EuroHip :: Day Three (London to Groningen)

Today is a travel day. Up at 3:15am, catch the 4:00am train to Gatwick, and then a 6:45 flight to Amsterdam. Once on the ground we boarded a train for Amersfoot, changed trains there and headed to Deventer. Another change of trains and we were bound for Zwolle. A final change in Zwolle and we were on our way to Groningen. The changes between trains required us to be quick on our feet as the longest changeover time was just 5 minutes!

The trains were all packed so we ended up standing in the aisle, surrounded by our bags – not fun for three hours, especialy after the late night and early morning we’d just experienced.

We’re now in Groningen at our hotel. The weather is great and the city looks wonderful but we are too tired to explore it right now. Showers and naps are the next items on our agendas.

EuroHip :: Day Two (Astoria, London)

Whew! What a great way to kick off EuroHip 2007! We toured the city some more before heading back to our hotel to grab our recording gear. With our gear fully charged and packed we headed to the show. Surprisingly there wasn’t a line up at the venue, nor were there any issues getting our gear in.

The venue itself is rather plain with patrons required to navigate a series of somewhat confusing (or maybe I was just confused) staircases. I ended up along the front row of the balcony and was content to stay there for the duration of the show. The rest of the balcony area is punctuated by 2×4 framed leaning bars and benches.

A few of our fellow travellers stayed upstairs with me, while the audio guys went straight for the soundboard. The sound in the venue was pretty good from where I was, and by the sounds of the recordings, it was pretty good down by the sound board as well.

Immediately following the show we were entertained by the throngs of drunken partyers before heading for the hotel. Our Saturday morning flight required us to catch the 4:00am train from Victoria Station to Gatwick!

Setlist:
01: Yer Not The Ocean
02: My Music At Work
02: Grace, Too
03: It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken
04: The Drop Off
05: Ahead By A Century
06: Giftshop
07: Family Band
08: World Container
09: Springtime In Vienna
10: At The Hundredth Meridian
11: The Lonely End Of The Rink
12: Bobcaygeon
13: In View
14: Fully Completely
15: New Orleans Is Sinking

Encore
16: COVER: “Queen Bitch: by David Bowie
17: Courage
18: Fireworks

EuroHip :: Day One

After lengthy delays leaving Toronto, and in London, we arrived at our “hotel.” It’s suitable for 8 guys going to shows, and students looking for a bit more than a hostel, but just barely.

We connected with Ben and Matt (two UK based Hip fans) and toured around for a bit before settling in for a few drinks. It was a rather uneventful day as the travel from Canada had definitely tired us all out.

Ben has posted some pics from the day to Hipography.

EuroHip 2007

The East Coast swing is complete and positive reviews have been streaming in. The Hip are now off to Europe for a series of shows:

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

Along with half a dozen or so other fans from North America, I’ll be following The Hip around Europe and posting regular updates to Hipfans.com. The tapers will be out in force so look for another series of audio and DVD releases through The Hip Tracker in the coming months.

SETLIST: 2007-09-15 – Charlottetown, PEI

Charlottetown Civic Centre

01: Yer Not The Ocean
02: My Music At Work
03: Grace, Too
04: Bobcaygeon
05: The Drop-Off
06: Ahead By A Century
07: Courage
08: Family Band
09: World Container
10: Springtime In Vienna
11: At The Hundredth Meridian
12: The Lonely End Of The Rink
13: Long Time Running
14: In View
15: Escape Is At Hand For The Travellin’ Man
16: New Orleans Is Sinking
17: Fire In The Hole

Encore
18: COVER: “Train In Vain” by The Clash
19: Little Bones

SETLIST: 2007-09-14 – Sydney, NS

Cape Breton University Student Union

01: Yer Not The Ocean
02: My Music At Work
03: Grace, Too
04: It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken
05: The Drop-Off
06: Ahead By A Century
07: Gift Shop
08: Family Band
09: World Container
10: Springtime In Vienna
11: At The Hundredth Meridian
12: The Lonely End Of The Rink
13: Bobcaygeon
14: In View
15: Scared
16: New Orleans Is Sinking
17: Fire In The Hole

Encore
18: Fully Completely
19: Blow At High Dough

Halifax, The Daily News

Halifax, The Daily News: Entertainment | Hip’s Downie shimmies and shakes like a goofy Mick Jagger
JIM REYNO
He squiggles. Then he squirms, then he … what? Would you call that a shimmy?

Gordon Downie, frontman for beloved Canadian rockers The Tragically Hip, is his usual eccentric self in front of about 9,000 fans last night at the Metro Centre. The Hip mix songs from last year’s World Container CD with their older material, all brought to life by Downie uninhibited.

Wearing a cap, white T-shirt and black pants, he’s an entertaining sight: parading around the stage immersed in his music, yet still bringing everyone into his world.

Downie’s got to be the best mime in rock ‘n’ roll.

During concert-opener The Lonely End of the Rink, he waves a white handkerchief while skidding across the stage like Mick Jagger (trade the sexiness for goofiness). Downie then pretends his microphone is stuck in his heart, playfully going into the audience and getting a fan to pull it out.

Now he’s pulling his heart out, tossing it in the air and shooting it during Grace, Too. He’s looking into the crowd during Courage, crossing the stage as if he’s in a canoe and the microphone stand is a paddle.

Here’s a good one: while the band rocks away on Fully Completely, Downie scurries like a monkey, causing one couple in Section 10 to exchange bemused glances.

But Downie’s at his best when his prop is an acoustic guitar, which it is a good part of the night:
“New Orleans Is Sinking!” he screams before attacking the strings and launching into the second song of the night.
“You’re Not the Ocean … yet,” he warns.

“No dress rehearsal,” he sings, strumming away to Ahead By a Century. “This is our life.”

Cue the crowd roar.

jreyno@hfxnews.ca

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.”