All language subtitles for The.Tragically.Hip.No.Dress.Rehearsal.S01E01.Part.One.Looking.For.A.Place.To.Happen.WEBRip.AMZN.en[sdh]

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish Download
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:01,377 [fans cheering] 2 00:00:04,839 --> 00:00:07,550 [chanting] Hip! Hip! Hip! 3 00:00:07,633 --> 00:00:09,635 ["Blow at High Dough"] 4 00:00:14,014 --> 00:00:17,810 [Denise Donlon] The Tragically Hip were more than a rock 'n roll band. 5 00:00:17,893 --> 00:00:22,106 Right from the beginning, to those final moments on the stage, 6 00:00:22,189 --> 00:00:23,816 there was something magic there. 7 00:00:23,899 --> 00:00:27,445 [Randy Lennox] Ireland will have U2. The UK will have the Beatles. 8 00:00:27,528 --> 00:00:29,447 In Canada, we'll have The Tragically Hip. 9 00:00:31,949 --> 00:00:37,663 ♪ They shot a movie once In your hometown ♪ 10 00:00:39,498 --> 00:00:45,504 ♪ Everybody was in it From miles around ♪ 11 00:00:46,922 --> 00:00:49,383 ♪ Out at the speedway ♪ 12 00:00:50,801 --> 00:00:53,554 ♪ Some kind of Elvis thing ♪ 13 00:00:54,680 --> 00:00:58,058 ♪ Well, I ain't no movie star ♪ 14 00:00:58,142 --> 00:01:02,146 ♪ But I can get behind anything ♪ 15 00:01:04,273 --> 00:01:07,026 ♪ Yeah, I can get behind anything ♪ 16 00:01:10,404 --> 00:01:13,282 I remember watching them going, "Holy fuck! 17 00:01:13,365 --> 00:01:15,618 These guys are from Canada and they're so good." 18 00:01:15,701 --> 00:01:19,038 ♪ Get it out Yeah, get it all out ♪ 19 00:01:19,121 --> 00:01:21,457 [Jay Baruchel] Having the biggest band in the country 20 00:01:21,540 --> 00:01:24,919 singing songs and telling stories about us, 21 00:01:25,002 --> 00:01:30,090 giving a soundtrack to this beautiful, powerful, important country. 22 00:01:30,174 --> 00:01:33,052 They were just doing what they were inspired by. 23 00:01:33,135 --> 00:01:36,889 I mean, was there ever a more authentic Canadian artist? 24 00:01:36,972 --> 00:01:40,434 ♪ When you blow at high dough ♪ 25 00:01:40,518 --> 00:01:43,521 [Bruce] They had the audience in the palm of their hand. 26 00:01:43,604 --> 00:01:46,440 And who is this weird guy spewing poetry in front? 27 00:01:46,524 --> 00:01:49,819 ["Ahead by a Century"] 28 00:01:49,902 --> 00:01:54,448 Gord Downie had the poetry and lyricism of a brilliant, brilliant writer, 29 00:01:54,532 --> 00:01:59,620 and he was the perfect frontman for this powerhouse all-Canadian band. 30 00:01:59,703 --> 00:02:02,623 [Rob Baker] So many bands come along and last four months, 31 00:02:02,706 --> 00:02:08,128 six months, a year. We all plan on doing it for a long time, together. 32 00:02:08,212 --> 00:02:11,173 ♪ No dress rehearsal ♪ 33 00:02:12,299 --> 00:02:15,386 ♪ This is our life ♪ 34 00:02:18,973 --> 00:02:20,307 [fans cheer] 35 00:02:20,391 --> 00:02:22,643 Thank you. Thank you. Good night. 36 00:02:30,276 --> 00:02:32,361 [reporter] We have some very tough news. 37 00:02:32,444 --> 00:02:36,115 Gord Downie has been diagnosed with terminal brain cancer. 38 00:02:39,869 --> 00:02:43,330 [Geddy Lee] It was remarkable to see an entire country 39 00:02:43,414 --> 00:02:46,750 glued to this farewell performance. 40 00:02:46,834 --> 00:02:49,670 [reporter] Today The Nation mourns the death of Gord Downie. 41 00:02:49,753 --> 00:02:51,922 He died at the age of 53. 42 00:02:53,424 --> 00:02:55,175 I just heard that morning 43 00:02:55,259 --> 00:02:59,930 and I knew it was coming, but I didn't want to think about it coming. 44 00:03:03,017 --> 00:03:08,689 [Finny McConnell] The legacy is the most unique, crazy, wonderful, tragic 45 00:03:08,772 --> 00:03:14,445 and artistic, loving story that'll ever be told in rock 'n' roll in this country. 46 00:03:14,528 --> 00:03:17,281 And now without further ado: 47 00:03:19,199 --> 00:03:20,951 Gord Sinclair, 48 00:03:22,995 --> 00:03:27,499 Gord Downie, Johnny Fay, 49 00:03:28,584 --> 00:03:32,546 Robbie Baker and Paul Langlois. 50 00:03:34,048 --> 00:03:36,508 [Mike Downie] Paul are you ready to get started? 51 00:03:36,592 --> 00:03:37,676 I'm ready. 52 00:03:41,055 --> 00:03:46,852 ♪ They shot a movie once In my hometown ♪ 53 00:03:48,103 --> 00:03:53,525 ♪ Everybody was in it From miles around ♪ 54 00:04:00,741 --> 00:04:03,619 [Man] Gordon Downie, The Tragically Hip. Good. 55 00:04:07,206 --> 00:04:08,791 Thank you, tape number K. 56 00:04:20,511 --> 00:04:24,640 [Gord Downie] When I was 16, I mean, I wanted to be in a band, 57 00:04:26,308 --> 00:04:30,145 and I wanted to tour around, you know. I wanted to come to Florida. 58 00:04:32,648 --> 00:04:36,610 Well, maybe not Florida, but I wanted to come, you know, and tour. 59 00:04:36,694 --> 00:04:39,029 Then, when you get, you know, you're 18 60 00:04:39,113 --> 00:04:42,533 you just keep readjusting how you actually thought it would turn out. 61 00:04:44,243 --> 00:04:48,872 I had no idea you know what it, what it entails, what it means. 62 00:04:48,956 --> 00:04:52,251 You know, it's a real carrot-on-a-stick kind of business. 63 00:04:52,334 --> 00:04:54,628 And at the same time, it's what you always... 64 00:04:54,712 --> 00:04:57,881 you have to keep reminding yourself it's what you always wanted to do. 65 00:05:03,178 --> 00:05:05,931 [Paul Langlois] We spend a lot of time in here. 66 00:05:06,015 --> 00:05:08,475 The van is a fact of life with touring. 67 00:05:09,643 --> 00:05:12,354 First thing we did was get a good stereo. 68 00:05:12,438 --> 00:05:17,067 [music playing on stereo] 69 00:05:19,153 --> 00:05:22,906 Every new trip, you know, guys make different compilations 70 00:05:22,990 --> 00:05:25,451 and see who can make the better ones. And... 71 00:05:25,534 --> 00:05:28,454 ["View Master" by Eric's Trip] ♪ In my stereo ♪ 72 00:05:30,164 --> 00:05:33,167 ♪ A view master ♪ 73 00:05:33,250 --> 00:05:38,172 If any of us were in another band, I don't think we'd be able to do it 74 00:05:38,255 --> 00:05:41,008 because we wouldn't be in another band with our friends. 75 00:05:42,926 --> 00:05:46,555 We'd be kinda with guys we work with. 76 00:05:46,638 --> 00:05:50,684 Makes it more special that we know each other really well. 77 00:05:50,768 --> 00:05:55,439 So, a really good gig becomes even better, and a really bad one isn't quite as bad 78 00:05:55,522 --> 00:05:58,358 because, you know, at least there were four other guys 79 00:05:58,442 --> 00:06:00,194 looking at the floor with you. 80 00:06:01,528 --> 00:06:03,989 [Gord Sinclair] This sort of era set the template 81 00:06:04,073 --> 00:06:06,617 for what we did our entire career. 82 00:06:06,700 --> 00:06:09,119 It was kind of always about the next gig, 83 00:06:09,203 --> 00:06:12,414 and having the chance to actually have a next gig. 84 00:06:12,498 --> 00:06:16,085 And then, that kind of morphed into the chance to make another record. 85 00:06:16,168 --> 00:06:19,755 It was the time of our lives, we had a riot, you know. 86 00:06:20,798 --> 00:06:23,342 [Johnny] It was a bonding experience, getting in a van 87 00:06:23,425 --> 00:06:27,846 and driving with the gear. You always know whatever you go through 88 00:06:27,930 --> 00:06:30,849 with these guys you know, you can always rely on them, 89 00:06:30,933 --> 00:06:33,310 and that's true friendship. 90 00:06:33,393 --> 00:06:35,437 I feel real secure in the knowledge 91 00:06:35,521 --> 00:06:38,524 that the band will never physically break up. 92 00:06:38,607 --> 00:06:42,277 The only conflicts we ever have are like any conflict 93 00:06:42,361 --> 00:06:44,071 you'd have with your best friend. 94 00:06:44,154 --> 00:06:48,200 They're stupid things, like the guy's feet smell on a particular day. 95 00:06:52,079 --> 00:06:57,876 [Gord Downie] Relaxation is the key. This morning we had a few sets of tennis, 96 00:06:57,960 --> 00:07:01,630 bit o' Goonie golf, followed by a massage, 97 00:07:01,713 --> 00:07:05,759 and maybe a nice low-carbohydrate meal. 98 00:07:05,843 --> 00:07:08,345 I dunno. Fuck, I'm playing golf. 99 00:07:09,680 --> 00:07:12,599 [Rob Baker] It's a good time. You just feel like 100 00:07:12,683 --> 00:07:17,896 you're out collecting ideas and experiences, which become songs. 101 00:07:20,315 --> 00:07:26,321 This is what we set out to do. No one can take it away from us. We've made it. 102 00:07:26,405 --> 00:07:30,117 We were making records, and we were playing killer live shows 103 00:07:30,200 --> 00:07:33,912 all over North America and Europe. And we just thought, 104 00:07:33,996 --> 00:07:36,748 "Yeah, this is exactly what we wanted." 105 00:07:36,832 --> 00:07:40,752 We were tight friends, firing on all cylinders. 106 00:07:40,836 --> 00:07:44,339 And just really, truly were having the time of our lives. 107 00:07:44,423 --> 00:07:46,383 ["New Orleans Is Sinking"] 108 00:07:46,466 --> 00:07:50,762 ♪ Pale as a light bulb Hanging on a wire ♪ 109 00:07:50,846 --> 00:07:54,683 ♪ Sucking up to someone Just to stoke the fire ♪ 110 00:07:54,766 --> 00:07:58,478 ♪ Picking out the highlights Of the scenery ♪ 111 00:08:02,608 --> 00:08:08,614 ♪ Saw some little clouds They looked a little like me ♪ 112 00:08:14,036 --> 00:08:18,916 ♪ I had my hands in the river My feet back up on the banks ♪ 113 00:08:18,999 --> 00:08:22,836 ♪ Looked up to the Lord above And said, "Hey, psycho, thanks" ♪ 114 00:08:22,920 --> 00:08:26,757 ♪ Sometimes I feel so good I gotta scream ♪ 115 00:08:26,840 --> 00:08:30,469 ♪ She said, "Gordie baby I know exactly what you mean" ♪ 116 00:08:30,552 --> 00:08:36,516 ♪ She said, she said I swear to God she said ♪ 117 00:08:38,602 --> 00:08:42,689 ♪ My memory is muddy What's this river that I'm in? ♪ 118 00:08:42,773 --> 00:08:47,527 ♪ New Orleans is sinking, man And I don't wanna swim ♪ 119 00:08:48,695 --> 00:08:50,155 ♪ Swim! ♪ 120 00:08:58,664 --> 00:09:00,207 [fans cheer] 121 00:09:09,258 --> 00:09:12,261 [Gord Downie] A tour like this is like a huge reward. 122 00:09:12,344 --> 00:09:14,596 It's one of those things you probably are more likely 123 00:09:14,680 --> 00:09:17,724 to put up on your memories trophies shelf. 124 00:09:17,808 --> 00:09:20,519 [cheering] 125 00:09:20,602 --> 00:09:22,980 -[pops] -Whoa! 126 00:09:23,063 --> 00:09:25,274 So, we enjoy it. We revel in it. 127 00:09:25,357 --> 00:09:27,734 Happy Birthday, bro. 128 00:09:27,818 --> 00:09:31,738 Just in the ability to have this experience, 129 00:09:31,822 --> 00:09:34,241 you know, this once in a lifetime thing. 130 00:09:38,453 --> 00:09:41,456 [interviewer] Are these the kind of guys you'd hang around with 131 00:09:41,540 --> 00:09:44,001 even if they weren't in a band with you? 132 00:09:44,084 --> 00:09:48,130 I'm sure I would. We see each other now when we get off the road, 133 00:09:48,213 --> 00:09:49,798 and we know each other, you know? 134 00:09:49,881 --> 00:09:53,510 We're in a bar in Kingston, and it's like... and we get together. 135 00:09:53,593 --> 00:09:55,971 We don't avoid each other, and we have fun. 136 00:09:56,054 --> 00:09:59,683 We have more fun off the road than on the road, I think. 137 00:10:02,102 --> 00:10:04,688 -[man] Are you rolling, Steve? -[Steve] Yep. 138 00:10:04,771 --> 00:10:06,982 [Steve] Have you heard about the Tragically Hip? 139 00:10:07,065 --> 00:10:08,734 -Yeah! -Yeah! 140 00:10:10,610 --> 00:10:13,363 -[man] Tell us a bit about 'em. -They're the best! 141 00:10:13,447 --> 00:10:15,824 -[man] Where they from? -Kingston. 142 00:10:15,907 --> 00:10:18,452 -[bus starts] -Gotta go. 143 00:10:18,535 --> 00:10:20,996 [ferry horn blows] 144 00:10:22,080 --> 00:10:24,249 ["Are We Family"] 145 00:10:27,627 --> 00:10:30,255 [narrator] And here's the city of Kingston, 146 00:10:30,339 --> 00:10:32,966 the oldest settlement in Upper Canada. 147 00:10:38,180 --> 00:10:40,766 [Gord] Everywhere we go, we say we're from Kingston, 148 00:10:40,849 --> 00:10:44,978 and we, you know, we praise its, its Kingston-ness. 149 00:10:45,062 --> 00:10:48,273 [narrator] Today, Kingston's inventory of institutions 150 00:10:48,357 --> 00:10:51,568 includes federal prisons, the Royal Military College, 151 00:10:51,651 --> 00:10:54,196 and its noted university, Queen's. 152 00:10:54,279 --> 00:10:59,993 [Tom Wilson] I always found Kingston had a very rigid dividing line 153 00:11:00,077 --> 00:11:03,205 between wealth and knowledge, 154 00:11:03,288 --> 00:11:06,666 {\an8}and poverty and survival. 155 00:11:06,750 --> 00:11:11,463 So, you do get both cultures running through your veins. 156 00:11:12,923 --> 00:11:15,133 [Bruce] Growing up in Kingston, there's something about 157 00:11:15,217 --> 00:11:19,429 that little working-class, sort of, town that is The Hip. 158 00:11:19,513 --> 00:11:21,848 They got to just hone their thing 159 00:11:21,932 --> 00:11:25,602 {\an8}in this little, unique, but sort of, obvious Canadian city. 160 00:11:25,685 --> 00:11:30,857 ♪ It's only human to want to Inhabit every feeling you've got ♪ 161 00:11:30,941 --> 00:11:36,488 ♪ And more often than not Let's take it to the nth degree ♪ 162 00:11:36,571 --> 00:11:41,368 ♪ Here he goes, "Give me ten bucks And a head start" ♪ 163 00:11:41,451 --> 00:11:45,872 ♪ Here's where he goes, "The puzzle's pulling apart" ♪ 164 00:11:45,956 --> 00:11:51,378 ♪ And here's the scene You're yelling calmly up the street ♪ 165 00:11:51,461 --> 00:11:55,924 ♪ "Are we family?" Or what? ♪ 166 00:11:59,052 --> 00:12:02,431 {\an8}I think that so much of The Tragically Hip story was Kingston. 167 00:12:02,514 --> 00:12:05,600 The band isn't the band without Kingston, Ontario. 168 00:12:05,684 --> 00:12:09,438 {\an8}"Oh, Kingston. That's down the 401 between Montreal and Toronto." 169 00:12:09,521 --> 00:12:13,066 {\an8}No. Kingston is the town that built The Hip. 170 00:12:13,150 --> 00:12:17,821 ♪ And here's the scene where You whisper down the crookedest street ♪ 171 00:12:19,072 --> 00:12:24,202 ♪ "Are we family?" Or what? ♪ 172 00:12:24,286 --> 00:12:28,331 ♪ Are we family When it's only if not when ♪ 173 00:12:30,083 --> 00:12:32,836 ♪ Sisters and brothers Wolf, wolf lover ♪ 174 00:12:32,919 --> 00:12:36,548 ♪ And the boy who stamped too many ants? Are we family? ♪ 175 00:12:47,476 --> 00:12:50,770 [interviewer] In terms of history of the band, how did it start? 176 00:12:50,854 --> 00:12:54,566 We all went to the same high school, 177 00:12:54,649 --> 00:12:57,110 and it was sort of like a solar eclipse. 178 00:12:57,194 --> 00:12:59,988 Johnny was in grade 9, Robbie and Gord were in 13, 179 00:13:00,071 --> 00:13:02,532 and Paul and I were both in grade 11. 180 00:13:02,616 --> 00:13:05,035 [school bell ringing] 181 00:13:05,118 --> 00:13:07,370 ["Let's Shake" by Teenage Head] 182 00:13:11,500 --> 00:13:14,753 {\an8}[Rob Baker] I have thought about this place a lot, KCVI. 183 00:13:14,836 --> 00:13:18,548 {\an8}The high school years are really important for everyone, on some level. 184 00:13:19,591 --> 00:13:22,719 [Johnny Fay] KCVI has been part of our connective tissue. 185 00:13:22,802 --> 00:13:26,973 {\an8}I think that that really kinda was our real, initial bond. 186 00:13:28,350 --> 00:13:32,479 ♪ Give me that opener Give me that beer ♪ 187 00:13:32,562 --> 00:13:36,233 {\an8}I'd skipped a grade in elementary school, and I was a November kid, 188 00:13:36,316 --> 00:13:39,611 so I was green behind the ears, trying to keep my head down 189 00:13:39,694 --> 00:13:41,279 and not get beat up. 190 00:13:41,363 --> 00:13:45,367 ♪ C'mon, let's shake Ooh, let's shake ♪ 191 00:13:45,450 --> 00:13:47,869 ♪ C'mon, shake... ♪ 192 00:13:47,953 --> 00:13:51,289 I loved the parties, and I played sports. 193 00:13:51,373 --> 00:13:55,252 {\an8}I was a decent student until the dope got the better of that. 194 00:13:55,335 --> 00:13:59,381 But I was pretty good for a while. [laughs] 195 00:14:00,590 --> 00:14:03,468 [Paul] First day of grade 11, probably the first period, 196 00:14:03,552 --> 00:14:08,848 {\an8}there's a new kid sittin' beside me, and it was Gord. Gord Downie. 197 00:14:08,932 --> 00:14:10,725 ♪ Don't make me blush... ♪ 198 00:14:10,809 --> 00:14:15,021 I remember just kind of seeing him around the hallways, 199 00:14:15,105 --> 00:14:17,941 and he always had a book tucked under his arm, 200 00:14:18,024 --> 00:14:22,195 and the other arm, he had a cheerleader. [laughs] 201 00:14:22,279 --> 00:14:25,073 {\an8}He definitely had drive and passion. 202 00:14:25,156 --> 00:14:29,619 He was such a reader, so into music, so into poetry. 203 00:14:29,703 --> 00:14:33,248 There was just something so engaging about Gord. 204 00:14:33,331 --> 00:14:38,086 He surprised me by saying, "I know you." I'm like, "You, you know me?" 205 00:14:38,169 --> 00:14:41,506 "Yeah, you broke into a store." I'm like, "What?" 206 00:14:41,590 --> 00:14:45,302 "Well, such and such has been blabbin' about it all over Amherstview." 207 00:14:45,385 --> 00:14:46,845 I'm like, "Seriously?" 208 00:14:46,928 --> 00:14:51,057 It was a drunken break and enter that was my friend's fault. 209 00:14:51,141 --> 00:14:53,560 But if it hadn't have happened, 210 00:14:53,643 --> 00:14:57,314 I wouldn't have met Gord and clicked with him immediately. 211 00:14:57,397 --> 00:14:58,523 ♪ Let's shake! ♪ 212 00:15:02,444 --> 00:15:05,196 [Gord Sinclair] We moved to our house on Churchill Crescent, 213 00:15:05,280 --> 00:15:10,952 which is right across from Rob's Mom and Dad, in 1966. 214 00:15:11,036 --> 00:15:13,705 [Rob] Gord moved in across the street from me 215 00:15:13,788 --> 00:15:17,417 when he was about one and a half. I think I was three. 216 00:15:17,500 --> 00:15:19,919 Gordie and I played in the sandbox. 217 00:15:20,003 --> 00:15:24,299 We've kind of been playin' together, in some form, ever since then. 218 00:15:24,382 --> 00:15:27,510 [Gord Sinclair] My mom and dad were both super, super musical. 219 00:15:27,594 --> 00:15:29,804 They had a great record collection. 220 00:15:29,888 --> 00:15:32,557 My mom was a classically trained pianist. 221 00:15:32,641 --> 00:15:34,559 [piano music] 222 00:15:34,643 --> 00:15:37,395 [Rob] And she attempted to teach me a little bit. 223 00:15:37,479 --> 00:15:41,691 And she taught Gord and his little brother, Colin, as well. 224 00:15:41,775 --> 00:15:45,070 Gord was one of those guys who could pick up any instrument. 225 00:15:45,153 --> 00:15:48,531 Very good bagpipe player. It was pretty crazy. 226 00:15:48,615 --> 00:15:52,535 It was something that I'd grown up with my whole life, so in retrospect, 227 00:15:52,619 --> 00:15:54,037 I was really, really fortunate. 228 00:15:54,120 --> 00:15:57,207 [Rob] My sister had a guitar that she never touched, 229 00:15:57,290 --> 00:16:01,002 and I would listen to music and pretend I was rockin' out. 230 00:16:01,086 --> 00:16:05,006 Then I'd graduate to the tennis racquet, and I'd leap off the furniture 231 00:16:05,090 --> 00:16:08,009 listening to Led Zeppelin and David Bowie records. 232 00:16:08,093 --> 00:16:11,012 My parents were always very encouraging about it. 233 00:16:11,096 --> 00:16:14,474 I think for my 12th birthday, they got me a guitar. 234 00:16:17,352 --> 00:16:19,562 [Gord Sinclair] Then, one day in grade 10, 235 00:16:19,646 --> 00:16:22,065 Robbie announced, "I'm gonna put a band together 236 00:16:22,148 --> 00:16:24,150 and you're gonna be the bass player." 237 00:16:24,234 --> 00:16:27,028 [Rob] It seems like it was a week later, 238 00:16:27,112 --> 00:16:30,699 a little trainer bass-amp and a bass, and we were on our way. 239 00:16:30,782 --> 00:16:32,534 Now, we need a drummer. 240 00:16:32,617 --> 00:16:35,495 We're walking home after stage band, Robby was behind me, 241 00:16:35,578 --> 00:16:37,789 and he says, "Can I talk to you?" 242 00:16:37,872 --> 00:16:40,500 He said, "Gord and I are putting a band together. 243 00:16:40,583 --> 00:16:42,961 We need a drummer, you interested?" I said, "Yeah!" 244 00:16:43,044 --> 00:16:45,672 [Rob] It became Rick and the Rodents because 245 00:16:45,755 --> 00:16:48,007 you should always name your band after the drummer. 246 00:16:48,091 --> 00:16:51,344 {\an8}Rick and the Rodents. And I'm like, "Well, that's kinda silly. 247 00:16:51,428 --> 00:16:55,056 {\an8}It's the drummer sitting in the back." And he goes, "That's the trick." 248 00:16:55,140 --> 00:16:56,307 I don't know. 249 00:16:56,391 --> 00:16:58,309 ["I Fought the Law" by The Clash] 250 00:17:02,355 --> 00:17:06,693 It felt like we had something on the go. I guess, by grade 12, 251 00:17:06,776 --> 00:17:09,404 our musical taste kinda grew and changed together. 252 00:17:09,487 --> 00:17:12,574 ♪ Breakin' rocks in the hot sun ♪ 253 00:17:12,657 --> 00:17:15,744 ♪ I fought the law and the law won ♪ 254 00:17:15,827 --> 00:17:18,121 When punk rock first came out, you know, 255 00:17:18,204 --> 00:17:22,375 the Sex Pistols' first record, that was a big changing moment. 256 00:17:22,459 --> 00:17:25,128 There was an energy that was inescapable for me. 257 00:17:25,211 --> 00:17:26,588 I really caught onto it. 258 00:17:26,671 --> 00:17:29,758 We kinda became Clash devotees. 259 00:17:29,841 --> 00:17:34,387 Learned the Sex Pistols album in a day and played everything on that. 260 00:17:34,471 --> 00:17:37,849 [crowd cheering] 261 00:17:37,932 --> 00:17:40,602 KC decided to have a punk dance. 262 00:17:41,686 --> 00:17:45,815 We were it. We were the high school band, and so we got the gig. 263 00:17:45,899 --> 00:17:48,359 [Rob] That's a big deal in high school. 264 00:17:48,443 --> 00:17:53,072 So much of your personal identity is wrapped up in that moment, 265 00:17:53,156 --> 00:17:58,328 and you've never really done this, been on stage. It was huge. 266 00:17:58,411 --> 00:18:00,789 [Johnny] They definitely tweaked the interest of people. 267 00:18:00,872 --> 00:18:04,083 You're in high school and you see these guys playing a gig. 268 00:18:04,167 --> 00:18:08,755 You're like, "Wow, maybe I can do that." It was pretty inspiring to see them. 269 00:18:08,838 --> 00:18:12,550 Everyone considered them ahead of their time and super cool. 270 00:18:13,843 --> 00:18:16,846 [Rob] We played one dance at the end of grade 12. 271 00:18:16,930 --> 00:18:20,767 When we were in grade 13, there was a competing band, which was The Slinks. 272 00:18:24,020 --> 00:18:27,315 [Steve Holy] I saw Rick and the Rodents play. KC talent show. 273 00:18:27,398 --> 00:18:30,235 {\an8}And I thought, "I want to be on that stage." 274 00:18:30,318 --> 00:18:33,863 [Andrew Fontini] Rick and the Rodents, they were a year older than us. 275 00:18:33,947 --> 00:18:38,326 They had very much, like, a punk, Sex Pistols, Clash, thing going on. 276 00:18:38,409 --> 00:18:41,162 {\an8}And we were gonna offer something, you know, different. 277 00:18:41,246 --> 00:18:45,667 [Steve] So, we started our band. That would be in the summer of 1980. 278 00:18:45,750 --> 00:18:50,171 It was a foggy night in June, and we were playing a party, 279 00:18:50,255 --> 00:18:55,218 and a guy came up and requested if he could sit in with the band. 280 00:18:55,301 --> 00:18:59,597 You might have heard of him. His name is Gord Downie. 281 00:18:59,681 --> 00:19:02,308 [Gord Downie] I got way into it, fast. 282 00:19:02,392 --> 00:19:07,730 {\an8}It's incredible. It was just so cool. It felt really good. 283 00:19:09,774 --> 00:19:11,985 [Steve] It was the first time he'd ever 284 00:19:12,068 --> 00:19:13,987 played any kind of music with people. 285 00:19:14,070 --> 00:19:17,782 [Gord Downie] At 16, you just want to get into a band and play. 286 00:19:17,866 --> 00:19:19,242 You don't even know why. 287 00:19:19,325 --> 00:19:22,954 He hadn't said he wanted to sing. He listened to a lot of music. 288 00:19:23,037 --> 00:19:25,206 He was probably thinking about it. 289 00:19:25,290 --> 00:19:30,295 [Heather] He was so into music. Various bands and performers, leading men. 290 00:19:30,378 --> 00:19:32,005 He loved Jim Morrison. 291 00:19:32,088 --> 00:19:35,091 I think the belt buckle thing comes from Jim Morrison. 292 00:19:35,174 --> 00:19:37,135 He kinda looked like him, too. 293 00:19:38,428 --> 00:19:43,141 [Steve] He loved to dance. His physicality being on the stage, 294 00:19:43,224 --> 00:19:45,685 it was almost like it was just born into him. 295 00:19:46,978 --> 00:19:50,231 [Patrick Downie] All that showmanship was there, for sure. 296 00:19:50,315 --> 00:19:52,525 {\an8}He was a natural leader 297 00:19:52,609 --> 00:19:56,988 and not afraid to, sort of, stand in front of a crowd. 298 00:19:57,071 --> 00:19:59,908 [Charlyn Downie] Always, in Gord, he was an entertainer. 299 00:19:59,991 --> 00:20:03,661 {\an8}He also was mischievous and very funny. 300 00:20:03,745 --> 00:20:08,750 {\an8}I knew he had a good ear because when he was young, 301 00:20:10,293 --> 00:20:14,255 {\an8}I would be listening on the radio to classical music 302 00:20:14,339 --> 00:20:20,136 and when it was over, you would hear him humming these tunes. 303 00:20:20,219 --> 00:20:24,057 Sort of thought he would make a fine choirboy. 304 00:20:24,140 --> 00:20:29,395 Which, uh, didn't come to pass. [chuckles] No. 305 00:20:30,688 --> 00:20:34,442 The first gig I saw with Gord was in this gym. 306 00:20:34,525 --> 00:20:37,153 [man over PA] The Slinks are gonna come on now. 307 00:20:37,236 --> 00:20:39,238 [indistinct chatter] 308 00:20:39,322 --> 00:20:42,367 [student over PA] We're doing a song by Teenage Head. 309 00:20:42,450 --> 00:20:44,202 ["Let's Shake" by Teenage Head] 310 00:20:50,416 --> 00:20:54,629 He was dressed up in a blazer and he was dancing, not just standing there. 311 00:20:54,712 --> 00:20:58,091 ♪ Give me that opener Give me that beer ♪ 312 00:20:58,174 --> 00:21:02,178 ♪ Move your ass On out of here ♪ 313 00:21:02,261 --> 00:21:04,764 I remember being floored with how good he was. 314 00:21:04,847 --> 00:21:08,977 That's probably where he discovered, you know, "I can be someone to watch." 315 00:21:09,060 --> 00:21:11,396 I don't think he knew that going in. 316 00:21:11,479 --> 00:21:13,606 ♪ C'mon, baby, let's shake! ♪ 317 00:21:13,690 --> 00:21:17,068 [students cheering] 318 00:21:17,151 --> 00:21:21,906 [Rob] I would have become aware of Gord around the time of The Slinks dance. 319 00:21:21,990 --> 00:21:25,034 He was a dynamic frontman, hard to take your eyes off him. 320 00:21:25,118 --> 00:21:27,662 [Andrew] We played together for two and a half years. 321 00:21:27,745 --> 00:21:30,665 First, he's a guy, we're letting you sing in the band. 322 00:21:30,748 --> 00:21:32,875 Then he thinks of it as the platform 323 00:21:32,959 --> 00:21:36,170 from which he's gonna grow and develop. Like, "I want to perform. 324 00:21:36,254 --> 00:21:40,341 I want to dance, to be a rock singer, to write poetry." 325 00:21:40,425 --> 00:21:42,468 [girl] Gord! 326 00:21:42,552 --> 00:21:45,888 [Andrew] But the band didn't think that Gord had what it took 327 00:21:45,972 --> 00:21:49,517 to be like a lead singer of a rock band. 328 00:21:49,600 --> 00:21:54,063 [Steve] Gord's instrument was his voice, and it was the voice of a teenager. 329 00:21:54,147 --> 00:21:56,983 He was a sitting duck for criticism. 330 00:21:57,066 --> 00:22:00,445 And he was very hard on himself. Extremely hard on himself. 331 00:22:00,528 --> 00:22:02,363 [Andrew] Rather than kick Gord out, 332 00:22:02,447 --> 00:22:05,950 we told him we were gonna end the band and pursue other things. 333 00:22:06,034 --> 00:22:08,327 We immediately took the whole band, except Gord, 334 00:22:08,411 --> 00:22:10,455 and started playing with two other guys. 335 00:22:10,538 --> 00:22:12,790 That was the end of The Slinks. 336 00:22:14,208 --> 00:22:17,128 So, I think that was painful for him. 337 00:22:17,211 --> 00:22:20,923 But I think he, sort of, didn't really miss a beat 338 00:22:21,007 --> 00:22:23,843 because after high school, he and Finton McConnell 339 00:22:23,926 --> 00:22:26,387 put together a band to work as The Filters. 340 00:22:31,434 --> 00:22:32,977 [knock at door] 341 00:22:37,356 --> 00:22:38,775 -Finton. -Mookie. 342 00:22:38,858 --> 00:22:40,985 How are ya, my brother? 343 00:22:41,069 --> 00:22:42,737 -C'mon in, brother. -Okay, comin'. 344 00:22:42,820 --> 00:22:44,697 I've got some stuff for you. 345 00:22:46,157 --> 00:22:47,200 Ah! 346 00:22:51,329 --> 00:22:53,289 I made a little record for ya. 347 00:22:55,708 --> 00:22:59,170 So, basically what happened was, I was in The Filters with Gord. 348 00:22:59,253 --> 00:23:03,382 I needed to get a band I could play in my dad's bar. All right? 349 00:23:03,466 --> 00:23:06,511 Do you want me to look in there or what way? 350 00:23:08,429 --> 00:23:13,351 I came up with the idea of asking Gord to start a band with me and my drummer, 351 00:23:13,434 --> 00:23:16,395 and him and his bass player. And then, Gord suggested, 352 00:23:16,479 --> 00:23:19,315 "Could we get Rob in the band, from The Rodents?" 353 00:23:19,398 --> 00:23:23,236 He's the only guy with any fuckin' talent here, I need to say. 354 00:23:23,319 --> 00:23:26,364 [Rob] We had just finished high school 355 00:23:26,447 --> 00:23:29,826 and my high school band, The Rodents, was done. 356 00:23:31,077 --> 00:23:34,539 Sinclair was going to Queen's University in Kingston. 357 00:23:34,622 --> 00:23:38,751 And, in fact, Gord Sinclair and I weren't really playing together at that time. 358 00:23:38,835 --> 00:23:43,005 So, the idea of being in a band with Gord Downie was very appealing. 359 00:23:43,089 --> 00:23:46,384 I was very mercenary about the whole thing, and I said, "Well, 360 00:23:46,467 --> 00:23:50,555 my rate is $50 a night and all my drinks free." 361 00:23:50,638 --> 00:23:55,226 [laughs] Thinking that I was pricing myself out of the market or something. 362 00:23:55,309 --> 00:23:57,228 [interviewer] What did you have for breakfast? 363 00:23:57,311 --> 00:24:00,606 What'd I have for breakfast? I had two beers and an aspirin. 364 00:24:02,525 --> 00:24:07,196 I was always a big fan of Rob Baker. He was my guitar hero in high school. 365 00:24:09,115 --> 00:24:13,411 Bit of a star, you know. All the hair and the nice suits and stuff. 366 00:24:13,494 --> 00:24:17,540 I just love Rob's style, too. He plays a sexy kind of guitar. 367 00:24:18,958 --> 00:24:23,087 Kinda slides in and out between the notes and does all these really nice sounds. 368 00:24:23,171 --> 00:24:25,506 And he adds atmosphere to the music. 369 00:24:28,885 --> 00:24:34,140 We all kind of felt, if you get Rob in your band, you kinda made it. [laughs] 370 00:24:34,223 --> 00:24:36,642 This is us. We were 18 years old. 371 00:24:36,726 --> 00:24:41,355 ♪ Well it sounds so sweet I had to take me a chance ♪ 372 00:24:41,439 --> 00:24:45,151 ♪ Started movin' my feet Whoa to clappin' my hands ♪ 373 00:24:45,234 --> 00:24:47,570 [Finny] Then we rocked out. Ready? 374 00:24:47,653 --> 00:24:51,032 ♪ I said the joint was rockin' Goin' round and round ♪ 375 00:24:51,115 --> 00:24:54,702 That was probably the best learning experience I ever had as a musician, 376 00:24:54,785 --> 00:24:57,663 playing those first gigs in the bars. 377 00:24:57,747 --> 00:25:00,833 These people, we had to please them and impress them. 378 00:25:00,917 --> 00:25:03,294 If they weren't impressed, they'd let us know. 379 00:25:03,377 --> 00:25:06,047 ["Baby, Please Don't Go"] 380 00:25:06,130 --> 00:25:09,550 [Rob] Gord and I were both going to Queen's at the time 381 00:25:09,634 --> 00:25:12,511 and suddenly we were playing gigs, you know, sometimes, 382 00:25:12,595 --> 00:25:14,305 four, five nights a week. 383 00:25:14,388 --> 00:25:18,184 We were rock 'n' roll school 101. Literally going to the school of rock. 384 00:25:18,267 --> 00:25:22,063 ♪ Baby, please don't go Baby, please don't go ♪ 385 00:25:22,146 --> 00:25:24,899 ♪ Baby, please don't go Down to New Orleans ♪ 386 00:25:24,982 --> 00:25:29,195 A year and a bit later, The Filters had become too much work, 387 00:25:29,278 --> 00:25:31,906 and Gord felt exactly the same way. 388 00:25:31,989 --> 00:25:35,910 It was getting a little hard to go to school and play in this band. 389 00:25:35,993 --> 00:25:38,704 Gord Downie said, "Why don't we form a band 390 00:25:38,788 --> 00:25:41,707 with some buddies at Queen's and do it for fun." 391 00:25:41,791 --> 00:25:44,710 [Gord Sinclair] We started talkin' to Robbie, more and more, 392 00:25:44,794 --> 00:25:49,423 about startin' to play together and sure enough, we started to jam together again. 393 00:25:51,342 --> 00:25:54,637 [Finny] Sinclair's a fantastic musician, a fantastic bass player. 394 00:25:54,720 --> 00:25:57,431 Always been with Rob. They're like a team, 395 00:25:57,515 --> 00:26:01,519 and they play together perfectly. I don't think they even look at each other. 396 00:26:01,602 --> 00:26:04,021 [Gord Sinclair] We were third year at university, 397 00:26:04,105 --> 00:26:08,651 and it just slowly became the thing. This is what we wanted to do. 398 00:26:11,028 --> 00:26:15,533 [Rob] Gord Downie said, "there's a guy, I think he's still in KC..." 399 00:26:15,616 --> 00:26:18,494 Who are you? Smarty pants! 400 00:26:18,577 --> 00:26:21,914 [Rob] "...and he's supposed to be a really kind of hotshot drummer." 401 00:26:21,998 --> 00:26:25,293 While I was in high school, I really wasn't in a band. 402 00:26:25,376 --> 00:26:28,129 I was just kinda studying, 403 00:26:28,212 --> 00:26:32,466 until grade 11 or 12, when Gord Downie called and said, 404 00:26:32,550 --> 00:26:35,177 you wanna come audition for this band we're starting? 405 00:26:35,261 --> 00:26:38,889 Ladies and Gentlemen, it's about time to introduce our drummer. 406 00:26:41,350 --> 00:26:45,438 Now that I've got your attention. His name is Mr. John Fay. 407 00:26:45,521 --> 00:26:48,024 [crowd cheers] 408 00:26:48,107 --> 00:26:49,775 Sweet Jane. 409 00:26:49,859 --> 00:26:54,488 [Johnny] This was the first gig we played in a Kingston bar. 410 00:26:54,572 --> 00:26:56,782 It was a pretty heavy moment. 411 00:26:56,866 --> 00:26:59,035 The stage was like right here, 412 00:26:59,118 --> 00:27:03,331 'cause I remember... I remember resting pints right here. 413 00:27:03,414 --> 00:27:06,334 ♪ Standing on a corner ♪ 414 00:27:07,668 --> 00:27:09,837 ♪ A suitcase in my hand ♪ 415 00:27:11,255 --> 00:27:14,633 ♪ Jack is in his corset Jane is in her vest ♪ 416 00:27:14,717 --> 00:27:17,178 ♪ Hey, honey, I'm in a rock'n'roll band ♪ 417 00:27:17,261 --> 00:27:18,763 [Mike] What's down here, Johnny? 418 00:27:19,722 --> 00:27:23,976 [Johnny] This was the dressing room that we used back in the day. 419 00:27:24,060 --> 00:27:29,899 And, um... you know, our seats were the, uh, beer cases. 420 00:27:31,108 --> 00:27:33,277 I actually did some homework down here. 421 00:27:33,361 --> 00:27:37,990 Robbie was in charge of English and Gord Sinclair was the historian. 422 00:27:38,074 --> 00:27:42,453 I remember doing a Great Gatsby paper that was due at nine o'clock. 423 00:27:42,536 --> 00:27:45,873 I'm sure it was 12:30. I was in between the third set. 424 00:27:47,208 --> 00:27:51,045 Hi, this is Katie Tucker for Around Town. And we're here in St. Catharine's 425 00:27:51,128 --> 00:27:55,007 at the Hideaway with the one and only, The Tragically Hip. Hi, guys. 426 00:27:55,091 --> 00:27:57,635 -Hey, Katie. -This is Gord here, and Rob. 427 00:27:57,718 --> 00:27:59,720 -Hi, I'm Gord. -Rob. 428 00:27:59,804 --> 00:28:03,641 First of all, where did you guys get a name like The Tragically Hip? 429 00:28:08,854 --> 00:28:12,900 We were booked to play the Kingston Artists' Association 430 00:28:12,983 --> 00:28:16,946 as The Bedspring Symphony Orchestra. And at the last minute, 431 00:28:17,029 --> 00:28:19,240 we changed our name to The Tragically Hip. 432 00:28:20,491 --> 00:28:23,744 Quite fortuitously, I would suggest. 433 00:28:23,828 --> 00:28:27,206 [Gord Sinclair] I grew up watching the Monkees on TV 434 00:28:27,289 --> 00:28:31,669 and Mike Nesmith had done a longform show called Elephant Parts, 435 00:28:31,752 --> 00:28:34,880 which is a series of music-based film vignettes, 436 00:28:34,964 --> 00:28:37,758 one of which was the foundation for The Tragically Hip. 437 00:28:37,842 --> 00:28:41,178 It's a happy sight, isn't it, children playing? 438 00:28:41,262 --> 00:28:45,057 But not Bobby. Bobby is tragically hip. 439 00:28:45,141 --> 00:28:48,144 We thought it sounded pretty cool. And the sentiment behind it 440 00:28:48,227 --> 00:28:50,646 was definitely one we could identify with. 441 00:28:50,729 --> 00:28:53,524 [Bruce McCulloch] Nothing about them is "tragically hip." 442 00:28:53,607 --> 00:28:55,276 I still don't understand the name, 443 00:28:55,359 --> 00:28:59,488 {\an8}because I can't reconcile it with the guys who feel more like The Band. 444 00:28:59,572 --> 00:29:03,868 It took me a moment. Then I heard it and I said, "I get it now." 445 00:29:03,951 --> 00:29:05,202 ["Mary, Mary"] 446 00:29:10,416 --> 00:29:13,169 [Tom Wilson] They looked like a bunch of Boy Scouts. 447 00:29:13,252 --> 00:29:14,628 That's how fresh they were. 448 00:29:19,049 --> 00:29:22,720 ♪ Mary, Mary, where you goin' to? ♪ 449 00:29:26,307 --> 00:29:27,892 ♪ Mary, Mary... ♪ 450 00:29:27,975 --> 00:29:30,436 [Tom] They played like they knew each other's moves. 451 00:29:30,519 --> 00:29:32,438 {\an8}They knew what each other were thinking. 452 00:29:32,521 --> 00:29:35,065 They were on the ball. They were good. 453 00:29:35,149 --> 00:29:38,486 ♪ I'd rather die than to live without ya ♪ 454 00:29:38,569 --> 00:29:42,323 ♪ Mary, Mary, where you goin' to? ♪ 455 00:29:42,406 --> 00:29:46,243 [Rob] We used to judge a gig by how quickly people got up dancing 456 00:29:46,327 --> 00:29:47,912 and were there any fights. 457 00:29:47,995 --> 00:29:50,414 'Cause if there's fights, then the energy was up. 458 00:29:50,498 --> 00:29:53,292 Bikers liked us, Queen's students like us. 459 00:29:53,375 --> 00:29:57,463 It doesn't really make a lot of sense but it's working. 460 00:29:57,546 --> 00:30:01,342 {\an8}The band was highly watchable, not just because Gord was magnetic. 461 00:30:01,425 --> 00:30:04,512 {\an8}You had Johnny. I spent more time, or as much time, 462 00:30:04,595 --> 00:30:06,972 watching Johnny hold down that groove. 463 00:30:07,056 --> 00:30:09,767 Bobby Baker, just shimmying back and forth. 464 00:30:11,477 --> 00:30:15,523 And then, there was Davis Manning, 465 00:30:16,982 --> 00:30:21,487 who was visually an odd-man-out. 466 00:30:21,570 --> 00:30:23,697 [Bernie] He was like the cool Muppet dude. 467 00:30:23,781 --> 00:30:26,867 {\an8}Like that horn-player, he kinda had shades 468 00:30:26,951 --> 00:30:30,246 and, you know, he had the 'stache and "Groovy, man." 469 00:30:30,329 --> 00:30:33,707 [Steve Jordan] Davis Manning, international man of mystery. 470 00:30:33,791 --> 00:30:36,961 He just added that sense of the unknown to the band, 471 00:30:37,044 --> 00:30:40,256 and no one really seemed to know where he came from 472 00:30:40,339 --> 00:30:42,591 and how he came to meet these guys. 473 00:30:44,009 --> 00:30:47,763 {\an8}Hi, I'm Davis Manning and I played saxophone 474 00:30:47,846 --> 00:30:53,852 {\an8}with the band Tragically Hip from 1984 to 1986. 475 00:30:58,232 --> 00:31:01,485 So, it started out in Washington, where I was born. 476 00:31:01,569 --> 00:31:06,407 Getting into school, I liked music, so joined the band. 477 00:31:06,490 --> 00:31:10,786 I thought I had said trombone, but it turned out 478 00:31:10,869 --> 00:31:13,872 that I didn't know a trombone from a saxophone. 479 00:31:13,956 --> 00:31:16,208 So, I played all through school. 480 00:31:16,292 --> 00:31:20,212 And then, in 1969, I'm 19, I went into the Navy. 481 00:31:20,296 --> 00:31:23,257 [reporter] In this jungle war, the United States is becoming 482 00:31:23,340 --> 00:31:25,759 more fully involved with each passing day. 483 00:31:25,843 --> 00:31:29,471 ♪ Love is a curse ♪ 484 00:31:29,555 --> 00:31:34,310 ♪ That he who would own it deserves ♪ 485 00:31:34,393 --> 00:31:39,481 As a young man, boy, did I feel betrayed, lied to, and played. 486 00:31:39,565 --> 00:31:41,817 Even all the way from the recruiter. 487 00:31:41,900 --> 00:31:44,945 [Rob] They said, "You're goin' to Vietnam." 488 00:31:45,029 --> 00:31:48,240 And he said, "no, I'm not goin' to Vietnam." 489 00:31:48,324 --> 00:31:51,827 And he split. Did some time in a military prison. 490 00:31:52,870 --> 00:31:55,956 {\an8}When he got out, he made a run for it, 491 00:31:56,040 --> 00:31:59,668 {\an8}and he got across the border and he settled in Hope. 492 00:32:00,753 --> 00:32:04,298 I made my choice. I came to Canada. Became an immigrant. 493 00:32:04,381 --> 00:32:08,719 [Rob] He had fallen in love with one of the gals I went to school with 494 00:32:08,802 --> 00:32:13,599 and followed her back to Kingston. And she said, "This guy's a musician. 495 00:32:13,682 --> 00:32:18,145 He plays sax, would you be interested in jamming with him?" 496 00:32:18,228 --> 00:32:23,984 The first impression I got is they had a good taste for rock and roll. 497 00:32:24,068 --> 00:32:26,820 They asked if I would join them, and I did. 498 00:32:26,904 --> 00:32:31,492 ♪ Can't live to die, too easy ♪ 499 00:32:31,575 --> 00:32:33,911 ♪ Why stick around? ♪ 500 00:32:35,371 --> 00:32:38,582 ♪ All my life ♪ 501 00:32:38,666 --> 00:32:42,336 ♪ Small town hometown bringdown ♪ 502 00:32:56,058 --> 00:32:59,228 ♪ This is it You might as well get pissed ♪ 503 00:32:59,311 --> 00:33:01,897 ♪ You're a crazy child ♪ 504 00:33:03,107 --> 00:33:04,525 ♪ Make your trip... ♪ 505 00:33:04,608 --> 00:33:08,195 {\an8}Davis Manning, he made a lot of contributions to the group, 506 00:33:08,278 --> 00:33:11,031 certainly when we were super-young, but probably the most important 507 00:33:11,115 --> 00:33:13,534 was he was an absolutely wonderful songwriter. 508 00:33:13,617 --> 00:33:16,870 This is one of our very own songs. It's called Evelyn. 509 00:33:18,539 --> 00:33:21,625 He really pushed us, "The money's in the songwriting, boys. 510 00:33:21,709 --> 00:33:23,210 This cover stuff is fun, 511 00:33:23,293 --> 00:33:25,796 but you gotta get into writing your own tunes." 512 00:33:32,177 --> 00:33:33,887 ♪ Evelyn ♪ 513 00:33:35,097 --> 00:33:36,557 ♪ Evelyn ♪ 514 00:33:36,640 --> 00:33:38,225 Yeah, that was a good crasher. 515 00:33:38,308 --> 00:33:40,561 ♪ Where were you last night? ♪ 516 00:33:41,687 --> 00:33:44,440 I think maybe Gord Sinclair might have wrote that song. 517 00:33:44,523 --> 00:33:48,652 I remember him fondly. Our relationship with him in the group 518 00:33:48,736 --> 00:33:51,029 did not end well, unfortunately. 519 00:33:51,113 --> 00:33:54,241 Thank you, very much. Please, stick around, we'll be right back. 520 00:33:54,324 --> 00:33:55,659 [cheers] 521 00:33:58,328 --> 00:34:02,207 [Rob] Putting his life in the hands of a bunch of 20-year-old college kids 522 00:34:02,291 --> 00:34:06,712 trying to make it up as they go along, and he thought he knew the template. 523 00:34:06,795 --> 00:34:09,798 He knew the formula, and we were getting it all wrong. 524 00:34:11,091 --> 00:34:14,094 And the fighting broke out. 525 00:34:14,178 --> 00:34:16,930 He said, "I'm not putting my life in the hands 526 00:34:17,014 --> 00:34:18,974 of a bunch of dumb college fucks!" 527 00:34:20,476 --> 00:34:23,562 Now, I gotta say that the parting, um... 528 00:34:25,522 --> 00:34:30,652 wasn't amicable at the time, and a lot was said that... 529 00:34:32,070 --> 00:34:33,739 maybe some of it regrettable. 530 00:34:34,948 --> 00:34:36,366 Certainly regrettable. 531 00:34:36,450 --> 00:34:39,203 [Gord Sinclair] I think each of us quit in succession 532 00:34:39,286 --> 00:34:41,497 until there was only Rob and Davis left. 533 00:34:41,580 --> 00:34:42,915 [Davis] What a guy. 534 00:34:44,374 --> 00:34:46,752 -Hey, Rob. -[laughs] 535 00:34:46,835 --> 00:34:49,463 How ya doin', buddy? 536 00:34:49,546 --> 00:34:53,300 [Davis] Rob got the job of calling me up and saying 537 00:34:53,383 --> 00:34:56,094 that the band wasn't gonna be needing me anymore. 538 00:34:56,178 --> 00:34:59,223 And he said, "Yeah, I know. It's all good. Love ya." 539 00:34:59,306 --> 00:35:01,308 I said, "I love you too, man." 540 00:35:07,981 --> 00:35:11,860 [Bernie] So, when Davis left the band, it was a weird time. 541 00:35:11,944 --> 00:35:15,405 Robbie said, "We're thinking about 542 00:35:15,489 --> 00:35:18,283 maybe a guitar player to replace Davis." 543 00:35:23,872 --> 00:35:27,835 [Paul] I went to Carleton and Gord was going to Queen's. 544 00:35:27,918 --> 00:35:32,047 But by Christmas, I couldn't take it anymore. I dropped out. 545 00:35:32,130 --> 00:35:36,218 So, I moved back to Kingston, and I got my cab licence. 546 00:35:37,511 --> 00:35:41,431 Basically, when I wasn't working, I was playing piano 547 00:35:41,515 --> 00:35:44,059 and playing guitar and starting to write songs. 548 00:35:44,142 --> 00:35:46,478 "What am I gonna do with my life?" 549 00:35:46,562 --> 00:35:49,523 {\an8}I wasn't really too interested in going back to school yet, 550 00:35:49,606 --> 00:35:51,859 {\an8}but I was interested in being a songwriter. 551 00:35:51,942 --> 00:35:54,862 My mom played piano, so we always had a piano, 552 00:35:54,945 --> 00:35:57,739 and she wanted us all to play. 553 00:35:57,823 --> 00:36:02,202 When I was about 13 or 14, she had heard me sing. 554 00:36:02,286 --> 00:36:04,872 She kinda stayed on me for years and years, 555 00:36:04,955 --> 00:36:06,623 just like, "You should do this. 556 00:36:06,707 --> 00:36:09,751 Learn guitar and sing. You've got a really nice voice." 557 00:36:09,835 --> 00:36:13,380 So, when I finally did learn guitar, 558 00:36:13,463 --> 00:36:17,718 which was halfway through my first year of university at Carleton, 559 00:36:18,969 --> 00:36:20,262 she was pretty pleased. 560 00:36:20,345 --> 00:36:23,557 ♪ When the colour of the night... ♪ 561 00:36:23,640 --> 00:36:26,810 {\an8}Paul definitely wanted to pursue music. 562 00:36:26,894 --> 00:36:30,188 ♪ And all the smoke for one life... ♪ 563 00:36:30,272 --> 00:36:33,191 [Paula] And Gord and Paul got along really well. 564 00:36:33,275 --> 00:36:38,071 Just his easygoing, go with the flow. 565 00:36:38,155 --> 00:36:40,908 I think Gord felt a comfort with Paul. 566 00:36:40,991 --> 00:36:44,411 They just kinda rolled well together, really rolled well together. 567 00:36:46,038 --> 00:36:49,124 [Paul] We became best friends pretty quickly in Grade 11, 568 00:36:49,207 --> 00:36:52,252 like literally in the first couple days. For some reason, 569 00:36:52,336 --> 00:36:55,631 he took to me, and I took to him because he was 570 00:36:55,714 --> 00:36:59,927 a nice kind of spirit for me to be around. It just went from there. 571 00:37:00,010 --> 00:37:02,346 Never stopped. Never stopped. 572 00:37:03,972 --> 00:37:07,017 [Rob] Paul, who was a chum of all of ours, 573 00:37:07,100 --> 00:37:11,063 he was thinking about going to Nashville to try his hand as a singer/songwriter. 574 00:37:12,105 --> 00:37:15,192 And Gord was like, "What? You're goin' to Nashville?" 575 00:37:15,275 --> 00:37:18,278 I said, "I want to take a shot. Be a songwriter." 576 00:37:18,362 --> 00:37:22,240 {\an8}And I'm like, "Oh, my God. I'll miss ya." 'Cause we were best friends. 577 00:37:22,324 --> 00:37:24,368 I went to the guys and said, 578 00:37:24,451 --> 00:37:26,578 "We should get Paul to join us." 579 00:37:26,662 --> 00:37:29,581 ♪ And find somewhere to go ♪ 580 00:37:29,665 --> 00:37:32,834 ♪ Go somewhere we're needed ♪ 581 00:37:32,918 --> 00:37:36,630 ♪ Find somewhere to grow ♪ 582 00:37:36,713 --> 00:37:39,466 ♪ Go somewhere we're needed ♪ 583 00:37:39,549 --> 00:37:42,594 He was so into it, and he joined. 584 00:37:42,678 --> 00:37:43,887 Made my life. 585 00:37:45,138 --> 00:37:47,307 Asked me to be in the band. 586 00:37:47,391 --> 00:37:49,851 [Rob] Instead of going for the hotshot guitar player, 587 00:37:49,935 --> 00:37:53,271 we thought, "Well, any asshole can learn how to play the guitar. 588 00:37:53,355 --> 00:37:57,609 It's not rocket science. But it's hard to find someone that you get along with." 589 00:37:59,027 --> 00:38:03,156 [Johnny] I think it was really important to have Paul there as Gord's best mate. 590 00:38:03,240 --> 00:38:06,535 I thought it was a good idea to get Paul in the band 591 00:38:06,618 --> 00:38:09,579 because we'd have these girls in the front row and then, 592 00:38:09,663 --> 00:38:11,957 {\an8}Paul would be gone and so would the girls. 593 00:38:12,040 --> 00:38:14,668 {\an8}I'd be like, "We should get him in the band." 594 00:38:14,751 --> 00:38:17,963 "He can play guitar or tambourine or something. 595 00:38:18,046 --> 00:38:19,798 Let's get him off the street." 596 00:38:19,881 --> 00:38:22,467 [Paul] I bought a guitar a few months before 597 00:38:22,551 --> 00:38:27,472 and was still, you know, looking at my fingers kinda style. 598 00:38:27,556 --> 00:38:32,436 So, for the first six months, I kind of faked my way through it. 599 00:38:33,854 --> 00:38:38,150 [Rob] He learned how to do it really quickly, and he was incredible, 600 00:38:38,233 --> 00:38:40,110 indispensable member of the band. 601 00:38:41,194 --> 00:38:44,197 [Finny] Paul, to me, is the Keith Richards of the band. 602 00:38:44,281 --> 00:38:47,325 He brought the edge to the band, and that look. 603 00:38:47,409 --> 00:38:50,328 [Bernie] He was just the coolest motherfucker there was. 604 00:38:50,412 --> 00:38:52,748 ["I'm A Werewolf Baby"] 605 00:38:56,835 --> 00:38:59,671 ♪ I'm a werewolf, baby And here I come ♪ 606 00:38:59,755 --> 00:39:02,007 ♪ I'm a werewolf, baby Shut your mouth ♪ 607 00:39:02,090 --> 00:39:04,634 ♪ I'm a werewolf, baby And here I come ♪ 608 00:39:04,718 --> 00:39:06,386 ♪ I'm a werewolf, baby ♪ 609 00:39:06,470 --> 00:39:10,057 [Bernie] When Paul joined the band, it was immediate for them, 610 00:39:10,140 --> 00:39:13,435 they found their legs and what rhythm guitar meant to the band. 611 00:39:13,518 --> 00:39:16,688 They hit their stride. You don't have to look much further than, 612 00:39:16,772 --> 00:39:18,690 "I'm a Werewolf, Baby", every single night. 613 00:39:18,774 --> 00:39:21,276 ♪ I'm a werewolf, baby Here I come ♪ 614 00:39:21,359 --> 00:39:23,612 ♪ I'm a werewolf, baby ♪ 615 00:39:23,695 --> 00:39:26,156 ♪ I'm a werewolf, baby Here I come ♪ 616 00:39:26,239 --> 00:39:29,743 ♪ I'm a werewolf, baby Howl right now ♪ 617 00:39:29,826 --> 00:39:33,205 [Paul] For some reason, someone suggested I play the shaker. 618 00:39:33,288 --> 00:39:38,043 And then me sort of dancing and doing backups with a shaker 619 00:39:38,126 --> 00:39:41,379 brought the werewolf out in Gord, I think, over time. 620 00:39:41,463 --> 00:39:45,258 ♪ Ow! Ow! Ow! 621 00:39:45,342 --> 00:39:48,970 And then, at the crucial moment, I would jump him, and 622 00:39:49,054 --> 00:39:53,308 [vocalizing] ♪ "I'm a werewolf, baby! And here I come!" ♪ 623 00:39:53,391 --> 00:39:56,269 And, uh, I'd attack Paul. 624 00:39:58,814 --> 00:40:02,609 He would totally, like just charge and really tackle me. 625 00:40:05,570 --> 00:40:09,157 He was always looking after me as you can do as the tackler 626 00:40:09,241 --> 00:40:12,077 better than you can at getting tackled. 627 00:40:12,160 --> 00:40:14,329 Eventually I got sick of it. 628 00:40:14,412 --> 00:40:19,584 But we did have fun with it for a good year and a half, or so. 629 00:40:19,668 --> 00:40:20,919 [chuckles] 630 00:40:27,843 --> 00:40:30,637 [Gord Sinclair] We had begun the conquest of the world 631 00:40:30,720 --> 00:40:35,058 in little 50 to 100-kilometer expeditions outside of Kingston. 632 00:40:37,978 --> 00:40:42,566 [Johnny] We were playing Belleville, Brockville, Cornwall, Trenton, Toronto. 633 00:40:44,734 --> 00:40:45,986 [train horn blows] 634 00:40:48,280 --> 00:40:51,032 [Gord Sinclair] Rob's dad was a larger-than-life figure 635 00:40:51,116 --> 00:40:54,536 and drove a larger-than-life car, and we would shove amps 636 00:40:54,619 --> 00:40:58,665 and as many drums as we could get into the trunk of his car. 637 00:41:01,668 --> 00:41:05,589 I think the judge got tired of lending his vehicle. 638 00:41:05,672 --> 00:41:09,426 So, I had a good chat with my dear mother. 639 00:41:09,509 --> 00:41:13,805 She ponied up to buy this, this crazy, crappy old Dodge van. 640 00:41:17,684 --> 00:41:21,771 [Rob] Leona financed the van. And I gotta say, Duncan and Leona, 641 00:41:21,855 --> 00:41:26,735 and my parents, Edgar and Lorna, the Fays, the Langlois, 642 00:41:26,818 --> 00:41:29,821 everyone's parents were super supportive of us... 643 00:41:31,573 --> 00:41:34,075 when it feels like we're out there trying to 644 00:41:34,159 --> 00:41:36,828 capture lighting in a bottle or something. 645 00:41:38,997 --> 00:41:43,210 [Johnny] Our parents really believed in us when other people didn't, 646 00:41:43,293 --> 00:41:46,129 and we definitely didn't want to disappoint them. 647 00:41:53,678 --> 00:41:57,682 {\an8}To begin with, he didn't have drums or drumsticks. 648 00:41:57,766 --> 00:42:01,645 {\an8}He had my knitting needles, and he'd... 649 00:42:02,729 --> 00:42:08,652 And then a friend had drums for sale and his Dad said, 650 00:42:09,778 --> 00:42:11,529 "I'll buy them, 651 00:42:11,613 --> 00:42:16,201 but you have to work and pay me back half." 652 00:42:17,327 --> 00:42:18,828 So, that's what we did. 653 00:42:20,163 --> 00:42:22,374 [Johnny] My mom pushed me to do music 654 00:42:22,457 --> 00:42:26,253 and if I really wanted to do it, then I was gonna do it. 655 00:42:26,336 --> 00:42:29,089 I remember, I was in grade 11. My mom said, 656 00:42:29,172 --> 00:42:31,883 "We're going on a trip tomorrow." She had seen me 657 00:42:31,967 --> 00:42:34,719 look at this brochure for the Berklee College of Music. 658 00:42:34,803 --> 00:42:39,683 His father and I discussed it, and then we said, "The best thing 659 00:42:39,766 --> 00:42:44,813 we can do is ship him out if they'll accept him." 660 00:42:46,564 --> 00:42:51,611 And so, I drove him down to Boston to the Berklee School of Music. 661 00:42:52,821 --> 00:42:55,282 [Johnny] And we walked in, and my mom said, 662 00:42:55,365 --> 00:42:58,285 "My son would like to go to the summer program." 663 00:42:58,368 --> 00:43:01,705 And this guy said, "No, no. You just, you can't show up." 664 00:43:01,788 --> 00:43:05,166 And my mom said, "Well, we drove all the way from Canada. 665 00:43:05,250 --> 00:43:08,295 Could you at least listen to him before we go home." 666 00:43:08,378 --> 00:43:10,880 This guy took me into a room, and I played. 667 00:43:10,964 --> 00:43:15,635 And they said, "Yes, we'll accept you. Where are your drums?" 668 00:43:15,719 --> 00:43:20,098 My mom said, "Oh, they're, they're in the car out front. We'll go get them." 669 00:43:20,181 --> 00:43:22,517 And we didn't bring any drums. 670 00:43:24,185 --> 00:43:27,897 So, she went across the street to this place called "Daddy's Junky Music." 671 00:43:27,981 --> 00:43:32,610 Got me a kit. It was just, you know, what great parents do. 672 00:43:32,694 --> 00:43:37,282 They open doors. And for me, she was kickin' doors down. 673 00:43:38,783 --> 00:43:40,410 [indistinct chatter] 674 00:43:42,579 --> 00:43:45,332 [woman on PA] Be really excited about this next band. 675 00:43:45,415 --> 00:43:50,337 -They're from Kingston, Ontario. Yeah. -[cheers] 676 00:43:50,420 --> 00:43:55,216 Live at Zorbas, from Mystic Productions from CIC-FM, 677 00:43:55,300 --> 00:43:57,427 Tragically Hip! 678 00:43:57,510 --> 00:44:02,557 Thank you! Happy to have you. Welcome to Zorbas. 679 00:44:02,640 --> 00:44:04,934 ["All Canadian Surf Club"] 680 00:44:05,018 --> 00:44:10,273 We could feel that it was starting to get a little bit more traction there. 681 00:44:10,357 --> 00:44:12,442 It wasn't just the Kingstonians showing up. 682 00:44:12,525 --> 00:44:17,530 ♪ And if you wanna make the scene You'll make it sooner or later ♪ 683 00:44:17,614 --> 00:44:21,993 ♪ You're really hanging with the crowd You know the ins and the outs here ♪ 684 00:44:22,077 --> 00:44:25,372 [Denise Donlon] It wasn't just a band, it was like a movement. 685 00:44:25,455 --> 00:44:29,334 {\an8}It's because one person would see the band and fall in love with them, 686 00:44:29,417 --> 00:44:34,297 {\an8}and then drag their three friends to see them and then their three friends. 687 00:44:34,381 --> 00:44:39,302 ♪ Yeah, when you're dancin' next to me, I want to roll and die there ♪ 688 00:44:39,386 --> 00:44:44,641 ♪ I'll be designing my buggy While I'm thinking about next year ♪ 689 00:44:47,060 --> 00:44:50,855 [Sarah Harmer] They put on a monster show. Like, I was, you know, 16. 690 00:44:50,939 --> 00:44:53,691 I'd never seen sweaty rock 'n' roll up close. 691 00:44:53,775 --> 00:44:56,736 {\an8}And they just played like song after song after song, 692 00:44:56,820 --> 00:44:58,905 like just segue to so much energy. 693 00:44:58,988 --> 00:45:02,325 [screams] 694 00:45:05,870 --> 00:45:09,749 [Denise] The band was loud and tight and forceful, 695 00:45:09,833 --> 00:45:13,670 and then Gord was mesmerizing. 696 00:45:13,753 --> 00:45:16,673 Gord Downie did evolve into his own thing. 697 00:45:16,756 --> 00:45:20,677 You watched him take pieces of Frank Venom, maybe Mick Jagger, 698 00:45:20,760 --> 00:45:24,889 and you know, Michael Stipe. Whoever it was, he put those pieces together. 699 00:45:24,973 --> 00:45:30,562 But once they got in there with some butter and onions, and celery and garlic, 700 00:45:30,645 --> 00:45:33,064 it became its own thing. 701 00:45:33,148 --> 00:45:36,234 ♪ Stop the car! That's my girlfriend! ♪ 702 00:45:36,317 --> 00:45:39,195 He actually just became himself. 703 00:45:39,279 --> 00:45:40,738 ♪ Stop it! ♪ 704 00:45:40,822 --> 00:45:42,532 [crowd cheers] 705 00:45:45,076 --> 00:45:48,079 [Gord Sinclair] We'd taken things about as far as we could. 706 00:45:48,163 --> 00:45:50,081 We didn't know what a manager was, 707 00:45:50,165 --> 00:45:52,876 but we were told, "You gotta get a manager." 708 00:45:57,589 --> 00:46:01,134 {\an8}[Mike Downie] So, this is where it all happens, Jake? 709 00:46:01,217 --> 00:46:05,597 Well, you know, this is where, uh, it starts. 710 00:46:06,681 --> 00:46:10,852 It all happens out there. What we do here is we, uh, 711 00:46:10,935 --> 00:46:14,814 I like to say we create the opportunities here. 712 00:46:14,898 --> 00:46:18,234 [announcer] Jake Gold's still waiting on his first big score. 713 00:46:18,318 --> 00:46:20,778 But now, with Allan Gregg's seed money in play, 714 00:46:20,862 --> 00:46:26,409 at Jacob J. Gold and Associates, he's managing their joint roster of four bands. 715 00:46:26,493 --> 00:46:32,290 [Jake Gold] I was introduced to Allan at a party in December 1985. 716 00:46:32,373 --> 00:46:37,003 At one point during the conversation, his wife Marjorie walks in 717 00:46:37,086 --> 00:46:39,881 and says, "His Nibs is on the phone." 718 00:46:39,964 --> 00:46:43,426 Unbeknownst to me who "His Nibs" was, 719 00:46:43,510 --> 00:46:47,847 Allan excuses himself, comes back in after the call and said, 720 00:46:47,931 --> 00:46:50,225 "Sorry, it was the Prime Minister." 721 00:46:50,308 --> 00:46:54,979 And at that point, I was like, "Okay. Where am I? Who is this guy?" 722 00:46:55,939 --> 00:46:58,691 [Allan Gregg] I've worked with creators for a long time. 723 00:46:58,775 --> 00:47:02,487 {\an8}I've worked on politicians for even a longer time. 724 00:47:02,570 --> 00:47:06,866 And my job, with politicians, has always been to help them find their voice. 725 00:47:06,950 --> 00:47:08,618 My first love was always music. 726 00:47:08,701 --> 00:47:11,120 Allan came from a very academic background, 727 00:47:11,204 --> 00:47:14,165 and I came, basically, from a street background. 728 00:47:14,249 --> 00:47:18,795 It was an odd couple, but we are very similar in a lot of ways. 729 00:47:18,878 --> 00:47:20,505 [receptionist] Gold and Associates. 730 00:47:20,588 --> 00:47:23,883 -Hi, it's Allan. Is Jake there? -[receptionist] Yes. Hold one moment. 731 00:47:23,967 --> 00:47:26,219 [Jake Gold] Allan gives me a call. 732 00:47:26,302 --> 00:47:30,223 He says that he got sent this tape from his friend, Hugh Segal, 733 00:47:30,306 --> 00:47:33,893 whose brother-in-law was friends with the guys in Kingston. 734 00:47:33,977 --> 00:47:35,270 ["Killing Time"] 735 00:47:35,353 --> 00:47:39,816 ♪ I need your confidence ♪ 736 00:47:39,899 --> 00:47:42,860 ♪ Need to know you're mine ♪ 737 00:47:42,944 --> 00:47:47,490 ♪ When it gets right down To the killing time ♪ 738 00:47:49,617 --> 00:47:52,120 And I went, "This guy's got an interesting voice." 739 00:47:52,203 --> 00:47:55,331 And Allan was like, "Maybe we should set up a gig." 740 00:47:55,415 --> 00:47:57,875 [announcer] Welcome, The Tragically Hip! 741 00:47:57,959 --> 00:48:00,128 [Jake Gold] They walked on stage. 742 00:48:00,211 --> 00:48:03,673 Gord said, "I can only give you everything," 743 00:48:03,756 --> 00:48:07,093 grabbed the mic and did that jackknife thing that he does. 744 00:48:09,512 --> 00:48:14,892 ♪ I can't give you more Than all I am ♪ 745 00:48:14,976 --> 00:48:20,565 And every hair on my body and my neck, everywhere, just stood up. 746 00:48:20,648 --> 00:48:22,859 ♪ Just a man ♪ 747 00:48:22,942 --> 00:48:27,697 It took us about a song and a half to look at each other 748 00:48:27,780 --> 00:48:32,452 and just say, this frontman is off the charts. 749 00:48:32,535 --> 00:48:37,081 [Jake Gold] The way they played as a unit, they were a machine. 750 00:48:37,165 --> 00:48:40,501 And I looked at Allan and said, we're signing these guys tonight. 751 00:48:40,585 --> 00:48:43,087 [crowd cheering] 752 00:48:43,171 --> 00:48:46,466 [Gord Sinclair] When we hooked up with Jake and Allan, it was good 753 00:48:46,549 --> 00:48:49,010 'cause we had just been hanging around in Kingston, 754 00:48:49,093 --> 00:48:52,680 kind of playing local bars and stuff. And Jake had a few connections 755 00:48:52,764 --> 00:48:56,267 at different agencies in all the worst clubs in Ontario, 756 00:48:56,351 --> 00:48:59,646 but they put us out on the road for like four months, 757 00:48:59,729 --> 00:49:02,440 which kind of brought everything together for us. 758 00:49:02,523 --> 00:49:05,693 Allan, he loaned us money to make our first EP, 759 00:49:05,777 --> 00:49:10,198 about six grand, which was great for us, you know? 760 00:49:10,281 --> 00:49:12,992 [Allan] It was seven songs, and it was good. 761 00:49:13,076 --> 00:49:16,120 Jake and I said, "Let's try to do something with this." 762 00:49:16,204 --> 00:49:20,875 We needed a calling card so we could get them out of basically Ontario 763 00:49:20,958 --> 00:49:23,419 and get them right across the country. 764 00:49:24,879 --> 00:49:28,633 At the time, people were aware of music videos. 765 00:49:28,716 --> 00:49:33,137 They could break bands. And so, you needed to make a video. 766 00:49:33,221 --> 00:49:37,767 [announcer] Ladies and gentlemen, our very own, Tragically Hip! 767 00:49:37,850 --> 00:49:39,936 ["Small Town Bringdown"] 768 00:49:43,356 --> 00:49:45,775 [Rob] The baby blue record was out. 769 00:49:45,858 --> 00:49:50,530 The "Small Town Bringdown" video was getting a lot of play on MuchMusic. 770 00:49:50,613 --> 00:49:54,867 Was Kingston the subject matter for the "Smalltown Bringdown" single? 771 00:49:54,951 --> 00:49:58,788 Well, our bass player, Gord Sinclair wrote that song and, uh, I don't know. 772 00:49:58,871 --> 00:50:03,251 I think you can apply it to almost any town, you know, or any sort of, 773 00:50:03,334 --> 00:50:07,130 anyone that comes from a small town. It could be very much autobiographical. 774 00:50:07,213 --> 00:50:11,134 You'd have to ask him, I guess. It doesn't reflect how we feel about Kingston 775 00:50:11,217 --> 00:50:13,302 'cause we quite frankly love it there. 776 00:50:15,054 --> 00:50:19,976 [Jake] Having a video, having a record in stores right away, legitimized you. 777 00:50:20,059 --> 00:50:24,355 At the end of the day, we probably sold about 11,000 records. 778 00:50:24,439 --> 00:50:28,609 [Rob] For an up and coming, nobody-knows-'em band, 779 00:50:28,693 --> 00:50:32,321 it was doin' very well. And that allowed us to play new markets. 780 00:50:34,365 --> 00:50:36,617 [Jake] They were workin' every day. 781 00:50:36,701 --> 00:50:39,620 Three nights here, three nights there, all over. 782 00:50:39,704 --> 00:50:42,915 We were playing small places, multiple nights. 783 00:50:42,999 --> 00:50:47,587 Because we felt going into a city for one show 784 00:50:47,670 --> 00:50:51,215 didn't leave enough time to get that word-of-mouth thing going. 785 00:50:51,299 --> 00:50:54,010 So, by the third night, it was always packed. 786 00:50:55,136 --> 00:50:58,431 {\an8}They were like the tightest band you ever heard. All the time. 787 00:50:58,514 --> 00:51:01,517 I never went to a bad Hip show. 788 00:51:01,601 --> 00:51:07,565 They felt they had a duty to be amazing because you came to their show. 789 00:51:09,567 --> 00:51:12,320 [Johnny] We needed to get in front of more people. 790 00:51:12,403 --> 00:51:15,615 We needed to travel and really be heard by some people. 791 00:51:15,698 --> 00:51:17,742 It took some time, you know? 792 00:51:19,410 --> 00:51:21,621 [Gord Sinclair] Anybody can play a sold-out show 793 00:51:21,704 --> 00:51:24,081 in downtown Toronto on Friday night. 794 00:51:25,124 --> 00:51:28,127 Part of comin' up in Canada is learning how to play, 795 00:51:28,211 --> 00:51:32,381 you know, the half-empty rooms, or the completely empty rooms. 796 00:51:32,465 --> 00:51:34,675 That's what makes you what you are. 797 00:51:36,010 --> 00:51:39,597 {\an8}They were a band that had played every fuckin' venue in the country. 798 00:51:39,680 --> 00:51:42,809 You know, like this is a very big land mass, 799 00:51:42,892 --> 00:51:47,021 and so I know a lot of Canadian bands that just won't tour the country. 800 00:51:47,104 --> 00:51:48,648 They'll go tour the States 801 00:51:48,731 --> 00:51:51,901 'cause they can get a show every five hours on the highway. 802 00:51:51,984 --> 00:51:54,445 It's just not like that necessarily here. 803 00:51:54,529 --> 00:52:00,535 There's like huge swaths of like Siberian-esque fucking T-Can. [laughs] 804 00:52:01,702 --> 00:52:04,247 [interviewer] What's the biggest obstacle you've faced so far? 805 00:52:04,330 --> 00:52:08,417 The Canadian Shield's probably the biggest obstacle. 806 00:52:08,501 --> 00:52:10,878 You know driving out to Winnipeg and stuff. 807 00:52:10,962 --> 00:52:12,338 It's hard touring in Canada. 808 00:52:12,421 --> 00:52:16,342 There's lots of long drives and lots of late nights and stuff. 809 00:52:16,425 --> 00:52:19,220 They toured madly, but no one wanted to sign them. 810 00:52:19,303 --> 00:52:21,764 There was no big cry and demand. 811 00:52:21,848 --> 00:52:27,520 [Gord Downie] We played in New York City for the CMJ, College Music Journal. 812 00:52:27,603 --> 00:52:31,691 It's a conference there. And we were fortunate enough to get our song, 813 00:52:31,774 --> 00:52:35,069 "Small Town Bringdown" on a compact disc that goes about 814 00:52:35,152 --> 00:52:38,573 to all these programmers and college music people, 815 00:52:38,656 --> 00:52:41,367 and Bruce Dickinson happened to hear it. 816 00:52:41,450 --> 00:52:45,121 [Bruce Dickinson] I grabbed the phone and called Jake Gold 817 00:52:45,204 --> 00:52:49,208 {\an8}and said I really liked the song that I just heard on the CD 818 00:52:49,292 --> 00:52:52,628 {\an8}and that I would like to come see his band. 819 00:52:52,712 --> 00:52:55,882 And I said, so what's the next date? And he says, 820 00:52:55,965 --> 00:52:59,051 "Well, we have one coming up, but it's two songs 821 00:52:59,135 --> 00:53:04,056 and it's for industry people," and I'm thinkin', "I'm comin' anyway." 822 00:53:04,140 --> 00:53:05,349 [indistinct chatter] 823 00:53:08,394 --> 00:53:10,646 [Gord Sinclair] In our minds, this is like, 824 00:53:10,730 --> 00:53:13,482 "Wow, this is the proverbial, possible big break." 825 00:53:15,568 --> 00:53:16,819 [Johnny] We were nervous. 826 00:53:17,737 --> 00:53:19,822 It was like, this is Massey Hall. 827 00:53:19,906 --> 00:53:23,117 This is like our Grand Old Opry. 828 00:53:23,200 --> 00:53:28,164 We knew that we had to get up there for two songs and really make it happen 829 00:53:28,247 --> 00:53:30,583 according to our manager, once again. And, uh, 830 00:53:30,666 --> 00:53:34,170 I guess we kinda made it happen or we were trying too hard 831 00:53:34,253 --> 00:53:37,298 or got nervous and got drunk or something, 'cause everything fell apart. 832 00:53:37,381 --> 00:53:41,677 Thanks for having us. Thanks a lot. 833 00:53:41,761 --> 00:53:44,805 New Orleans is sinking, and I don't want to swim. 834 00:53:44,889 --> 00:53:46,223 ["New Orleans Is Sinking"] 835 00:53:46,307 --> 00:53:48,851 [Allan] The Toronto Music Awards was a disaster. 836 00:53:48,935 --> 00:53:51,312 Here, in front of all of these people, 837 00:53:51,395 --> 00:53:54,482 including Bruce Dickinson, A&R guy from New York City, 838 00:53:54,565 --> 00:53:57,860 MCA Records, and Gord's mic breaks. 839 00:53:59,236 --> 00:54:01,781 [Bruce Dickinson] The microphone comes out of the stand 840 00:54:01,864 --> 00:54:05,242 and falls and breaks into its component parts. 841 00:54:05,326 --> 00:54:07,995 And even the cable comes out. 842 00:54:08,079 --> 00:54:12,249 And I'll always remember the look on Gord Sinclair's face was like, 843 00:54:12,333 --> 00:54:17,421 "Oh, crap." You could tell this was not rehearsed. 844 00:54:17,505 --> 00:54:23,511 Gord starts to pantomime and improvise and mock his misfortune 845 00:54:23,594 --> 00:54:27,932 of not being able to sing, long enough that they finally get the mic fixed. 846 00:54:28,015 --> 00:54:32,186 ♪ Bourbon blues on the street Loose and complete ♪ 847 00:54:32,269 --> 00:54:36,440 ♪ Under skies of smoky blue-green ♪ 848 00:54:36,524 --> 00:54:40,319 ♪ I can't forsake a dixie dead-shake ♪ 849 00:54:40,403 --> 00:54:44,782 ♪ So we danced the sidewalk clean ♪ 850 00:54:44,865 --> 00:54:49,036 ♪ My memory is muddy What's this river that I'm in? ♪ 851 00:54:49,120 --> 00:54:54,125 ♪ New Orleans is sinking, man And I don't wanna swim ♪ 852 00:54:54,208 --> 00:54:59,255 It could have been disastrous and he, you know, made it part of the show. 853 00:54:59,338 --> 00:55:03,134 ♪ Colonel Tom, what's wrong? What's going on? ♪ 854 00:55:03,217 --> 00:55:07,513 [Jake] That was part of what we were selling was this enigmatic front guy 855 00:55:07,596 --> 00:55:11,434 that was spontaneous, and you never knew what was gonna happen next. 856 00:55:11,517 --> 00:55:13,060 At that point, I'm sold. 857 00:55:13,144 --> 00:55:17,064 So then, I turn to Jake and Allan, "I want to sign your band." 858 00:55:17,148 --> 00:55:21,068 ♪ My baby, she don't know me When I'm thinking 'bout those years ♪ 859 00:55:22,236 --> 00:55:25,865 A Canadian band being signed out of New York, it was big news. 860 00:55:25,948 --> 00:55:28,075 [Rob] We met Bruce after the show, 861 00:55:28,159 --> 00:55:31,454 and he said, "I'd like to sign you to a seven-record deal." 862 00:55:31,537 --> 00:55:35,374 So, when that happened and Bruce made that offer, 863 00:55:35,458 --> 00:55:40,838 that put us firmly on the track that we always dreamed of being on. 864 00:55:40,921 --> 00:55:42,173 [guitar music] 865 00:55:48,846 --> 00:55:52,266 We're negotiating the contract. It gets signed by early January, 866 00:55:52,349 --> 00:55:55,352 and by the end of the month, the band's in Memphis. 867 00:55:55,436 --> 00:55:57,396 Like, that's how fast things happened. 868 00:55:57,480 --> 00:56:00,608 [Johnny] We were a band going down to prove ourselves, 869 00:56:00,691 --> 00:56:04,820 make a record for the very first time. It was like, "Okay. Here we go." 870 00:56:04,904 --> 00:56:06,572 [Gord Sinclair] As music fans, 871 00:56:06,655 --> 00:56:09,992 and we're making our first record in Memphis, Tennessee, you know? 872 00:56:10,076 --> 00:56:14,080 Jerry Lee Lewis is across the river, and the King lived there. 873 00:56:14,163 --> 00:56:16,415 [Gord Downie] I was really excited to come, 874 00:56:16,499 --> 00:56:20,252 just 'cause I figured that it would, you know, the music environment 875 00:56:20,336 --> 00:56:24,340 would sort of sit very close, very far down in the air, kinda thing. 876 00:56:24,423 --> 00:56:28,552 [Jake] You could tell that there was this real sense of like, 877 00:56:28,636 --> 00:56:33,933 "Holy fuck, man. We're in Memphis?" Five guys from Kingston 878 00:56:34,016 --> 00:56:38,979 are now on the precipice of putting out a first major label record in the U.S. 879 00:56:42,316 --> 00:56:46,153 [Rob] I think we really felt we were something walkin' into Ardent. 880 00:56:47,822 --> 00:56:48,823 Buddy! 881 00:56:48,906 --> 00:56:51,367 -Buddy, has this got sound to it? -Oh, yeah. 882 00:56:51,450 --> 00:56:55,412 [Rob] I think The Replacements had just finished before we went in. 883 00:56:55,496 --> 00:56:57,414 It was pretty heady stuff. 884 00:56:57,498 --> 00:57:01,877 Say hi to your wife, Gord. We're gonna send her this tape. 885 00:57:03,129 --> 00:57:04,839 Gord Downie? This is for Laura. 886 00:57:05,923 --> 00:57:09,176 [Rob] With Bruce Dickinson came Don Smith. 887 00:57:09,260 --> 00:57:13,514 He just produced the Keith Richards album, just done the Traveling Wilburys, 888 00:57:13,597 --> 00:57:18,435 and like a whole host of Tom Petty albums. And we were like, "Yeah. That'll work." 889 00:57:18,519 --> 00:57:20,855 ["I'll Believe in You"] 890 00:57:20,938 --> 00:57:22,565 The Tragically Hip went down to Memphis. 891 00:57:22,648 --> 00:57:24,775 They've already been working on their second record, 892 00:57:24,859 --> 00:57:27,987 and we sent Kim Clark Champness to see what happened. 893 00:57:28,070 --> 00:57:31,949 ♪ Well, it's 7 a.m. And she woke by the radio... ♪ 894 00:57:32,032 --> 00:57:36,036 {\an8}[interviewer] How was it to work this year with established rock legends 895 00:57:36,120 --> 00:57:39,331 and then suddenly work with a young Canadian band? 896 00:57:39,415 --> 00:57:43,878 It's refreshing, actually. I think this band can hold its own 897 00:57:43,961 --> 00:57:46,005 against all the people I worked with. 898 00:57:46,088 --> 00:57:52,094 ♪ Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! ♪ 899 00:57:53,345 --> 00:57:58,267 It's getting very good. It seems like... To me, it feels like it's too fast 900 00:57:58,350 --> 00:58:00,561 'cause you're rushing every word, you know? 901 00:58:00,644 --> 00:58:05,941 Go slow. But I don't know. It actually does feel kinda slow, 902 00:58:06,025 --> 00:58:08,903 but what's happening, I think you're rushing every lyric. 903 00:58:08,986 --> 00:58:12,072 -[woman] Do you want a beer, Gordie? -[Gordie] No, thanks. 904 00:58:12,156 --> 00:58:16,327 [Paul] We'd record and then go back to the hotel at night and keep writing. 905 00:58:17,578 --> 00:58:20,414 Talkin' about the songs and tryin' to improve them, 906 00:58:20,497 --> 00:58:25,211 and add new ones, like "38 Years Old" was written in a hotel. 907 00:58:25,294 --> 00:58:28,672 Like, I played bass on that because Gord Sinclair, 908 00:58:28,756 --> 00:58:31,342 it was his guitar riff. [mimics guitar] 909 00:58:31,425 --> 00:58:34,053 [Gord Sinclair] I mistuned an acoustic guitar. 910 00:58:34,136 --> 00:58:36,680 I wasn't much of a guitar player back then, 911 00:58:36,764 --> 00:58:40,517 and it dropped the top E and top B string down a full tone. 912 00:58:40,601 --> 00:58:43,145 Started playing D shapes and C shapes, 913 00:58:43,229 --> 00:58:45,564 and came up with the musical idea for that song. 914 00:58:45,648 --> 00:58:48,067 And then we started writing it. 915 00:58:48,150 --> 00:58:51,779 [Gord Downie] Where I grew up is a place called Amherstview outside Kingston, 916 00:58:51,862 --> 00:58:56,784 and even closer to Amherstview is a place called Millhaven Penitentiary. 917 00:58:56,867 --> 00:59:01,121 And I remember one summer, there was this big, huge jailbreak, 918 00:59:01,205 --> 00:59:04,333 it sort of threw the outlying area into a real panic. 919 00:59:04,416 --> 00:59:06,627 [reporter] The man in charge of the hunt 920 00:59:06,710 --> 00:59:10,256 says he's still working on the theory that six of the missing seven 921 00:59:10,339 --> 00:59:12,299 are in the Millhaven area. 922 00:59:12,383 --> 00:59:15,803 ♪ Twelve men broke loose in '73 ♪ 923 00:59:17,137 --> 00:59:21,433 ♪ From Millhaven Maximum Security ♪ 924 00:59:21,517 --> 00:59:24,770 {\an8}[Gord Sinclair] There was a real bad man named Donald Oag, 925 00:59:24,853 --> 00:59:28,983 who was among those guys who got out. He had it in for Robbie's dad, 926 00:59:29,066 --> 00:59:33,862 who was a Provincial Court judge. And they actually moved Robbie and his family, 927 00:59:33,946 --> 00:59:35,322 to a hotel downtown. 928 00:59:35,406 --> 00:59:37,533 [Gord Downie] I remember it was tense. 929 00:59:37,616 --> 00:59:39,535 Everyone was pretty scared 'cause these were... 930 00:59:39,618 --> 00:59:42,371 [Rob] It was front page news for over a year. 931 00:59:42,454 --> 00:59:44,748 {\an8}But it was also really exciting, you know. 932 00:59:44,832 --> 00:59:48,002 {\an8}It made the summer kind of exciting. 933 00:59:48,085 --> 00:59:50,921 -Kinda magical. [laughs] -Well, who knows, you know? 934 00:59:51,005 --> 00:59:55,384 ♪ Same pattern on the table Same clock on the wall ♪ 935 00:59:55,467 --> 01:00:00,597 ♪ Been one seat empty Eighteen years in all ♪ 936 01:00:00,681 --> 01:00:05,811 ♪ Freezing slow time Away from the world ♪ 937 01:00:05,894 --> 01:00:09,898 ♪ He's 38 years old Never kissed a girl ♪ 938 01:00:09,982 --> 01:00:12,318 "Thirty-eight years old and never kissed a girl." 939 01:00:12,401 --> 01:00:15,988 That's how he describes a prisoner who's been in prison his whole life. 940 01:00:16,071 --> 01:00:17,323 That's storytelling. 941 01:00:17,406 --> 01:00:22,244 That is poetry. Not the kind of thing you hear from a rock band, period, 942 01:00:22,328 --> 01:00:25,080 let alone a rock band putting out their first record. 943 01:00:25,164 --> 01:00:28,584 That's why we fell in love with The Tragically Hip were the lyrics. 944 01:00:28,667 --> 01:00:31,837 {\an8}Every single song would destroy us in some little way. 945 01:00:31,920 --> 01:00:35,174 The Tragically Hip LP out in your store now. 946 01:00:35,257 --> 01:00:37,634 It's real good. It's very rock 'n' roll. 947 01:00:37,718 --> 01:00:40,888 When we put out "Up To Here," we felt it was success 948 01:00:40,971 --> 01:00:43,265 and we were moving in the right direction. 949 01:00:43,349 --> 01:00:45,893 In Canada, the record went exponential. 950 01:00:45,976 --> 01:00:49,897 30,000 at Christmas, to 50,000, which was gold, 951 01:00:49,980 --> 01:00:52,983 to 100,000 a month later, which was platinum, 952 01:00:53,067 --> 01:00:56,236 to double platinum a month later. Just blew up. 953 01:00:56,320 --> 01:01:00,699 {\an8}[CASBY presenter] The 1990 CASBY for fave album of the year goes to... 954 01:01:00,783 --> 01:01:03,118 {\an8}The Tragically Hip. "Up To Here." 955 01:01:03,202 --> 01:01:04,203 {\an8}[crowd cheers] 956 01:01:04,286 --> 01:01:09,166 [JUNO presenter] For Group of The Year for 1990, The Tragically Hip. 957 01:01:09,249 --> 01:01:11,418 [crowd cheers] 958 01:01:11,502 --> 01:01:14,630 "Up To Here," yeah. This is my personal favourite. 959 01:01:14,713 --> 01:01:20,719 Um, there are songs on absolutely every record that I like. 960 01:01:20,803 --> 01:01:26,767 This one has just the fuckin' highest concentration of them in a row for me. 961 01:01:26,850 --> 01:01:30,145 "I'll Believe In You, or "I'll Be Leaving You Tonight". What a... 962 01:01:30,229 --> 01:01:32,231 Come on, get the fuck outta here. 963 01:01:32,314 --> 01:01:34,817 I'm not gonna talk about "Blow At High Dough" 964 01:01:34,900 --> 01:01:38,112 because how the fuck do you talk about, "Oh, Canada." 965 01:01:38,195 --> 01:01:41,365 {\an8}I remember spending an entire night, 966 01:01:41,448 --> 01:01:44,535 {\an8}uh, with "Blow At High Dough" on repeat. 967 01:01:44,618 --> 01:01:49,665 And for me, that just... You know, this... This was how it all started. 968 01:01:49,748 --> 01:01:52,084 ["Blow At High Dough"] 969 01:01:52,167 --> 01:01:55,838 [Sarah Harmer] Hearing that record for the first time, and those songs, 970 01:01:55,921 --> 01:01:59,216 and those stories, you know, there is meat on the bone here. 971 01:01:59,299 --> 01:02:01,844 There is a lot of amazing material. 972 01:02:03,303 --> 01:02:06,890 I mean, "New Orleans is sinking, man, and I don't want to swim." 973 01:02:06,974 --> 01:02:09,601 Like, how do you get fuckin' heavier than that? 974 01:02:09,685 --> 01:02:12,896 Like that... That's why rock 'n' roll exists! 975 01:02:15,190 --> 01:02:19,194 ♪ Yeah, I can get behind anything... ♪ 976 01:02:19,278 --> 01:02:23,907 [Jake] And before you knew it, we were offered big money to play bigger venues. 977 01:02:23,991 --> 01:02:27,828 It was like, "Holy fuck! Things are goin' in the right direction." 978 01:02:27,911 --> 01:02:30,873 [Bernie] Nobody really knew what they were on the precipice of, 979 01:02:30,956 --> 01:02:33,584 and what was happenin'. We just knew it was happening. 980 01:02:33,667 --> 01:02:39,089 Ladies and gentlemen, Kingston's own, The Tragically Hip! 981 01:02:39,173 --> 01:02:43,302 We were hyper aware at the very beginning that The Tragically Hip were different. 982 01:02:43,385 --> 01:02:46,680 They're the band that was just lookin' for a place to happen 983 01:02:46,763 --> 01:02:50,934 and it just happened to be at a time when we were ready for it. 984 01:02:51,018 --> 01:02:52,019 Whoo-hoo! 985 01:02:52,102 --> 01:02:55,522 ♪ Yeah, I can get behind anything ♪ 986 01:02:55,606 --> 01:02:58,817 ♪ Yeah, I can get behind anything ♪ 987 01:03:05,824 --> 01:03:08,368 [interviewer] In terms of your musical future, 988 01:03:08,452 --> 01:03:13,081 would you even attempt to anticipate where the band's gonna go? 989 01:03:14,500 --> 01:03:18,337 I don't know. It kinda, it gets kinda scary because I, you know, I... 990 01:03:19,630 --> 01:03:23,217 Um... We out of film? Cool. 991 01:03:23,300 --> 01:03:24,343 [camera whirs, stops] 992 01:03:27,012 --> 01:03:30,641 ["New Orleans Is Sinking"] 993 01:03:30,724 --> 01:03:31,934 ♪ All right! ♪ 994 01:03:48,408 --> 01:03:52,538 ♪ Bourbon blues on the street Loose and complete ♪ 995 01:03:52,621 --> 01:03:56,875 ♪ Under skies of smoky blue-green ♪ 996 01:03:56,959 --> 01:04:01,338 ♪ I can't forsake a dixie dead-shake ♪ 997 01:04:01,421 --> 01:04:05,801 ♪ So we danced the sidewalk clean ♪ 998 01:04:05,884 --> 01:04:10,264 ♪ My memory is muddy What's this river that I'm in? ♪ 999 01:04:10,347 --> 01:04:15,143 ♪ New Orleans is sinking, man And I don't wanna swim ♪ 1000 01:04:22,943 --> 01:04:27,197 ♪ Colonel Tom, what's wrong? What's going on? ♪ 1001 01:04:27,281 --> 01:04:31,034 ♪ Can't tie yourself up for a deal ♪ 1002 01:04:31,118 --> 01:04:35,497 ♪ He said, "Hey, north, you're south Shut your big mouth ♪ 1003 01:04:35,581 --> 01:04:40,210 ♪ You gotta do what you feel is real" ♪ 1004 01:04:40,294 --> 01:04:44,256 ♪ Ain't got no picture postcards Ain't got no souvenirs ♪ 1005 01:04:44,339 --> 01:04:48,552 ♪ My baby, she don't know me When I'm thinking 'bout those years ♪ 88744

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.