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Tragically Hip's Canada Day Show Proves Gord Downie is the Nation's Weird Uncle
- Posted on Jul 2nd 2012 3:00PM by Sarah Kurchak
Aaron Brophy for AOL
Like the uncle who slips you mix tapes of his favourite bands, The Hip have introduced the greater populace to all sorts of unplucked musical gems and artistic outliers through festivals like the band's signature Another Roadside Attraction series and opening slots on cross country tours.
They've suggested that we check out semi-obscure works by Canadian literary giants, like Hugh MacLennan's The Watch That Ends The Night, from which the song "Courage" has the final verse ripped wholesale. And, in return, we've fondly listened to their wacky stories about killer whales and catharsis, and sung along to their ballads about tragic painters and hockey players.
As such, seeing The Tragically Hip play on Canada Day at Burl's Creek in Oro, Ontario was like spending the holiday with extended pop culture family. Although the band's current outdoor concert forays lack the sweeping scope of Another Roadside Attraction's '90s heyday, both in size and artistic out-there-ness, they're still an impressive mix of good old Canadian rock, American tokenism and hey-check-this-shit-out discoveries, and this edition was no exception.
This year's up and comers were the Rural Alberta Advantage, whose giddy cover of "Canada Geese," a song from Downie's solo album Coke Machine Glow -- complete with an appearance from Downie himself -- provided one of the highlights of the day. And if the shirtless, tribal-tattooed youngster proudly clinging to his autographed RAA LP was any indication, the Hip have once again succeeded in bringing a promising, semi-underground indigenous act to the masses.
This year's potential successors to the Can Rock throne, the New Pornographers, were entertaining, but somewhat upstaged by what seemed like singer (and honorary Canadian) Neko Case's slow decent into heat stroke-induced stage banter, which included dry jokes about the band's punk rockness, and their war against the sun ("Fuck you, sun! We're playing right in your face!"). 2012's token Americans, Death Cab for Cutie, sounded like an unfortunate mix of Treble Charger's less dynamic moments and Jimmy Fallon parodying indie rock, but some of the kids liked it, and the band provided a nice dinner and/or campsite break for the rest of the audience who had been on-site all weekend.
Satisfactory sated, rested and smoked up, the crowd returned en masse for The Hip. Downie took to the stage with a message about music's ability to unite people, and his fans' behavior during the band's two hour, career-spanning set certainly did a lot of to support his hypothesis.
- Tragically Hip's Gord Downie
- Tragically Hip Crowd
- Tragically Hip's Paul Langlois
- Tragically Hip's Gord Downie as Pro Wrestler Sabu
- Gang Concerns at the Tragically Hip Show
- New Pornographers' Carl Newman
- New Pornographers' Neko Case
- New Pornographers' Kathryn Calder
- Tragically Hip Fan
- Death Cab For Cutie's Ben Gibbard
- Rural Alberta Advantage
- Canada Day Music Appreciation Gallery
- Arcade Fire's Politics
- Leonard Cohen's Endurance
- Feist's Rainbow Connections
- Deadmau5's Honesty
- Drake's Crew Love
- Justin Bieber's Potential
- Maestro Fresh Wes' Backbone
- Metric's Independence
- Michael Buble's Attitude
- Neil Young's Influence
- Randy Bachman's Vinyl Tap
- Couer De Pirate's Split-Popularity
- Rufus Wainwright's Flair
- Spirit of the West's "Home For a Rest"
- Stompin' Tom Connors' Existence
- The Tragically Hip's American Obscurity
The biggest temporary beer tattoo-sporting (and permanently beer-gutted) drunken hoser united with the most bookish and bespectacled hipster as they negotiated the polysyllabic and thematic gymnastics involved in singing along to "Poets" and "At the Hundredth Meridian." Rockers and activists alike hoisted their lighters (one of the charms of small town concerts is that people still generally eschew the cell phone for the more traditional source of ballad-accompanying light) for the David Milgaard-inspired "Wheat Kings." And everyone chuckled when Uncle Gord embarked on twisted monologues about his complicated relationship with his microphone stand (he seems to hate the stand, but sometimes feels like the mic itself is the only one listening to him) and warned "Wheat Kings " guest singer Sarah Harmer about wearing an old hat of his ("I can't let you do that! I got conjunctivitis from that hat at Ontario Place in 1983. It's an eye thing.").
Objectively, it wasn't the Tragically Hip's greatest or most accomplished set ever. While drummer Johnny Fay, bassist Gord Sinclair and guitarists Rob Baker and Paul Langlois remain as solid as ever, Downie's increasingly shouty vocals and erratic stage presence and the band's musical divergences sometimes cross the line from interesting into ill-advised. But, at this point in their storied and varied career, The Hip have certainly earned the occasional divergence and they've moved far beyond the need for objectivity. The band have become part of the country's creative mythology and seeing them perform has become an experience that transcends the occasional blown note or hint of boredom (we suspect that Downie is taking the piss when he sings "Blow at High Dough" these days).
Like any good family reunion, a big Tragically Hip festival is a reminder of all that our people are and can accomplish, from the embarrassing to the bizarre to the truly great and heartwarming. And as long as we have our favorite weird uncles in the Hip around to remind us, Canadians can stop and take a little pride in the strange balance of hoserism and intellectualism inherent in our national consciousness that could make a band like the Tragically Hip big enough to stage this kind of festival to begin with.
- Filed under: Concerts and Tours, News, Exclusive, Pop Culture, Music Appreciation
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