The Band w/ Ronnie Hawkins |
Spotify link here.
Tidal link here.
1. Stompin’ Tom Connors, “The Singer (Voice
of the People).” Okay, right out of the gate, I have no idea if the
Tragically Hip have any affection for the man most dedicated to capturing
Canada in song, or if they think he’s a rube. (They did, of course, cover
“Sudbury Saturday Night” when they played Sudbury once.) But I love Stompin’
Tom, and this is a song that has haunted me ever since I first heard it used in
the Bruce McDonald film Roadkill. I
quoted it in its entirety as the epilogue to Have Not Been the Same. It’s the first song I wanted to hear when I
learned of Tom’s death a few years back; it’s the first song I wanted to hear
the day Gord Downie died.
2. Lord Creator, “Kingston Town.” Again,
I have no evidence the Tragically Hip are even aware this song exists. But it’s
an underrated reggae classic, and I contemplated titling one of the first
chapters with the chorus lyric: “There is magic in Kingston town.”
3. Velvet Underground, “Sweet Jane.” The
first song of the first set when Gord Downie first performed in public with the
Slinks, his first high school band, at a KCVI school dance. Downie loved Lou
Reed. If you’ve never seen him sing “How Does It Feel” with Kevin Hearn and
Reed’s band, check this out link.
4. Rolling Stones, “Dance Little Sister.”
This band is the single biggest influence on early Hip; I could populate an
entire playlist of the Hip’s favourite Stones tracks. Picked this one because
Rob Baker has said that it’s Mick Taylor’s guitar solo here, which he first
heard when he was just learning how to play guitar, that he feels sums up his
own approach to lead work.
5. Howlin’ Wolf,
“Smokestack Lightnin’.” Although I cringe every time someone describes
early Hip as “blues rock,” there’s no denying the band’s deep love for the
genre. Howlin’ Wolf in particular was a favourite of Downie’s, both for his
vocal approach and his longevity. He marveled at stories of Wolf’s
performances, like this one, from Robert Palmer’s book Deep Blues: “Where was
Wolf? Suddenly he sprang out onto the stage from the wings. He was
a huge hulk of a man, but he advanced across the stage in sudden burst of
speed, his head pivoting from side to side, eyes huge and white, eyeballs
rotating wildly. He seemed to be having an epileptic seizure, but no, he
suddenly lunged for the microphone, blew a chorus of raw, heavily rhythmic
harmonica, and began moaning. He had the hugest voice I had ever heard —
it seemed to fill the hall and get right inside your ears, and when he hummed
and moaned in falsetto, every hair on your neck crackled with electricity. … He was the Mighty Wolf, no doubt about it.
Finally, an impatient signal from the wings let him know his portion of the
show was over. Defiantly, Wolf counted off a bone-crushing rocker, began
singing rhythmically, feigned an exit, and suddenly made a flying leap for the
curtain at the side of the stage. Holding the microphone under his beefy right
arm and singing into it all the while, he began climbing up the curtain, going
higher and higher until he was perched far above the stage, the thick curtain
threatening to rip, the audience screaming with delight. Then he loosened
his grip and, in a single easy motion, slid right back down the curtain, hit
the stage, cut off the tune, and stalked away, to the most ecstatic cheers of
the evening. He was then fifty-five years old.”
6. Junior Wells, “Messin’ With the Kid.”
Several early covers the Hip did were lifted from the Blues Brothers, the band
that featured, of course, fellow Kingstonian Dan Aykroyd. But because I think
the Blues Brothers are hot garbage, I’m going to include the original artists’
versions here instead. (BTW, did you know there are Blues Brothers tribute acts
making the circuit? What’s the point of that?!)
7. Don Covay, “Mercy Mercy.” I do not
think the Stones are hot garbage, but my tolerance for them is limited. So,
again, this playlist contains the original tracks that the Stones covered; the
Hip learned their versions from the Stones, and then sped them up.
8. Monkees, “I’m a Believer.” Other than
the Stones, the Hip’s other big early influence seems to be… the Monkees? Yes,
there was a lot more to this cartoonish TV band than meets the eye, as
generations of hardcore music nerds will tell you ad nauseum. The Hip were
those guys. Downie would often introduce this song as “a song by Neil
Diamond”—which is true, and the kind of little-known fact music nerds like to
wield. The Hip even took their name from a TV skit on a show that Monkee Mike
Nesmith created in the early ’80s, Elephant
Parts.
9. Dale Hawkins, “Susie-Q.” This is the
original; the Hip could have learned this set staple from the source or any
number of cover versions, including the epic jam by CCR.
10.
Roy Head, “Treat Her Right.” The
kind of ’60s R&B obscurity the early Hip specialized in—and they got to it
before George Thorogood covered it in 1988, and before it was featured in the
1991 film The Commitments.
11.
Them, “I Can Only Give You Everything.”
Van Morrison’s ’60s R&B band is, to these ears, far superior to the Rolling
Stones’ earliest days. This is a song Downie did with Baker in the Filters, and
carried over to early Hip sets. It’s also the title of the book’s second
chapter. After the book was published, I heard Jake Gold tell an interviewer that this song opened the set the Hip played the night they auditioned for Gold and Allan Gregg. They signed a deal that night. Both parties gave the relationship everything they had.
12.
Pretty Things, “Don’t Bring Me Down.”
Confession: I know next to nothing about this band, other than by
reputation. The Hip were obsessed with ’60s British garage bands who drew from the
blues, and this group usually ranked right beside the Stones and the Yardbirds
as the Holy Trinity of original influences for the Hip. It’s why, along with
Them, each gets more than one track on this playlist.
13.
Rock Roll, “Bedrock Twitch.” Yes,
this is from an episode of The
Flintstones. How the Hip managed to learn this song is a mystery: if I had
to guess, I’d say someone’s family was an early adopter of the VCR and recorded
the episode (the ’60s show was still in wide after-school syndication in the
’80s). This was a popular live favourite. Almost everyone I talked to about the
Hip’s earliest days would mention this song in particular. It’s safe to say no
one else covered it.
14.
Sam the Sham and the Pharoahs, “Wooly
Bully.” I don’t doubt the Hip played a lot of frat parties at Queen’s and
Western. This would have been a set necessity.
15.
Monkees, “Mary, Mary.” It was years
before I knew from where Run-DMC sampled the chorus of their 1988 hit; the Hip
were covering this song well before that. It’s definitely the funkiest Monkees.
16.
Marvin Gaye, “Hitch Hike.” Another
soul classic plundered by the Stones, and later the Hip. The riff also inspired
the Velvet Underground’s “There She Goes Again.”
17.
Them, “Baby, Please Don’t Go.” This
is the direct inspiration for “New Orleans is Sinking,” in terms of the guitar
riff, the structure, and the lyrical reference. There are plenty of versions of
this blues classic, but you can bet the Hip learned it from Them.
18.
Yardbirds, “Train Kept A-Rollin’.”
Everybody covered this song, including the Stones. And the Hip.
19.
Pretty Things, “Come See Me.” See
above, track 12.
20.
Doors, “Roadhouse Blues.” Perhaps
the most obvious song in the Hip’s early repertoire, and a guaranteed
crowd-pleaser at any beer bash. Because audiences didn’t know what to make of
Downie’s stage presence, he was often compared to Jim Morrison—because, you
know, weirdness. It is true that Downie was asked to join the Slinks because he
knew all the words to “The End” (or it could have been “When the Music’s Over”—Downie
gave varying accounts of this story), and that the band was once offered steady
work as a Doors cover band in London, Ont.—an offer they laughed off because,
as Baker said, “We didn’t even have a keyboard player!”
21.
The Band w/ Ronnie Hawkins, “Who Do You
Love?” A Bo Diddley jam that ticks several boxes for this list: it’s a song
the Hip covered, it’s done here by Canadian icons The Band (“Robbie Robertson
was like God to me,” Baker said), sung by Ronnie Hawkins, who ruled the roost
at some of the same century-old Ontario hotels the Hip would play 25 years
after he did—Downie would even swing from exposed pipes above the stage,
something my parents told me they saw Hawkins do at the Embassy Hotel in London
in the early ’60s. This version, of course, comes from The Last Waltz—which is now, post-2016, the second-most-important
farewell concert to be filmed.
22.
Neil Young, “Tonight’s the Night.”
This is a song Downie’s Country of Miracles covered live; there’s a great story
in the book about doing it at the Edmonton Folk Festival in 2001, going on
after Baaba Maal. It’s also a song Downie references in the 2002 song “All Tore
Up”: “Play your tonight’s the nights right / and don’t clear the place.” This
album is a “difficult” one in Young’s discography (along with dozens others,
mind you) in that it was decidedly ragged and rough, and its release was
delayed for several years after the mainstream success of Harvest. It’s a total don’t-give-a-fuck triumph, and it’s the Neil
Young album that the most hardcore Neilheads adore. Confession: I had never
listened to this album all the way through, until I read Jimmy McDonough’s bio Shakey (which I did on the
recommendation of Steve Jordan when I started writing this book).
23.
Patti Smith, “Dancing Barefoot.” Not
aware of the Hip ever covering this song—though their friends Crash Vegas often
did. This song is structurally very similar to several Hip songs, and I’d be shocked if Downie didn’t take some cues from Smith’s writing
and performance. Because men are never compared to women, nobody really talks
about the direct line between Patti Smith and Gord Downie. Nobody, that is,
except the Constantines’ Bry Webb, who first suggested it to me.
24.
The Clash, “Brand New Cadillac.” If
you were a teenager in a rock band in the early ’80s, you probably covered this
song. The Slinks, the Rodents, and the Filters all did.
25.
The Stooges, “Down on the Street.”
Jason Schneider, co-author of Have Not
Been the Same, is convinced that “Locked in the Trunk of a Car” was
inspired by this guitar riff. I don’t think he’s wrong.
26.
David Bowie, “Watch That Man.” The
Hip were huge Bowie fans; Man Machine
Poem was originally going to be called “Dougie Stardust,” for some reason.
Downie sings a bit of “China Girl” on Live Between Us. They covered “Queen
Bitch”—a song Arcade Fire once did with Bowie himself—on the 2006 tour. This
song, from Aladdin Sane, is a less
obvious choice, but it was one covered by the Slinks.
Teenage Head |
28.
Rush, “In the Mood.” From the very
first album, with John Rutsey on drums. Apparently Rob Baker saw them on that
tour; he would have been 12 years old.
29.
The Clash, “I’m So Bored with the USA.”
It’s very funny to me: the idea of teenage Gord Sinclair and Rob Baker playing
this in the Baker basement and then going on to form a band where they’d
constantly be asked about American success or lack thereof.
30.
Go-Gos, “We Got the Beat.” I read
somewhere that this was covered by either the Slinks, Filters or Hip. Don’t
know if that’s true, but it’s fun to imagine. It does have a beat that rides
the floor tom, which Downie once told Johnny Fay is something guaranteed to
make him move. Imagine the "Little Bones" riff played over this beat.
31.
Talking Heads, “Pulled Up.” Downie
once cited Byrne as an influence, though I’m not aware of him or the Hip ever
covering Talking Heads. If they did, this is what I imagine they’d pick.
32.
Rick James, “Super Freak.” According
to the Slinks’ Joe Pater, this was in the band’s repertoire. Who wouldn’t want
to hear Downie do this one?!
33.
Doug and the Slugs, “Making It Work.”
I don’t know if the Hip liked this band or not, but I can guarantee they saw
them at the Lakeview Manor. I imagine the two bands likely shared a love of the
Monkees. Singer Doug Bennett was one of the most entertaining frontmen in
Canadian music in the early ’80s. Keyboardist Simon Kendall would play with
Baker in Strippers Union years later.
34.
David Wilcox, “Downtown Came Uptown.”
Another frequent flier at the Lakeview Manor.
35.
Payola$, “Eyes of a Stranger.”
Featuring guitarist Bob Rock, who later produced World Container and We Are
the Same—though perhaps he’s most famous for his supporting role in the
Metallica documentary Some Kind of
Monster. Singer Paul Hyde is/was a great storyteller in song. This band,
much like the Hip later on, spent most of their career explaining to the
Canadian press why they didn’t break in America. As if that matters.
36.
Red Rider, “Human Race.” Tom Cochrane’s
first band is much more interesting than one would expect if you only knew
“Life is a Highway.” Guitarist Ken Greer is a wizard. He also produced the
Hip’s debut EP.
37.
The Police, “Synchronicity II.”
Johnny Fay wore out several copies of this cassette when he was 12 years old,
and collected enough Police bootlegs to spot subtle changes in Stewart
Copeland’s drum fills through the years. Years later, he’d hire producer Hugh
Padgham for In Violet Light.
Interviewing the legendary Padgham was one of the greatest joys of writing this
book.
38.
Replacements, “Bastards of Young.”
Contemporaries of the Hip, this band recorded at Ardent Studios in Memphis just
before the Hip arrived to make Up to Here.
The Hip covered this song on their 2006 tour.
39.
Keith Richards, “Talk is Cheap.” Engineered
by Don Smith, and released right before he got the gig producing Up to Here.
40.
Steve Earle, “I Ain’t Ever Satisfied.”
A new Americana movement in the late ’80s, spearheaded by Earle, Lucinda
Williams and others, undoubtedly influenced the sound of the EP and Up to Here.
41.
R.E.M., “Pretty Persuasion.” The Hip
were often touted as “R.E.M. meets the Rolling Stones” in their early years. It
became a cliché, but it’s not inaccurate. Downie shares many similarities with
Michael Stipe: both are unusual, enigmatic, poetic frontmen at a time when that
was in short supply in rock’n’roll. Musically, both bands shared many
influences: ’60s garage rock, Americana country, punk and new wave. Pretty sure
R.E.M. were never into Rush, though.
42.
Yardbirds, “Heart Full of Soul.”
This playlist stops being chronological here, as we wind down the pines, so to
speak. But this seminal Hip influence flows nicely out of R.E.M., no?
43.
Gordon Lightfoot, “Sundown.” From
Gord to Gord: the elder was an enormous influence on the younger. “As a
ten-year-old kid listening to ‘Sundown,’ it sounded like a secret, from you to
me,” Downie told Lightfoot in an on-stage conversation between the two of them
and Laurie Brown. “It blew my mind to know that a song could be so mysterious
and sound so dangerous—it’s a dangerous song. I think about your austerity and
economy every time I put pen to paper.”
44.
Bruce Cockburn, “Tokyo.” In the
mid-’90s, the Hip were asked in an online chat what songs they might like to
cover. Gord Sinclair picked Sons of Freedom’s “Circle Circle.” Gord Downie
picked this song. The guitar shapes played over a pulsing root-note bass in the verses are not unlike those heard in "50 Mission Cap."
45.
John Martyn, “Don’t Want to Know.” A
’70s psych-folk song later covered by Dr. John and Blackie and the Rodeo Kings,
this was slipped into the middle of “New Orleans is Sinking” by Downie at
Halifax’s Misty Moon, at a show taped for broadcast by MuchMusic. Yet another
example of Downie’s delight in diving deep into his record crate for
references.
46.
Cowboy Junkies, “Misguided Angel.”
Contemporaries of the Hip, they seemed to have little in common other than a
love of Americana. But at the very least, Downie was a huge fan of The Trinity
Session (who isn’t?), and borrowed the band’s accordionist, Jaro Czerwinec, to
play on Coke Machine Glow.
47.
Led Zeppelin, “Black Mountain Side.”
As children of the ’70s, of course everyone in the Hip loved Zeppelin, and it
was the thrill of a lifetime to tour and hang out with Jimmy Page and Robert
Plant in 1994. I don’t hear a lot of Page’s electric work in Rob Baker, but I
do hear a similar approach to acoustic guitar, as this track shows: think of the intro to "Wild Mountain Honey" or the open-tuning intro he was playing to "Ahead by a Century" on the final tour.
48.
Rolling Stones, “2000 Light Years From
Home.” When the Hip covered the Stones early on, they mostly covered the
covers, not Jagger/Richards originals. This is an exception.
49.
Jimi Hendrix, “Third Stone from the
Sun.” Rob Baker would usually segue into this song in the middle of “2000
Light Years from Home.”
50.
Neu, “Hallogallo.” I have no idea if
the Hip ever listened to this German art-rock band of the early ’70s, but
Johnny Fay conjures this “motorik” beat often, particularly on “Escape is at
Hand for the Travelling Man,” especially with Baker and Langlois’s interwoven
guitars there sounding specifically like this track.