Not The Ocean
06: Ahead By A Century
07: In View
08: Courage
09: World Container
10: Fully Completely
11: Boots Or Hearts
12: At The Hundredth Meridian
13: The Kids Don’t Get It
14: Wheat Kings
15: My Music At Work
16: Family Band
17: Little Bones

Encore
18: COVER: “Queen Bitch” by David Bowie
19: Bobcaygeon
20: Blow At High Dough

Subject to confirmation

Halifax Daily News- The Hip hit Halifax haunt

The Hip hit Halifax haunt print this article
DEAN LISK

Everyone knows where The Hip will be tonight. But where were they last night?

“We always go to Victor’s place the night before,” The Tragically Hip’s Johnny Fay said, referring – of course – the mecca of Hali-hip, Victor Syperek’s Economy Shoe Shop.

“It’s awesome there. It’s the atmosphere: It’s always great and we are always well taken care of,” the drummer said. “We’ve spent many a night there.”

Touring steadily for the last 14 months in support of 2006’s World Container, the fivesome are back in the Maritimes tonight.

“We always have fun when we come out East,” Faye said. In the early days, he added, the band would spend a week playing The Misty Moon in Halifax for 1,500 people, and then move across the harbour for a few bar gigs in Dartmouth.

“We’d be like, ‘Oh my god, people must be sick of us.'”

It’s a pattern the band still follows today, hitting larger stadiums one night, and then mixing up the tour with smaller club dates.

“It makes you tighter,” Fay said. “You never know what the venue is going to be like. But, I think that is what has kept us alive, being able to hop from different types of venues – back and forth.”

Cultural exchange

In many ways, it reflects the band’s double identity.

North of the 49th, the band is Captain Canuck – a symbol of pride with Canadian lyrics and a treasure in red and white. South of the border, The Tragically Hip have only achieved cult status.

“I think that people know and like the music, and come out to see us,” Fay said about those American cousins. “They might have been turned on by a Canadian who gave them a CD or something like that.

“It is so funny, because, we can track where our records are selling. When the CDs are at the airport, people grab a bunch of them and give them to people all over the world. It’s been the delivery system for a while.”

With so many musicians touring and playing gigs, Fay said it doesn’t matter where they play, it’s just nice to be working.

“As musicians, we are very fortunate that way,” he said. Back in 1984, the band turned to music post-high school as an opportunity to make a little cash and hang out with friends.

Fay said it took four or five years to get noticed. It wasn’t until the first album, Up to Here, came out and got them recognized across the country. DJs started playing their early hits, like Blow at High Dough and New Orleans is Sinking – which took on a new meaning after Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Fay noted the band had a history with the crescent city, having recorded there is the past. They’ve been back since the hurricane, but not to perform. Their first post Hurricane gig will take place this fall.

“Unfortunately, I feel asleep the last time we drove into the city, but Gord (Downie) said it looked like it had just happened. It was pretty devastating,” he said. “Apparently, the city is so crazy dangerous right now, with people getting murdered left, right and centre. So, I don’t know what to think of New Orleans. It’s sad.”

After the hurricane and flooding of the city, a number of radio stations stopped playing the song, which is now more than two decades old.

“We did take it out for a little while,” Fay said.

“But then, we put it back in because it was a good song and we enjoy playing it.”

Hits – The Lefsetz Letter

I’m a subscriber to the Lefsetz letter, and todays post made me think of The Hip.

http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/index.php/archives/2007/09/11/hits/

Hits

So I’m opening up the daily mail and I come across a CD Pro for Kim Richey. Yup, the label has picked a track to be featured on radio, as if she’s got a chance and anybody’s listening. But she’s got one of the best labels going, and it made me think of one of their marquee acts, Ryan Adams, who just released an album. Which came out with a thunder and hasn’t been heard from since. Is it a stiff?

Well, we’d have to check the grosses for that.

Yup, that’s how you know if you’ve got a career today. Whether anybody wants to SEE YOU or not! Album sales? You can’t sell any albums unless you’re the rapper du jour or a mainline country act. Look at Kelly Clarkson. Her album’s a joke and now she’s playing theatres. How does that old song go? She’s going DOWN DOWN DOWN DOWN DOWN!

And maybe she’ll have another Clive-manufactured hit to bring her up again, but it will only be momentary. She’ll smile on TV, sing some national anthems, go on a tour, and then she’ll be back at base zero, thinking of guesting on sitcoms. Or maybe she’ll give up the rat race, go back to her native Texas and duet with Tracy Nelson, trying to reinvent herself as a blues mama. She’s got the pedigree! Strong woman unlucky in love sings the blues! Hell, that’s a HELLUVA lot more interesting than wannabe starlet with a weight problem battles septuagenarian label head over fate of her stardom.

What is a star? He or she used to be ubiquitous. Someone everybody knew. Who was respected. You don’t respect the people with publicity these days. Kanye gets the mic and expresses such arrogance you turn your head. He’s not THAT good! And Fitty is so angry you’d rather he go to counseling than make music. As for the starlets all over the Web? Hair and makeup. Drinking and drugging. What does this have to do with music?

Are you a musician? A musician sings and plays. A star is a coddled item manufactured for consumption. But, it’s almost impossible to become a star these days. Certainly a music star. Either you sell your soul to the devil, the machine, losing everything that makes you attractive to begin with, or you start off from rock bottom.

I mean who would you rather be? Kelly Clarkson or Ani DiFranco?

DiFranco never went platinum. Was never plastered all over billboards or MTV. But, her fans still buy her records and want to see her live. So, they’re just a fraction of the overall population? WHO CARES! Do you really want the momentary people at the gig, talking on their cellphones, yelling out the name of the radio hit? Do you want to dilute the essence to such a point that there’s nothing left?

Records are no longer a path to riches, their release no longer makes a splash, they’re just another totem that the fanbase has to collect. See them that way. Don’t focus on them, run your career by them. It’s too disappointing. You take a year off from the road, hire a publicist, buy ads and what happens? ALMOST NOTHING! Because after the core purchases the album, no one else cares. In a world of endless diversions, do you really think you’re going to have an impact?

Oh, the labels just lay it on heavier. We’re gonna FORCE the public to pay attention. If you think that works, you’re probably some asshole I don’t know e-mailing me about your unsigned band trying to get me to listen and spread the word. That’s the KISS OF DEATH! You just show me you work harder at selling than playing. Because if you’re THAT good, a FAN will contact me, with no desire other than to turn me on. The fan is your audience, not me.

MTV is not your audience. Nor the “New York Times”. Not “The Today Show”. Not “Rolling Stone”. None of them are about you, they’re about advertising. Your fan isn’t about advertising, he’s just about you. Solidify THAT relationship. THAT will pay dividends for decades if you play it right.

Ryan Adams returned to form. Not as much as the writers would have you believe. Then again, he was never that far off the mark, that far gone, as they want you to believe. I don’t want to read another fucking article about how he battled his demons, just give me the fucking record. That article about him in the newspaper, that’s not WRITTEN FOR THE FAN! It looks like he’s stunting, playing the game, I’M TURNED OFF!

The fan knows about the new release. Because he CARES!

And the only way you can get SOMEONE ELSE to care is if they don’t hear it from you, but from someone they trust, who is a FRIEND! Whether it be an individual or a Website. It’s about the TRUST, not the HYPE!

If you do it right, that album you just made should sell FOREVER! And you don’t have to worry about people cherry-picking singles on iTunes, because they will want everything you ever do. The demos, the live tapes. And, they’ll pay for them even if you give them away for free. As a badge of honor, as a hallmark of BELONGING! You want to turn a blind eye on THESE people and get in bed with the MACHINE?

The machine didn’t do well by John Prine. He’s been doing it himself now for twenty years, quite well, thank you. And he’s not that good-looking, and he doesn’t dance, but he can write songs.

Hate to tell you, but there’s an ENDLESS SUPPLY of good-looking people in this world. In the time it takes you to make it, the machine can find someone else younger, who won’t talk back, to start paying attention to. And now, in the studio, via auto-tune, it can be made to appear that ANYBODY can sing. But not anybody can sing live, not anybody can write a song.

So, if you’re a musician, you want to focus on writing and singing/playing. That’s it. If you’re good, and you’ve got a Web presence, people will find you. And these people will do ANYTHING for you. They won’t care if your single stiffed on the radio, in their heart, YOU’RE ALWAYS NUMBER ONE!

You’re a cottage industry. Your product is you. Make it as good as you can and guard it very closely. Don’t grow too fast, you won’t be able to keep up with your success. And don’t be afraid to try something new, to risk. If you want instruction, study Silicon Valley companies as opposed to major labels.

The old yardsticks are irrelevant. Don’t pay attention to SoundScan. Music fans don’t watch MTV, and neither should you. Go where your people are, both physically and online. Connect with them. Make it about the essence, not the sheen. Be in it for the long haul. Talent is at most fifty percent, the rest is pure desire. If you’ve got both, it’ll take you a long time, but you’ll make it. You’ll have a career in music. You’ll be able to quit your day job. As for being featured on “Cribs”? It’s what’s on the inside that counts. Not the bling. And the bling never lasts. The same car won’t run forever, not without a ton of upkeep. And that mansion has expenses. You can lose it all. But you can’t lose yourself. Focus on yourself.

Hip’s brave new World

Hip’s brave new World
Kingston quintet revitalized with help from producer Rock
By STEPHEN COOKE Entertainment Reporter

When veteran Canadian rockers the Tragically Hip named their 11th studio record World Container, they could have been referring to their own globe-spanning adventures over the past year. They’ve criss-crossed the continent a few times and following this week’s Atlantic Canadian leg of the tour, cross the Atlantic Ocean for the second time in 14 months.

But as with most things found in the lyrics of Hip vocalist Gord Downey, there are multiple meanings to be parsed, and the CD title track is no exception, putting personal relationships into a larger global context, with our individual collections of experiences and actions jostling against each other in this giant cargo hold called Mother Earth.

“That’s pretty much how I see it,” says guitarist Paul Langlois, who joins his bandmates and the Sadies at the Halifax Metro Centre on Thursday, and the Cape Breton University Student Union in Sydney on Friday. “I love the image of it, that everyone has their own way of seeing the world, and reacting to it and what’s in it. I also love that it’s up for a lot of interpretation, and that’s usually a difficult process, coming up with the title for a record.

“It’s nice to have a title like that which could mean a number of things to a number of different people. And World Container is probably my favourite song on the record to listen to; it goes a lot of different places lyrically and I love the drama of it. It’s a great title, because it’s an apt title of where we’re at, and it also describes our path and a kind of consciousness.”

Where the band is at is an interesting situation. Produced by noted rockmeister Bob Rock (Metallica, Motley Crue), World Container boils the Hip down to its essence, with straightforward rockers and openly personal word-work by Downie. It’s the sound of a band taking its engine apart, cleaning the parts and putting it back together following the intense career-analyzing process of assembling its 2005 Hipeponymous box set, determined to rediscover the essentials.

“I think that has a lot to do with why we were feeling so energized going into the project,” says Langlois. “Working with Bob Rock was going from an idea to a reality, and we’d had Yer Favourites coming out, with the Walk of Fame and the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, and it was all a lot for everyone to absorb. . . . I think it put a bit of wind in our sails as far as saying, ‘We’re not done yet!’

Rock is known for his back-to-basics approach — he did similar duties for Our Lady Peace on the Healthy in Paranoid Times — although Langlois says Rock didn’t have to play referee between the members of the Kingston quintet as he famously did with OLP and Metallica.

Instead of wearing a ref’s black and white striped shirt, Langlois says Rock was more like a cheerleader for the album, but one who knows his way around a song and what makes them work for a mass audience.

“Bob certainly didn’t hesitate to attempt to get us to highlight the hook,” Langlois chuckles. “That kinda goes against our nature a little bit; we’ve tried to keep them really subtle, and if something sounds really great, we try not to overplay it.”

Rock’s desire to focus on songs that grab the listener rather than sneak up on them pays off in the brute force of the CD opener Yer Not the Ocean and Downie’s analogy between playing goalie and fronting a band, The Lonely End of the Rink, which has become the favourite show starter on the current tour.

The flip side of that sentiment can be found in Family Band, a propulsive ode to the days when the band travelled in a van, loaded its own gear, and played long-gone Halifax venues like Rosa’s Cantina on Argyle Street and Dartmouth’s Crazy Horse. The Hip’s set list changes every night, but there’s a nice symmetry on those evenings when The Lonely End of the Rink and Family Band bookend a show.

In fact, the band plays a healthy selection of new tunes in its current shows, which pleases its hardcore fans and those who’ve seen it perform countless times, but doesn’t always sit so well with the casual listener who can only name a handful of song titles off the top of their head.

“Well, people are different,” sighs Langlois. “We were at a cottage recently with our family and our neighbours, sitting around having a few beers, and one guy I had just met that week — a nice guy — had definitely had a few, and he asked, ‘Why is it you don’t write songs like you used to?’ “

With a little prodding by the ardent fan, Langlois discovered the incredulous listener was comparing recent material to songs that are nearly two decades old, off Up to Here and Road Apples, and he hadn’t picked up a Hip album since 1992’s Fully Completely.

“So he just had to check back in,” says Langlois. “Like a lot of fans, when you’re 22 and in university or whatever, the music you love then becomes the music you’ll always love, or you get older and move on. I don’t think we sound the same, but if we did sound the same, we wouldn’t be together anymore.”

Tickets for the Tragically Hip at the Halifax Metro Centre are $69.50 for Gold Circle seats, $49.50 for regular admission. Tickets are available at the Ticket Atlantic box office (451-1221), online at www.ticketatlantic.com and participating Atlantic Superstores.

Tickets for the Sydney show are $49.50 at Centre 200 box office, Savoy Theatre and Caper Convenience at CBU, $25 for students (CBU only). They are also online at www.reservatech.ca

( scooke@herald.ca)

SETLIST: 2007-09-08 – St. John’s, Newfoundland

Mile One Stadium

01: The Lonely End of the Rink
02: New Orleans Is Sinking
03: Yer Not the Ocean
04: ‘It’s a Good Life If You Don’t Weaken’
05: The Drop-Off
06: Ahead by a Century
07: In View
08: Gift Shop
09: Titanic Terrarium
10: Fly
11: COVER: “Surrender” by Cheap Trick
12: Springtime In Vienna
13: At the Hundredth Meridian
14: Bobcaygeon
15: The Kids Don’t Get It
16: Wheat Kings
17: Locked In the Trunk of a Car
18: My Music at Work

Encore
19: Grace, Too
20: Long Time Running
21: Family Band

The Wait Is Almost Over!

Tomorrow night the tour resumes in Fredericton. I imagine that the month off for the boys will have them recharged and roaring out of the gate.

Will we see more cover tracks? Some old gems brought back into the rotation? What are your thoughts for the upcoming tour swing?

Q107’s 500 Greatest Rock Songs Of All Time

Toronto’s Classic Rock station counted down the 500 Greateest Rock Songs Of All Time over the Labour Day Weekend. Here’s where The Hip placed:
104. New Orleans Is Sinking
184. Courage
271. Twist My Arm
282. Little Bones
338. Three Pistols
355. Fifty-Mission Cap
425. Ahead By A Century
491. Blow At High Dough

It’s certainly not the order that I would have predicted.

The complete list can be found here.

Upcoming Shows

After a month off, The Hip are set to hit the road again. Heading east from Kingston, the boys will play a handful of Maritime shows before crossing the Atlantic for EuroHip 2007!

Aside from the EuroHip shows, it looks like most of these shows may go undocumented – as in, no fan recordings. 🙁 If you are attending one of the shows, and plan on recording it, please let us know.

09/08/07: St. John’s: Mile One Centre
09/11/07: Fredericton: Aitken Centre
09/13/07: Halifax: Metro Centre
09/14/07: Sydney: Cape Breton University Student Union
09/15/07: Charlottetown: Civic Centre
09/21/07: London: The Astoria
09/23/07: Groningen: Oosterpoort
09/25/07: Amsterdam: Paradiso
09/26/07: Amsterdam: Paradiso
09/28/07: Brussels: Ancienne Belgique
09/30/07: Koln: Prime Club
10/01/07: Eindhoven: Effenaar
10/10/07: San Francisco: The Warfield
10/11/07: Los Angeles: House Of Blues
10/13/07: San Diego: 4Th & B
10/15/07: Aspen: Belly Up
10/16/07: Boulder: Boulder Theatre
10/18/07: Austin: La Zona Rosa
10/19/07: Dallas: House of Blues
10/20/07: New Orleans: House Of Blues
10/23/07: New York: Grand Ballroom at The Manhattan
10/26/07: Washington: 9:30 Club
10/27/07: Boston: Orpheum Theatre
10/29/07: New Haven: Toad’s Place
10/30/07: Burlington: Memorial Auditorium