CBC.ca – Arts – Music – Our Home and Native Band

CBC.ca – Arts – Music – Our Home and Native Band
Why we’re attached to the Tragically Hip
By Jason Anderson
November 24, 2005

It was shaping up to be Canada’s most memorable southward salvo since some British colonials burned down the White House in 1814. March 25, 1995: another episode in another middling season of Saturday Night Live. Though the show that evening was hosted by John Goodman, his buddy Dan Aykroyd had the honour of introducing the musical guests. As a native of Canada, Aykroyd clearly saw this as a golden opportunity to promote the biggest band in his homeland, a quintet of Kingston lads who’d already sold millions north of the border with their sturdy yet enigmatic songs. Surely it was only a matter of time and timing before America caught on.

The Tragically Hip’s choice of song that night was the first indication that the conquest was not to be. Although the brooding, lumbering Grace, Too is in many ways a prototypical Hip song, it can hardly be considered an instant grabber. The song relies on restraint rather than standard rock ’n’ roll catharsis for effect. And as is so often the case, the only real colour is provided by Bobby Baker’s lacerating lead guitar and Gord Downie’s strained yet indefatigable yelp of a voice. Devoted largely to the boasts and promises of a sinister man who’s “fabulously rich,” the lyrics are defiantly cryptic. “The secret rules of engagement are hard to enforce,” Downie wailed before SNL’s cameras, “when the appearance of conflict beats the appearance of force.”

“Wha?” said the masses, who heard a song that was miles from slick alt-rock or burly grunge and promptly turned the channel.

The SNL appearance gave the Tragically Hip only a marginal boost. Day for Night (the album that featured Grace, Too) was released in the States in 1995, but did not crack Billboard’s album charts; Trouble at the Henhouse (1996) made it to No. 134. Two years later, Phantom Power hit No. 142 and became the band’s last album for Atlantic Records. Though still a strong live draw, especially in the northeastern states, the Tragically Hip’s career — summarized in a handy new four-disc set called Hipeponymous — was fated to be a homegrown phenomenon.

Why that should be such a sticking point is hard to figure. Even though the Hip has shifted over six million units and still sells out the country’s biggest arenas, the band’s success is often regarded as incomplete without the validation of American record buyers. Confronted with this quandary in a Toronto Sun interview last year, Downie was frustrated it even remains an issue.

“I could do hours on this subject,” he said. “You know, why not? Why isn’t Canadian film big down there? Is Paul Martin big down there? Margaret Atwood? Who are you comparing us to? The Barenaked Ladies? Our music is entirely different. Nickelback? Avril? Because of the people we are and the music we make, we get the success we deserve.”

Hipeponymous. Courtesy Universal Music.
Listening to the two discs’ worth of songs on Hipeponymous — selected by votes on the band’s website, hence the name Yer Favourites — the big question is not why didn’t the band fly in the U.S., but how did such thorny, idiosyncratic music succeed anywhere? From the sweaty barroom boogie of its early days to the unrepentantly arty excursions on recent discs, the Tragically Hip’s music has rarely fit comfortably into rock’s mainstream. The fact that the band could become so popular reflects well on fans, who seem happy to accept any musical challenge the band throws at them.

That’s not to say the likes of Blow at High Dough do not retain a meat-and-potatoes appeal. The bluesy rock of the band’s self-titled debut (1987) and Up to Here (1989) was music built for drinking and dancing and fighting. (You can’t discount the latter. My older brother Jim used to regale me with tales of scraps that he’d gotten into every time the Tragically Hip played the University of Alberta. It was something of a tradition.) It was with Fully Completely (1992) and Day for Night (1994), however, that the band’s artistic ambitions became more pronounced. Songs were more likely to roam than burrow into a groove, though they still did an awful lot of that as well, as Grace, Too demonstrates. A patriotic strain became prominent in songs like Wheat Kings, a haunting number inspired by the miscarriage of justice that sent David Milgaard to prison; more than a few songs mentioned dead hockey players. Having made their live rep on extended versions of New Orleans Is Sinking, the band was now fully embracing its country’s mythology.

And despite the earnestness the Tragically Hip displayed in its early days, a dark sense of humour emerged, too. Even though the band was far too popular with the jocks to gain much favour with the cognoscenti, Downie was always too artsy, too flagrantly odd, to ever qualify as king of the hosers. The 1998 single Poets confirmed his egghead allegiances: “Porn speaks to its splintered legions,” he rants, “to the pink amid the withered corn stalks in them winter regions.”

“Wha?!” we replied, though secretly we thought it was pretty effing cool that such a Beat-like spiel could come from the singer in Canada’s biggest band.

By the time of the Saturday Night Live appearance, the band had already reached its high-water mark in terms of domestic sales power— tallies for studio albums would decline from Up to Here’s peak of 1.25 million to Day for Night’s 780,000 to 101,000 for last year’s In Between Evolution. Yet, the band’s ability to fill stadiums in this country has remained miraculously unimpaired. Nor has any other Canadian band replaced them in fans’ affections. With its reheated bozo-rock clichés, Nickelback seems as flagrantly American as Bryan Adams ever did (which is a lot). And despite the star-making prowess of Allan Gregg and Jake Gold, the Hip’s original managers, the duo’s Management Trust company did not accomplish the same trick with the Watchmen or Big Wreck.

Major-label Can-rock bands were not the ones the Tragically Hip tended to support, anyway. For opening acts, they preferred indie hopefuls like Change of Heart, the Rheostatics and the Joel Plaskett Emergency. If the Tragically Hip has any true stylistic heir among younger acts, it’s another recent tour mate, Winnipeg folk-punkers the Weakerthans. Both bands are fronted by sensitive-minded wordsmiths whose flights of fancy are sometimes compromised by the music’s more plebeian nature. And both find more reasons to celebrate their country’s heritage than to ignore it. (Not that the Weakerthans could be described as civic boosters; their song One Great City has turned the phrase “I hate Winnipeg!” into a rallying cry.)

Given that the Hip’s achievements tend to be regarded as more admirable than interesting, Hipeponymous provides a surprisingly colourful view of the band’s history. Because the accompanying booklet is largely devoted to a collage of old gig posters, weird illustrations and hastily scrawled notes, the set obfuscates as much as it clarifies.

The most surreal moment in the two discs’ worth of concert footage, videos and other audiovisual material lies in the recent tour documentary Macroscopic. Director Christopher Mills’s camera captures the band as they brave the wintry outdoors to take the halftime stage at the 92nd Grey Cup in Ottawa. They play Courage (for Hugh MacLennan), a song that may be even more beloved by their fanbase than Grace, Too (perhaps because it’s easier to hum along to). But who else but Downie would use an exuberant folk-pop song as a place to pay homage to CanLit giant Hugh MacLennan? Downie goes so far as to paraphrase passages from MacLennan’s 1958 novel The Watch That Ends the Night. The DVD cuts between the band’s live performance and an earlier stadium sound check attended chiefly by a gaggle of cheerleaders.

“So there’s no simple explanation for anything important any of us do,” Downie sings, his breath frosty but his convictions clear. “And yeah, the human tragedy consists in the necessity of living with the consequences.” Undaunted by the song’s fatalistic air, the football fans and the cheerleaders greeted Courage as if it were the national anthem. And maybe it is.

Jason Anderson is a Toronto writer.

True Patriot Love
The five most Canadian Hip songs ever

Fifty Mission Cap
This dearly loved Fully Completely rocker makes much of two world-historical events in 1962: the Maple Leafs’ Stanley Cup victory and the discovery of the remains of the Leaf defenceman who scored the winning goal in the ’51 playoffs. The plane carrying Bill Barilko and his pilot friend Henry Hudson disappeared en route to a fishing trip on Seal River. The mystery fuelled an array of wild rumours, including the story that the Russian-born defenceman had defected to the Soviet Union. The truth is, the plane went down in the woods near Cochrane, Ont. The fact that most of this data was gleaned off the back of a hockey card could not be more Canuck.

Three Pistols
This Road Apples track opens with Tom Thomson paddling past. “Bring on a brand new Renaissance,” he says, apparently unworried about the shakiness of his hands or the depth of the water. Alas, the Hip’s Group of Seven cred was trumped when the Rheostatics did a whole album about them.

Bobcaygeon
This elegiac hit from Phantom Power praises the constellations seen above the eponymous Ontario town, prompting questions about whether Kapuskasing and Nipigon will ever get their due. The song also includes a nostalgic reverie about a Toronto concert by the Men They Couldn’t Hang, ’80s protest-rockers who were not actually Canadian but were earnest enough to pass as such.

My Music at Work
True, the only geographic signifier in this portrait of drudgery is the River Ganges, which runs nowhere near Flin Flon. But the title is borrowed from the slogan for EZ Rock, a Toronto FM radio station that promises “soft rock with less talk.” The video was directed by Bruce McCulloch, who shoots it as if it were one of the Kids in the Hall’s acute satires of office life.

Fireworks (a.k.a. the other big Hip song about hockey)
Here, Downie sings of “the goal that everyone remembers”: Paul Henderson’s series-winner in the ’72 Canada Cup. When Downie’s female companion says she “didn’t give a f— about hockey,” he begins to wonder what else there is to life.

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The Globe and Mail: Thinking outside the box (set)

The Globe and Mail: Thinking outside the box (set)

Picked up today’s ( November 8 ) Globe & Mail and on the cover of the “Globe Review” section is an article about The Hip and Hipeponymous…

Full story:
1,250,000 Number of copies sold of Up To Here (1989), The Tragically Hip’s bestseller
The Tragically Hip may be pushing a new compilation, but singer Gord Downie has no desire to look back, BRAD WHEELER writes

Nobody likes to be boxed into corners or tight spaces, and Gord Downie is no exception. Watching the wriggling, bursting singer on the concert film That Night in Toronto, there is a strong sense that he would not make a tame prisoner. The film, a DVD component of The Tragically Hip’s new box set Hipeponymous, documents what the title suggests — a single performance at Toronto’s Air Canada Centre in November, 2004.

“Do you want it fully?” Downie asks the audience. “Completely?” It’s what the fans want, and the band inches into Fully Completely, the second of 24 songs. Downie, who is also the band’s lyricist, sings about shackles and the measures for ending things (“You’re gonna miss me, just wait and you’ll see”). The song ramps up to a furious pace before collapsing, exhausted.

Almost a year after the concert was filmed, Downie sits at a downtown Toronto café, discussing the box set that he’s not so sure about. This kind of compilation tends to arrive when a band is winding down, and Downie’s not there yet — not full, not complete.

“A friend of mine once said if you’re a farmer, every once in a while you have to stop your tractor and look over your shoulder and look at the fields that you plowed,” says Downie, 41. “But that’s not my inclination.”

In front of him sits a package that holds 48 pages of poetry and artwork, a double-CD best-of collection (Yer Favourites), the aforementioned concert film and another DVD of videos, vignettes and a short film. The box set is available now, and today Universal releases separate versions of Yer Favourites and That Night in Toronto. (Yer Favourites is so named because the track lineup was chosen by fans who participated in an on-line poll. Two previously unreleased songs fill out the collection).

When discussing the box set, Downie speaks slowly, as if half his brain wants to promote the thing, while the other half warily considers the product’s message. “It’s something that someone felt like we needed to do,” he says, indicating that the project’s initiative came from the band’s label. “It’s not a career retrospective. When we do one, I’ll guess you’ll know it.”

But if he’s concerned that the box could be seen as a career-capping sendoff for the band, which formed in Kingston two decades ago, he’s not ready to buy all the copies and bury them in his backyard, either. He’s enthusiastic about the concert DVD: “As a music fan, I’m excited when I watch it.”

That is interesting, because an excited Downie is certainly something to see. In addition to his quirky physicality, there are the stream-of-consciousness raps — words that come between verses, not just between songs. A career retrospective seems alien to a performer so utterly in the moment. Physically and mentally, Downie is flexed for the concert’s length, and that can’t be an easy chore.

“I’m exhausted at the end of every show, to the point of where I’m staggering away,” Downie says. “That doesn’t make me a heck of a guy, but ultimately I don’t think I ever feel closer to Howlin’ Wolf than I do at that moment.” Downie refers to a blues artist — a gigantic Mississippi-born legend who was already over 40 years old by the time he first recorded for Sam Phillips at Sun Studios in the early 1950s.

Wolf, whose real name was Chester Burnett, was known for his voice — a hellish, commanding instrument — but it is the bluesman’s astounding determination that earns Downie’s respect. “He was in his 60s, climbing up the curtain in the auditorium and perching 30 feet above the stage with a microphone under his arm, singing.”

What the blues crowds didn’t know was that Wolf was quite ill towards the end, and that the performances were punishing. When Downie speaks of an affinity to Wolf, the pain is what he’s thinking of. “Going on stage, there’s a lot of trepidation, a lot of fear, concern, anticipation,” he says. “Because it’s going to hurt, I suppose, and I couldn’t experience that anywhere else, with any other group of guys.

“I think that’s what keeps us all interested and moving forward. . . just sort of plugging into that idea that blues have to hurt.”

What also keeps the Hip propelled, according to the band’s singer, is what’s around the next corner. Currently, the group is working on a new album with Bob Rock, a producer whose name can be found on the credits of top-selling albums by Aerosmith, Bon Jovi, Metallica, Bryan Adams and Cher. The partnership with Rock might indicate an attempt by the band to halt its commercial downturn — while earlier albums Up to Here and Fully Completely sold more than a million copies each, the Hip’s last three releases registered sales of less than half a million combined.

Despite slumping numbers at the record stores, the band is still a formidable draw on the road in Canada. It’s hard to imagine that changing any time soon, but for Downie nothing is assured. “We’ve played to three people in Hoboken — we’ve played to every crowd imaginable. That kind of thing can go on as a band for a long time, when you’re outnumbering the crowd.” You wouldn’t think that a band that uses the home-side dressing rooms of hockey arenas across the country would be worried about single-digit crowd counts, but Downie still remembers the slow days. “You’re never past that,” he says. “I have no illusions of the future — or maybe it’s all illusion, I don’t know. I’ve always been ready for it.”

When asked if he’s prepared to play in front of the Hoboken three again, Downie offers his quickest reply of the interview: “Sure.” With that, he scans the room for sugar for his coffee, finally tracking down a near-empty container. With a minor look of disgust, he shakes his head while considering the paltry supply. “Look at this,” he says. “Think I can get a spoonful?”

That is always the question. Howlin’ Wolf sang about spoonfuls — of diamonds, of gold, and everybody fighting for just a little taste more. The great blues artists performed to their end, and Downie is strongly taken by their ethic. “I love that,” he says, mulling the idea over. “Performing to our end — that’s something we haven’t done yet.”

1,250,000: Number of copies sold of Up To Here (1989). The Tragically Hip’s bestseller

101,000: Total sales for the band’s last album, In Between Evolution (2004)

Tragically dipping

The Tragically Hip has sold more than 6-million records in its 22-year career, but album sales have dropped dramatically of late.

The Tragically Hip (1987) 350,000
Up To Here (1989) 1,250,000
Road Apples (1991) 935,000
Fully Completely (1992) 1,035,000
Day for Night (1994) 780,000
Trouble At The Henhouse (1996) 575,000
Live Between Us (1997) 375,000
Phantom Power (1998) 405,000
Music @ Work (2000) 210,000
In Violet Light (2002) 130,000
In Between Evolution (2004) 101,000

SOURCE: UNIVERSAL MUSIC CANADA

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Gord Sinclair’s Favourite Hip Songs

Sinclair writes:

It’s a good listen. My original thought was to get it down to one CD in length – around 80-90 minute (though this may run a tad long – so it might be an Ipod experience).

So here’s my faves as of 31 Oct, in a very particular order:

Tiger the Lion
Grace Too
The Bear
Fully Completely (Don Smith mix)
The Luxury
Nashville
Cordelia
Scared
Don’t Wake Daddy
Meridian (Don Smith)
Yawning or Snarling
Titanic Terrarium
38 Years Old
Flamenco
Silver Jet
ElDorado
Sharks
Boots or Hearts
Leave
No Threat
Emporer Penguin
Gems

GS

(I created an iTunes iMix. Here’s the direct iTunes Link.)

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