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I got tired of waiting for the library and I picked it up today. Starting to read tonight.
Jeff
June 21, 2003 Toronto, ON: SkyDome
July 1, 2004 Toronto, ON: Molson Amphitheatre
November 26, 2004 Toronto, ON: Air Canada Centre
June 24, 2006 Toronto, ON: Historic Fort York
May 10, 2007 Indianapolis, IN: The Vogue
July 14, 2011 Edmonton, AB: Northlands Festival Site
June 30, 2012 Niagara-on-the-Lake, ON: The Commons at Butler's Barracks
January 23, 2013 Edmonton, AB: Rexall Place
July 28, 2016 Edmonton, AB: Rexall Place
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I rarely look at the hip fan FB page -- the discussion on this book is hilarious with regards to unauthorized, the band privacy, etc.
I found it very respectful of the band -- I maybe learned one thing about each member's personal lives that I did not know, and usually it was a pretty mundane fact. Without "unauthorized" journalism, basically there would be no stories properly told, plus Barclay primarily uses already published sources for the book.
Then weirdly, you can scroll though the FB page and see people still posting shots of the Macleans magazine (one of the main pieces written by Barclay, likely biggest selling issue of the magazine), posting shots of unauthorized artwork purchases (the scam charity gold album), or advertising cover band appearances. I wanted to point out the lack of disparity, but didn't want to get lambasted by middle aged women.
That said, there's a guy posting links to a YouTube channel who has some pretty great boots, sounds like audience recordings he's done some work on.
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The "ballad of Billy Ray" is a priceless little gem in this book. I love that bit where Crash Vegas hires him thinking "he's with the Hip, he must be the best in the country," and quickly realizes that the guy has no idea what he's doing :lol: The incredible, touching loyalty between him, GD, and the band as a whole is really something.
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Lots going on personally lately. Completely forgot about this book was coming out. Ordered it yesterday with next-day shipping. Can't wait to get started! Btw...I've (obviously) been on Hipbase for years. I'm also on the FB page occasionally. I get some of the slams against peeps there but at the end of the day we're all just fans who dig the Hip. Some good folks on there too...
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I think there is definitely a legitimate essay to be written on cover bands as a general phenomenon. It's as though he had a desire to write on that theme, and decided to cram it into his book on the Hip. That piece would have worked much better as a stand-alone essay on cover bands in general (not just Hip cover bands). If he had to write about specifically Hip cover bands, then it definitely should not have been placed so early in the book, where it gets in the way of the exciting narrative of the Hip's rise to fame. A big and basic editorial mistake.
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Got my free ticket to the interview by Jeff Wells reading at the NAC on April 20th. Anyone other Hipbasers get a ticket?
2004-12-03 - Saint John/2005-09-03 - Moncton/2006-06-30 - Charlottetown/2006-11-09/10 - Montreal/2007-09-11 - Fredericton/2007-09-13 - Halifax/2007-09-14 - Sydney/2007-09-15 - Charlottetown/2008-06-30 - Charlottetown/2009-05-01/02 - Montreal/2011-06-28 - Moncton/2011-06-30 - Charlottetown/2012-06-30 - Niagara-on-the-Lake/2013-02-01 - Moncton/2013-02-02 - Halifax/2015-01-10 - Toronto/2015-02-20 - Montreal/2015-07-17 - Ottawa/2016-08-18 - Ottawa/2016-08-20 - Kingston
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I'm on the final chapters. I think the book is a decent summary of previously published information. A bit scattered, opinionated, and amateur (quoting message boards and fan sites, a chapter on cover bands, etc), but overall an enjoyable read. I'm glad it was published.
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Forgive me if this has already been discussed, but one thing that seems fairly clear from the book is that Gord Downie was somewhat estranged from the band from M@W onward. That quote where an observer notes that, leading up to MMP, Gord admitted to the rest that he'd been a "total dick for a while now" seemed pretty striking to me, given that previous chapters discussed the band's antagonism to Gord bringing new elements to the table for the M@W tour, striking out for his solo career, and so on.
My impression is that after M@W Gord basically approached the Hip as a job, one he did with commitment, but without terrific joy or enthusiasm. His real joy was in subverting or at least dancing around the expectations created by Hipdom itself through his solo work and other ventures. This might contribute to explaining the bizarre "Screamo Gord" phase, which I always suspected had to do with some kind of frustration, either with the Hip or their fans or the crowd's preference for oldies or for the playlists - whatever. I think the clash between GD's experimental nature, his 'arty' streak, and the essential musical conservatism of the others taken as a unit - really their greatest strength in the early days - eventually became an ongoing sore-point that undercut the unity of the band. That's my impression anyhow.