SETLIST: 2007-03-21 – Las Vegas, NV

House Of Blues, Las Vegas, Nevada

01: Yer Not The Ocean
02: New Orleans Is Sinking
03: The Drop Off
04: Boots Or Hearts
05: In View
06: Ahead By A Century
07: Luv (sic)
08: Poets
09: Flamenco
10: World Container
11: Puttin’ Down
12: At The Hundredth Meridian
13: Bobcaygeon
14: The Kids Don’t Get It
15: Fully Completely
16: Scared
17: Family Band
18: Blow At High Dough

Encore
19: The Lonely End Of The Rink
20: Fire In The Hole
21: COVER: “Suspicious Minds” – Elvis Presley

SETLIST: 2007-03-19 – Denver, CO

Gothic Theatre, Denver, Colorado

01: The Lonely End Of The Rink
02: New Orleans Is Sinking
03: In View
04: Ahead By A Century3 In View
05: Last Night I Dreamed…
06: Chagrin Falls
07: Courage
08: Luv (Sic)
09: Long Time Running
10: Pretend
11: Lionized
12: At The 100th Meridian
13: Bobcaygeon
14: The Kids Don’t Get It
15: Fireworks
16: Scared
17: Yer Not The Ocean
18: Little Bones

Encore
21: Grace, Too
22: COVER: “Train Kept A’ Rollin'” by Tiny Bradshaw/The Yardbirds/Led Zepplin
23: Family Band

From The Toronto Star….

www.thestar.com

Ben Rayner
AUSTIN, TEXAS — Gord Downie is wary.
Unnecessarily so, I might add. The Tragically Hip front man has, in this writer’s very limited experience, always come across as a thoroughly decent, thoughtful cat and a most un-rock-star-like rock star – not to mention the sort of bona fide music fan who doesn’t just name-check Eric’s Trip in his tunes when it’s cool to do so, but who seeks out that band’s Julie Doiron as his own bassist years later when it’s time to do his own solo thing. He’s in the presence of a fan on this sunny Austin afternoon, although I’m not sure that he believes it.

There’s been some behind-the-scenes fretting on the record-label front that the Star only wants to talk to Downie and the Hip at the South by Southwest festival — where the beloved Kingston quintet played venerable downtown concert hall Antone’s last night to 1,200 or so reverent fans — so it can rehash the 15-year-old tale of how the Hip’s “conquering rock heroes” status at home has never translated abroad.

Downie is quick, too, to bring up the fact that I’d recently mentioned his band in the same sentence as Our Lady Peace in a Canadian Music Week piece about changing times in the domestic music industry; even though the connection wasn’t made disparagingly, I instantly feel guilty. I get the sense he thinks I’m coming at him from some loaded, “indier-than-thou” perspective that would negate the Hip’s crucial, bricklaying role in giving Canada a homegrown music scene of which it can be proud. A national scene that ranks among the most admired and envied on air at SXSW 2007, if we’re to believe the smoke being blown up our country’s collective arse by innumerable insiders and outside observers here in Austin.

“Any rock ’n’ roller worth his salt would want none of any of that,” says Downie. “To be honest, I think affiliation is anathema — if you’re a rock `n’ roller, you’re a lone wolf.”

So, no, the Hip isn’t part of the Arcade Fire/Broken Social Scene/Metric/etc. mafia And unlike fellow elder-statesmen-in-Austin Sloan — who seem to be playing every hour on the hour this weekend (“Ripley’s has been notified,” guitarist Chris Murphy quipped yesterday — the Tragically Hip feels slightly removed from the Golden Dogs, the Hylozoists, Inward Eye and the countless other Canadian indie acts vying for attention down here, because the band has enjoyed such a long run at the forefront of our national consciousness.

And while the fact that several consecutive U.S. labels have consistently failed to turn a band with such glaringly obvious popular appeal above the 49th parallel into even a minor sensation in the States has become an overstated part of Canadian popular mythology, it’s still a baffling fact. The Tragically Hip might be a “major-label” band in Canada, but the Hip is the sole “industry” force pushing its new disc, World Container — released in the States just a week and a half ago — south of the border.

“We’re essentially an indie act down here. We’re goin’ it alone, so it makes total sense for us to be here,” says Downie, eager to point out that the band has no complaints about the way it has been handled for years by Universal Music in Canada. “Within the Universal deal, we’ve always felt like an independent act. We’ve never been told what to do. We’ve used their resources to our own design.”

In any case, it’s weird that the Hip, like Sloan, is on a level playing field with pretty much every other act at SXSW. It also makes you appreciate what we take for granted in Canada when you see Sloan or the Hip play a relatively intimate club show in Texas — not because of the loudmouthed Canadians who turn out in droves to wave the flag and, I’m sure, irritate the hell out their favourite bands, but because the non-Canadian fans there are people who’ve clearly sought the bands out through sheer love of their music. The tunes have reached them honestly, free of hype and radio/video saturation.

“Not to be immodest, (1992’s) Fully Completely just went diamond,” says Downie. “I’m proud of that. I don’t usually care about those things, but I was really proud of that because it took so long. It means people are still plugging into it and buying it over time. That’s our career, and it’s really uncharted …..

“There are certain places where we arrive to a bit of acclaim, if certainly not to screaming girls at JFK (airport). At this point, we’ve had not one shred of national-profile-enhancing anything. We’ve played on Saturday Night Live and got not even a Rolling Stone review. Nothing. Which I’m not lamenting, really, but it gives you an idea of how we’ve been doing it, which is 50 people at a time — literally. We played in Dallas last night to 1,000 people, but I can distinctly remember playing Dallas to 45.”

World Container’s lead single, “In View,” has won enough enthusiasm that Downie is cautiously optimistic that things are once again happening in the U.S..

“We haven’t had that one song,” says Downie. “I think Randy Bachman said that about us once. My tight-lipped response to a radio interviewer in New York once who told me `Randy Bachman says the reason you’re not big down here is you never wrote a hit’ was — after I thought `F— you, Randy Bachman’ under my breath — that he’s probably right. I’m not saying we’ve done that now, but when I hear `In View’ down here, I think that song is the thing that’s sort of opening the door a little bit. Not our sparkling personalities, not our Canadian-ness, not any quirk or the fact that Paul (guitarist Paul Langlois) has 25 cats.”

It’d be great if they tasted just a shred of the adulation they’ve had at home, in the U.S., England, anywhere. But what would top that would be neither the Canadian press nor the Tragically Hip having to worry about the Tragically Hip’s fortunes anywhere but Canada — because we like them and, at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter that the band sells records to anyone but its fans.

It would be nice, too, to tell Gord Downie you’re gonna go see his band and not get a disbelieving brush-off.

“What? You’re not going to the Stooges like everybody else?”

“No, I haven’t seen you guys in a club in a long time. I actually really wanna come tonight.”

“Well, even if you don’t, Ben, thanks for doing this.”

Damn you, Tragically Hip. Believe it when we say we love you.

SETLIST: 2007-03-15 – Houston, TX

Scout Bar, Houston, Texas

01: The Lonely End Of The Rink
02: New Orleans Is Sinking
03: Yer Not The Ocean
04: Boots Or Hearts
05: The Drop Off
06: Ahead By A Century
07: In View
08: Gift Shop
09: Last Of The Unplucked Gems
10: World Container
11: Puttin’ Down
12; At The 100th Meridian
13: Bobcaygeon
14: The Kids Don’t Get It
15: Springtime In Vienna
16: Wheat Kings
17: Luv (Sic)
18: Blow At High Dough

Encore
19: Grace, Too
20: COVER: “Substitute” by The Who
21: Family Band

SETLIST: 2007-03-16 – Dallas, TX

Palladium Ballroom, Dallas, Texas

01: Yer Not The Ocean
02: New Orleans Is Sinking
03: The Drop Off
04: It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken
05: In View
06: Bobcaygeon
07: Fly
08: Poets
09: World Container
10: Fiddler’s Green
11: Springtime In Vienna
12: At The 100th Meridian
13: The Dire Wolf
14: The Kids Don’t Get It
15: Locked In The Trunk Of A Car
16: Sherpa
17: Blow At High Dough
18: The Lonely End Of The Rink

Encore
19: COVER: “Tush” by ZZ Top
20: Family Band
21: Little Bones

SETLIST: 2007-03-13 – Atlanta, GA

Roxy Theatre, Atlanta, Georgia

01: The Lonely End Of The Rink
02: New Orleans Is Sinking
03: Yer Not The Ocean
04: Gus; The Polar Bear From Central Park
05: In View
06: Ahead By A Century
07: Last Night I Dreamed…
08: Poets
09: World Container
10: Long Time Running
11: Don’t Wake Daddy
12: At The 100th meridian
13: It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken
14: Luv (Sic)
15: Locked In the Trunk of a Car
16: Bobcaygeon
17: Family Band
18: Fully Completely

Encore
19: COVER: “The End of the World As We Know It” by REM
20: Kid’s Don’t Get It
21: On The Verge
Atlanta setlist