Thursday, 18 August 2016

Final concert by The Tragically Hip on Saturday in Kingston

Courage & Ahead By A Century among a long list of hit songs

Band's frontman Gord Downie diagnosed with brain tumour late last year 

By Mark Schadenberg
A farewell tour always brings back memories and nostalgia, and it doesn’t matter if the retiring performer is a music talent or an athlete.
To read the many press clippings of the Tragically Hip final tour is almost too sombre as all Canadians know the health diagnosis of The Hip frontman Gord Downie.
I’ve been involved with Relay For Life for the Canadian Cancer Society in Woodstock for almost 10 years and thereby I know how cancer has affected people of all ages. I would include a list of people I know struggling to find a cure for their cancer, or who have lost their battle, but that list would only be a very sad reminder about how many types of cancer exist and how difficult discovering a cure has been.
The final Tragically Hip show is set for the band’s hometown of Kingston on Saturday night (August 20) as the Man Machine Poem tour has made stops in Ottawa (today), London, Hamilton, three shows in Toronto, and a dozen or so more in stops like Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver.  


Downie saddened all rock music lovers everywhere on May 24 when it was announced publicly that the Tragically Hip lead singer was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumour. It was an interesting press conference as it was hosted by neuro-oncologist doctors who explained they type of cancer which Downie had. According to an archived Globe And Mail story, Downie was diagnosed after suffering a seizure in Kingston this past December.
The Tragically Hip library is both superb and immense. It’s hard to believe the album Road Apples is 25 years old in 2016 and it’s not their first release, but rather their third. I believe it is 14 studio albums, plus three Downie solo records, plus a few greatest hits and live recordings, for a prolific resume for a legendary band.

Excerpt from Globe And Mail story back in May.



I began following the charts and successes of The Hip with New Orleans Is Sinking and that was a 1989 tune.
Rock radio regular songs include Bobcaygeon, Courage, Fifty-Mission Cap, Ahead By A Century, Little Bones, Blow At High Dough, Boots Or Hearts, In View, and 38 Years Old. As a Maple Leafs fan and someone who likes to read about history in general, I would say Fifty-Mission Cap is my favourite track by The Hip. The YouTube clip of that song I include here is from a German TV show in the 1990’s.

Downie, who is just 52 years old, has more than earned his place in Canadian superstar rock music annals alongside Burton Cummings, Neil Young and Bryan Adams.
The Hip’s final concert will be aired by the CBC, but that broadcast will also be live streamed in countless locations, including the Springer Market Square in Kingston. The city’s mayor has already declared Saturday to be Tragically Hip Day.

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From newspaper Kingston Whig-Standard:
“The Tragically Hip are an iconic Canadian band who have made tremendous contributions to our country and the Kingston community in particular, through their music and philanthropy,” Mayor Bryan Paterson said in a release. “We look forward to welcoming The Hip home and giving Kingston fans the opportunity to show their love and support of the band.”
The free public celebration is open to all and starts at 8 p.m.. Rides on Kingston Transit will be free after 4 p.m. on the Saturday, as well as offering express service.
“This event is a small gesture to allow our community to come together in a showing of our support,” Mayor Paterson said. “This celebration is going to show what The Tragically Hip means to our community and what I think Kingstonians expect. This event is going to be big and unlike anything we’ve seen before in Market Square.”
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In Woodstock, Boston Pizza will accept donations to the Canadian Cancer Society as part of its airing of the final performance. 
Not much is really known about what happens after the Kingston show is over. Downie could quietly move to the background to continue his cancer treatments and spend time with his family, which includes 4 kids. He could continue his philanthropy work and support of many environmental causes, including clean water in the Great Lakes.  


LINKS:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/arts/tragically-hip-how-to-watch-1.3723485
http://www.macleans.ca/culture/how-we-will-miss-gord-downie-and-the-tragically-hip/
https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/music/2016/08/19/how-gord-downie-and-the-tragically-hip-forged-a-relationship-with-our-30-million-hearts-vinay-menon.html
http://www.therecord.com/whatson-story/6812314-gord-downie-i-ve-got-to-go-it-s-been-a-pleasure-doing-business-with-you-/

May 2016 Stories

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