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Tag: Tragically Hip

  • ‘The Tragically Hip: No Dress Rehearsal’: An intimate look at Canada’s band  | Globalnews.ca

    ‘The Tragically Hip: No Dress Rehearsal’: An intimate look at Canada’s band | Globalnews.ca

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    The Tragically Hip, from L-R: Johnny Fay, Gord Downie, Rob Baker, Gord Sinclair and Paul Langlois, pictured in front of a tour bus.


    Gordon Hawkins/Prime Video

    It’s been almost exactly seven years since Canadians lost The Tragically Hip frontman Gord Downie, and more than eight years since the band played their last-ever show in Kingston, Ont.

    Time, elongated and obfuscated by the pandemic, seems cruel. Has it really been that long since we lost one of our country’s most charismatic, beloved musicians? And has it really been almost a decade since the group of guys fondly referred to as “Canada’s Band” ceased to play?

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    The Tragically Hip: No Dress Rehearsal, a four-part docuseries streaming on Prime Video starting Sept. 20, provides an incredibly intimate look at the band, from its humble beginnings in small-town Ontario to its glory days onstage.

    Directed by Gord’s brother Mike Downie, all four hour-long segments of the docuseries are unapologetically raw, with vignettes from Gord himself and each of the band members as the plucky bunch of boys grow from teenagers dreaming of becoming rock stars into, well, rock stars in their own right.


    Click to play video: 'Brother of Gord Downie recounts emotional final tour of ‘The Tragically Hip’'


    Brother of Gord Downie recounts emotional final tour of ‘The Tragically Hip’


    Jaw-dropping concert footage is featured throughout — even die-hard Hip fans will see things they’ve never seen before (no spoilers here!) — and there are interviews with family, friends and others who knew them during the journey. Canadian celebrities and fans, including Dan Aykroyd, Jay Baruchel and Bruce McCulloch, among many others, express their love and incredulousness about the band, cementing what any fan already knows: The Tragically Hip were something special, and a certain kind of musical magic Canadians may never see again.

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    Global News sat down with Mike Downie and the remaining members of the band — Paul Langlois, Rob Baker, Gord Sinclair and Johnny Fay — to talk about what the docuseries means to them, what it was like accelerating to national fame at the height of Canadian rock, and life after Gord’s death.

    When revisiting all of the archival footage, reflecting on past performances and everything that you’ve all been through together, how did it feel to watch?

    Gord Sinclair: It’s like the drone shot in a lot of ways. We always kept a fairly narrow horizon throughout our careers, getting to the next gig and then the next opportunity to make a record, next opportunity to take some time off, writing and stuff. When you step back and look at it, to me, it’s a feeling of gratitude for the opportunity that we had…. We were never sure whether we were going to be able to make another record after the previous one.

    Gratitude to the fans that came along and the guys I played music with. Rewatching it made me really appreciate what Mike went through. Mike moved with Gord from Amherstville when we were only 13, and he’s coming at it not only as a friend, but honouring his family and honouring the group. I think he did a wonderful job. Again, it’s a nice look back, for sure.


    The Tragically Hip sits on a couch.


    Prime Video

    Why did you decide on now as the time to put this docuseries out there?

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    Mike Downie: I think timing was a big part of it, and it’s explained in the film.

    I know for the guys in the band, the years after Gord’s passing were… a little bit lost. You just kind of retreat into your own sort of experience, and I had a similar experience as well. You know, trying to figure out what it’s all about. But, when we went into our old high school, it was vacant. It had been sold to Queen’s University. Students were all gone, and in October of 2021, we were able to go in there for four days and really just kind of take it over, use it as our set.

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    That was almost four years to the day that Gord had passed. And I kind of just realized recently that it was probably the right amount of time, like it was still really close. You see it in the interviews. But there was also enough distance to have some clarity as well, and to start thinking about, or talking about, the band and certainly the early days because it’s what we wanted to do when we were in high school.

    I remember that feeling, the lump in my throat, you know, as we started talking about the band and everything. But soon the story takes over. Gord’s not with us anymore, but he’s alive in those stories. It always got me when I’d hear another story, obviously something I didn’t know about my brother that these guys did. They were spending most of their time away together. So, that was really great for me. And a lot of that’s probably not in the doc, but it’s, you know, it’s in here [gestures to his heart] forever now.


    Gord Downie, former lead singer/frontman of The Tragically Hip.


    Prime Video

    Has diving into the film, creating it, looking at everything, having the lump in the throat… has that helped each of you with your sense of grief?

    Rob Baker: I think grief is always going to be with you. It never goes away. The good times, you remember them; they’re like a nice cleansing bath or a night out. You have great memories of it. But grief is something that pierces your skin and leaves scars, you have to reform the way you move through life, to accommodate. Time is really just the best way to deal with it. Like we did in the band, you put one foot in front of the other. We never focused on the horizon, conquering the world. It was all about the next gig, the next song we’re going to write. And it’s the same thing with dealing with grief.

    We lost a brother. We went through everything that we did together, very collectively and openly together, and then we all went off separately and grieved. Completely alone. And that was really hard.

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    Click to play video: 'The Morning Show: September 6'


    The Morning Show: September 6


    Watching this footage is just mind-blowing. It’s like you’re right there in the pit. In the ’90s, Canadian rock was such a beast. What was it like to have a meteoric rise during that time?

    Johnny Fay: It was fun! I was thinking back to some of the stuff that we had done. We had this one gig we were really excited about, we were opening for 54-40 at the Spectrum in Montreal. And then a year to the day later, 54-40 opened for us at Penguin Park in Saskatoon.

    I remember talking to some people and they said to me, “It felt like we were watching a plane take off, and you guys went into the clouds!”

    Having a conversation like that afterwards, it was like, “Really?” 54-40, Blue Rodeo, The Northern Pikes… we were all using the same PA companies and stuff. We were touring in the winter, which was pretty treacherous, and the fact that we went through that and lived is a story in itself. It was a pretty exciting time to be a band that was playing rock ‘n’ roll in this country at that time. There were some really, really great bands in this country. And then Great Big Sea out east, and it was like, yeah! We were all doing it and we were all having fun. It was a great time to be making music because it was pre-phones, which at our last show, that’s all you saw. Some people put the phone down and watched it for real, but (back then) was a pretty golden age of people going and listening to music.

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    Tragically Hip fans watch the band’s final show from The Horseshoe Tavern in Toronto.


    Prime Video

    Canadian success vs. U.S. success: Does it matter if The Tragically Hip were as popular in the U.S. as they were in Canada?

    Mike Downie: Certainly, when I was setting out to do this doc, I really wanted to answer this question once and for all. Because, I feel, for a lot of people, there’s this asterisk about huge success in Canada, but not nearly as much in America. I think we really took a good run at it in the documentary, because the truth is, it really wasn’t about measuring country to country. It was really this idea of validation that Canadians, especially in the ’80s and ’90s, we’re looking at our own artists, our own anything and saying, “Yeah, that’s pretty great, but what do the Americans think?”

    Back then it was almost a parental approval kind of thing that we needed. And that’s what happened to the Hip. And then of course, it flipped, because then Canadians were like, “Wait a minute, this means everything to us. We love this.” And we realized it doesn’t matter what the rest of the world thinks because it’s ours. That confidence wasn’t really there before. And I think the band had this inherent confidence because of this brotherhood and this partnership and this collaboration. The band had this confidence in their songwriting and in their performance.

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    Canadians were coming out of our shells, growing up in the shadow of Great Britain and the United States. It just took us a while to find our footing, and I believe The Tragically Hip helped move that forward in a big way.


    The Tragically Hip as young men, when they first started out.


    Prime Video

    One thing that stood out about the doc, right off the top, is that you were all boys with a musical connection, fantasizing about becoming rock stars. And you grew up to be members of one of the biggest rock bands in Canadian history. Looking back, does it ever feel like a dream?

    Gord Sinclair: Very much so, I was just thinking about this yesterday. When (we were teens), Rush played the Jock Hardy Arena, which is a small half-hockey arena, maybe 2,000 people… I know most of you were there with me [gestures at bandmates], as we’re from a small town and this was a big, big concert. I remember they opened up with Bastille Day, and it was the loudest, most amazing thing I’ve ever seen. It was truly inspiring.

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    And yesterday we’re sitting there, and here’s Ged (Geddy Lee, Rush frontman) on TV talking about our tunes. The 16-year-old me is like, “Wow.” It’s amazing. I still have problems looking that man in the eye because it’s Geddy Lee! It’s pretty incredible, back when we were playing on tennis racquets as kids listening to the Rolling Stones, and then we’re having a pint with them. It’s hard to believe.

    It’s kind of like a dream come true, that level of inspiration. It speaks to the power of music for me, because I still hold those memories really, really strongly. Music was the only thing I wanted to do after seeing Rush play, and as a music fan to be able to do that… to be able to appreciate that on a winter’s night in Saskatoon, or Pigtown, there’s a kid out there who’s maybe thinking the exact same thing. You get that sense of community that music creates. Music is a great force for good.

    —

    ‘The Tragically Hip: No Dress Rehearsal’ is now streaming across Canada on Prime Video.

    This interview has been edited and condensed.


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    Chris Jancelewicz

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  • Looking for some music books to read this winter? Here are some recommendations – National | Globalnews.ca

    Looking for some music books to read this winter? Here are some recommendations – National | Globalnews.ca

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    Fall is the best time of the year for book lovers. Publishers schedule the release of their most serious-minded fare for when we’re indoors and have time to read. So put away that phone and tablet. There will be plenty of time for doomscrolling in the New Year when get back to climate change emergencies, Elon Musk’s latest bits of insanity, and panic over the U.S. presidential election. Time to curl up with some good books on music.

    Talking to My Angels by Melissa Etheridge (Out now)

    Looking for some music books to read this winter? Here are some recommendations - image

    Etheridge’s second memoir (the first was The Truth Is… from 2002) picks up where that one left off and adds 20 years of new experiences (a battle with breast cancer, some very public breakups, the death of her son as the result of opioid addiction, involvement in the LGBTQ2 community) and reflections on life. It’s very honest stuff. There will be tears.

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    Mud Ride: A Messy Trip Through the Grunge Explosion by Steve Turner (Out now)

    Looking for some music books to read this winter? Here are some recommendations - image

    Turner, a skater and hardcore kid, was there at the very beginning of grunge. In fact, it was Mark Arm, his later bandmate in OG groups like Green River and Mudhoney who first used the word to describe the heavier sounds coming out of the Pacific Northwest. Turner takes us through those early days, showing us just how few people were responsible for a scene that eventually blew up worldwide. Green River, for example, once included both future Pearl Jam members Jeff Ament and Stone Gossard but left when their ambitions outgrew the group. Although Mudhoney continues to record and tour, their experience shows that not everyone associated with the birth of grunge was on the same page.

    Abbey Road: The Inside Story of the World’s Most Famous Recording Studio by David Hepworth (Out Now)

    Looking for some music books to read this winter? Here are some recommendations - image

    I’ve been lucky to both work at and tour through Abbey Road Studios several times over the years and I can attest that the place is like a shrine. Opened by Electric and Machine Industries (that’s what “EMI” stands for) in a nine-bedroom century-old Georgian townhouse, the studios have been the source of some of the most legendary recordings in the world: The Beatles, Pink Floyd, Oasis, Muse, Radiohead, Depeche Mode — the list goes on forever. The massive Studio One is also where orchestras performed and recorded the soundtracks for Raiders of the Lost Ark, Return of the Jedi, Aliens, and a bunch of Harry Potter films. While the studio is off-limits to most visitors, this book takes us inside and shows how things work behind the curtain.

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    Don’t Call It Hair Metal: Art in the Excess of ’80s Rock by Sean Kelly

    Hair metal has not been treated kindly by history. Most remember it as a time when dudes looked like ladies with their big hair, makeup, and spandex up partied up and down the Sunset Strip. A lot of rock fans were fine when the grunge tsunami wiped the entire scene from the face of the early at the dawn of the 1990s. But maybe we’ve been too harsh. Kelly teases out stories from members of Twisted Sister, Guns N’ Roses, Dokken, Poison, Quiet Riot, and others to offer a different perspective on the music of the era. Maybe it wasn’t so bad after all.

    High Bias: The Distorted History of the Cassette Tape by Mark Masters (Out Oct. 3)

    Looking for some music books to read this winter? Here are some recommendations - image

    When Philips introduced the Compact Cassette in 1963, they expected it to be used for low-fidelity purposes like diction and answering machines. But as tape formulations and tape machines got better, the cassette allowed everyone to create custom mixtapes for home, the car, and new-fangled things like the Sony Walkman. For a brief period in the 1980s, more people bought prerecorded albums on cassette than on vinyl or the new compact disc. The cassette made music consumption personal, customizable, and portable. Today, cassettes are making something of a comeback as retro tchotchkes and souvenirs as well as being used to preserve Afghani music from the Taliban’s music-hating ways. It’s a fun, twisty story.

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    Lay It On the Line by Rik Emmett (Out Oct. 10)

    Subtitled A Backstage Pass to Rock Star Adventure, Conflict, and Triumph, the guitarist for Canada’s other ’70s-’80s power trio offers a mix of memoirs, anecdotes, observations about the music industry, and rock’n’roll songwriting that’s sure to be appreciated by anyone who likes Canadian-built hard rock. Emmett also explains why he walked away from the band for 20 years to explore other forms of music.

    Behind the Seams: My Life in Rhinestones by Dolly Parton (Out Oct. 17)

    Looking for some music books to read this winter? Here are some recommendations - image

    Dolly has been having a very long moment these past couple of years, especially since she was inducted into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. With a new album entitled Rockstar coming in November (yes, a Dolly Parton rock record), she’s ready with a thick book featuring 450 full-colour photos of her wardrobe while explaining how her sense of style developed over the decades. Love sequins and rhinestones? Here you go.

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    The Tragically Hip ABC adapted by Drew Macklin (Out Oct. 24)

    This could be classified as something for the young’uns, but it’s really a picture book for all fans of The Tragically Hip. And it’s like it sounds: a tour through Hip songs A is for “Ahead by a Century,” B is for “Bobcaygeon,” etc., all whimsically illustrated by Clayton Hammer, Julia Breckenreid, Bridget George, and Monika Melnychuk. File it under, “For the Hip Fan Who Has Everything.”

     

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Alan Cross

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  • Use of Tragically Hip’s music at CPC event causes social media clash  | Globalnews.ca

    Use of Tragically Hip’s music at CPC event causes social media clash | Globalnews.ca

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    Though The Tragically Hip knows how important it is for some people to play My Music At Work, they don’t seem to want Pierre Poilievre to use their tunes for his.

    When band’s guitarist Paul Langlois was notified that The Tragically Hip’s 1993 hit song Fifty-Mission Cap was played at an event for Conservative Party of Canada leader Pierre Poilievre this weekend, he called the news “highly offensive.”

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    A fan wrote to Langlois on Twitter and claimed the song was played at a meet-and-greet with Poilievre on Saturday at the Grand Olympia Hospitality and Convention Centre in Stoney Creek, Ont., east of Hamilton.

    Langlois replied: “We certainly did not know this — highly offensive if true (we’ll wait to make sure and potentially confirm this) and if so, this will be stopped.”

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    The response triggered a wave of online support and outrage for Langlois and The Tragically Hip. Some praised his slamming of Poilievre and the CPC, while other longtime fans felt blindsided by the political stance.

    Still, despite Langlois’ claims that the band was unaware their music was used, the venue has since confirmed that it did have the rights to play The Tragically Hip’s music.

    In a statement on Monday, The Tragically Hip took a softer stance than Langlois had expressed on social media, but still requested political parties directly ask to use their music.

    Read more:

    Crowd crush leaves 2 dead, others injured at GloRilla concert in N.Y.

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    “It is (and has always been) our expectation that brands, political parties, or public figures wishing to use our music for a campaign first seek our approval,” the statement reads. “When we began to see posts and tweets from the event this weekend, the specifics were unclear.”

    “It has now been confirmed that Saturday’s event took place in a venue licensed by SOCAN, which means the venue pays a fee to ensure artists and musicians are compensated appropriately when music is played on site. As such, specific permissions were not required in this case. We did not have the full details in our earlier posts — and now consider this matter resolved.”

    Despite claims of a resolution, discourse about Langlois’ upset over the Conservative Party playing Fifty-Mission Cap is still snowballing online.

    On Sunday, Langlois (albeit seemingly reluctantly) clarified his first statement on Twitter.

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    “I hate to have to clarify this but here goes: We have always been highly offended by anybody who doesn’t ask for our permission to use our music for a brand, a political party, or a public figure of any sort,” he wrote. “It’s just common courtesy to ask, and it applies to anyone and everyone.”

    Langlois then replied to several Twitter users, many of whom were against his stance on the CPC using the Hip’s music. The guitarist clearly found entertainment in egging on folks who had been outraged by his earlier tweets.

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    “Am I allowed to play it while I’m working alone baking? Do I owe some royalties?” asked one person.

    “No you’re not allowed,” responded Langlois.

    “I’m having a party next weekend. Can I play your music for my guests?” tweeted another.

    “Yes, thanks for asking but you didn’t have to,” replied Langlois.

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    “How offensive. Damn, and to think I was a hip [sic] fan. If I could take back every purchase, I would now,” read one tweet.

    “Do it,” Langlois tweeted back.

    At one point, the guitarist even wrote that “maybe I shouldn’t have commented publicly” but noted regardless he’s “kinda enjoyed all this a little bit.”

    On Monday, Langlois posted his final tweet in the saga, and appeared to pose as an assistant named “Randolph” who claimed his boss was “sensitive and prone to lashing out.” It is unclear as of this writing if Randolph is a real person.

    Read more:

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    Langlois is definitely not the first musician to take issue with a politician using their music. Perhaps most famously, Bruce Springsteen insisted U.S. President Ronald Reagan cease using his song Born in the U.S.A. during his re-election campaign.

    Last year, two members of the band Journey started a legal battle over the use of their song Don’t Stop Believin’ at events affiliated with Donald Trump and the Republican Party.

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Sarah Do Couto

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