Friday, September 25, 2015

I don't know what a Pigeon Camera is. So, this is a two'fer to make up for it.

But I'm sure it's got some special meanings. I'm gonna go hit the google...

Okay, back. The CIA strapped some cameras to pigeon back in Da Nang. I have no idea what the hell this has to do with anything.  Gotta tell ya... this song is a cool 6.25 out of 10 on the "Favourites" scale.  Not hard to listen too, but not easy, either.




All this being said, I think we should check out another, shall we?

li·on·ize
ˈlīəˌnīz/
verb
past tense: lionized; past participle: lionized
  1. give a lot of public attention and approval to (someone); treat as a celebrity.

This is "Lionized". Top notch Hip, IMHO.  Framing those we lionize as a tableau vivant is pretty genius, but then you probably see more of the world than I do.

-Roberto

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

If you've ever driven across the country...

...and you're going from east to west, then you know that part where it goes from being all green and rocky and tree-y to grassy and flat and wheat-y?  That's the hundreth meridian.  This is a song about that, and other things.

-Roberto


Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Well this is different!

So, this is another song from Fully Completely. "Looking for a Place to Happen" is another song where Gord takes advantage of the Canadian legend that is Jacques Cartier.  Jacques was an early French explorer tasked with exploring the St Lawrence river and ended up founding some of the bigger cities in what is now Quebec.  His most lasting legarcy... he coined the term Canadienne an Iriquois word for "massive beaver" or something, and it's from this that we get the term Canada!  So, Jacques Cartier, thank you very much!

-R


Saturday, September 19, 2015

And now for Fully Completely...

Finally, enough of the appetizers! Onto the main course!

Most likely, we will hear all of the Fully Completely album, and this is the first song off the album. This is "Courage".  The video below is pretty hilarious. Classic mid-90s Tragically Hip.  Who is that guy shaving?  Why was that included? What are you trying to tell us, Tragically Hip!?!?  Sidenote: the Boston Bruins jersey Gord is wearing... they're his favourite team, apparently.

This is for sure one of my favourite songs. In the Live Between Us version, he intermingles a story about the tragedy at the Ecole Polytechnique where a madman went on a shooting rampage and murdered a bunch of women (specifically women), and I'll be damned if it doesn't add a whole new dimension to the song, and maybe if you listen with that as the backdrop, you'll have a better understanding of the song. Thinking out loud: Maybe the guy in the video is someone who tried to stop the madman, unsuccessfully, and has to live with the consequences of his actions? Who knows.

Let's meet some of the band, shall we?  This is Rob Baker, the lead guitarist. The beard and his glorious hair is how you'll tell him from the rest of the band. Just take a minute to drink in that majestic mane.  Ahh. The majesty.


Picture credits to:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rob_Baker_(guitarist)#/media/File:Robbaker.jpg
http://kickasscanadians.ca/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/Rob-Baker-feature2.jpg

Friday, September 18, 2015

AND I DON'T WANNA SWIM!!!

Alright, a long long long long time ago, well before Katrina, the oracle Gord Downie predicted the underwaterness of New Orleans in the Tragically Hip song "New Orleans is Singing".

Further, in an amazing rant, an underground version started circulating that has become almost as popular as the original. This is that version, and this is the most popular Hip song by a long shot.

Note the rock-ness of it. This song is so much more raw than anything produced after 1992, where they refined their sound and had the ability to bounce between a rock and a more zen, smooth sound.

-Roberto


Thursday, September 17, 2015

This is Ahead By a Century

Trouble at the Henhouse has the most experimental lyrics of all the Hip albums. Songs like "Coconut Cream" (about a cannon shooting coconut cream, 40 gallons at a steady stream) and "Sherpa" (including lyrics about a bee drinking dewdrop tea from a cannonball tree) highlight the depths of Gord's insanity.  I would call this the dream-inspired album...

"Ahead by a Century" was the biggest commercial success off the album, and the video played incessantly on MuchMusic (aka MTV but for Canada, eh). It has a pretty pop beat, the lyrics are palatable, and I guess that makes it very sing-along-able.

Give it a whirl, eh?! This is "Ahead by a Century"!



As an aside, let's all be very clear - Canadian bands typically don't produce very good music videos.  Lots of farmland / middle-of-Canada imagery seems to work it's way into everything.  The videos get better over time, but this was the mid-90s and looking back at it, it's pretty hilarious.

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

A Strip Club in Montreal

A stripper in Montreal has a hard time getting through her set. Whatever.

-r


Monday, September 14, 2015

Song Deux!

Okay, triathlons, etc out of the way, here's another ditty by our boys from Kingston, Ontario. This is a song of awesomeness from there latest album, Now for Plan A, and the song being "At Transformation".

Honestly, I love this song. There's a line in there that goes "I want to help you lift enormous things!" which, at the point in which it is sung, my heart (and often my mouth - sorry 24Hr Fitness members!) is screaming out the words with Gord, and I just feel all strong and amazing and wanted to spread that feeling to the world.  Damn he's good.  Anyhoo, I hope you enjoy it! The video actually starts with a poetry reading... I'm leukwarm on the poetry, but Gord is Gord and I guess you never can tell where inspiration will come from.

Bacione!
Roberto


Friday, September 11, 2015

Hi Tracy!!!!
In just a few short weeks, we're going to see the Tragically Hip. They might not make sense without some sort of exposure... so I've made this website to help you understand the sensory deluge you're about to experience.

Lets start with the basics: This is the Fully and Completely tour, based strongly on the album Fully Completely from 1992.  I was 12. You were 7? Yeezus. Welp, anyway, here we are.

Moving on to the music, I'm going to send you to one song per day, to properly expose you to some of my favourites and some of the songs from playlists on the tour.  Let's dig in, shall we?

First up!
Grace, Too (from the Day for Night album)

The Hip seem to love starting concerts off with this song, even though it has nothing to do with the Fully Completely album.  (It has a slow buildup which is probably a good way to get the musical juices flowing.)  Okay, the live version of this (released on another album) is good indication of what to expect at the concert... the original song being 5:35 long and this live version being 6:18, it includes a good mix of Gord Downie (lead singer) rambling on in his poetic fashion, as he is want to do - this starts at the 4:30 mark of the live version. 

Even though Day for Night came out in '94, it travelled around Italy with me in '96. Picture a wee little Roberto with his yellow Walkman, rocking out to this song over and over again, and exploring the meaning of each and every lyric.  This was my Hip listenin' prime.

Bacione!

Live:


Album:
The one and only, Gord Downie: