New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Celebrated, iconic band The
Tragically Hip announce a brand-new album, Saskadelphia, out Friday, May 21.
Saskadelphia (Universal
Music Canada/UMe) is made up of six previously unreleased tracks written in 1990. Five recorded in that same year during the Road Apples sessions in New Orleans, and one live track, "Montreal (Live from The Molson Centre, Montreal, Dec 7th, 2000)," written at the same time, but for which the original recording is yet to be found.
With no shortage of material and higher ups at the American record label resisting the band's call to release a double album, countless tracks were left behind on the studio floor. And so one album, Road Apples, heads out into the world, a rung on The Tragically Hip's climb to legend status, while the rest of the tracks are tucked into boxes and moved out of sight.
Until now.
Welcome to Saskadelphia: the record that stayed in the wings as Road Apples hit the stage. The title, a term coined by the band in a nod to the extensive touring they were doing in the early 1990s, was the original working title for Road Apples before it was rejected by those same label execs as being "too Canadian."
From lead single "Ouch," which greets listeners with the familiar roaring vocals of late singer and lyricist Gord Downie, to "Not Necessary," a song whose fiery sound is layered with gentle and emotional lyrics - are pure, undistilled The Tragically Hip, as Rob Baker (guitar), Gord Downie (vocals, guitar), Johnny Fay (drums), Paul Langlois (guitar) and Gord Sinclair (bass) lay the groundwork for their unmistakable sound.
"I went 'Wow' when I heard 'Ouch' after all this time," says Rob Baker. "We were a pretty good little band."
After rediscovering the tracks they wrote more than three decades ago, The
Tragically Hip knew they had to share the music with fans. Of these abandoned souvenirs from the past, Johnny Fay said, "We didn't know what was there, so this meant baking them and listening to them as they were being transferred. Hearing them for the first time in 30 years was crazy."
The
Tragically Hip are set to receive the 2021 Humanitarian Award Presented by
Music Canada at the 50th Annual JUNO Awards on Sunday, June 6, in Toronto. Canadian
Music Hall of Fame inductees and rock icons, Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson of Rush will present the band with the award. The award recognizes outstanding Canadian artists or industry leaders whose humanitarian contributions have positively enhanced the social fabric of Canada and beyond. The broadcast can be streamed globally on CBCmusic.ca/junos.
Saskadelphia is available for preorder here: https://thehip.lnk.to/Saskadelphia
Full Track List:
1. Ouch
2. Not Necessary
3. Montreal (Live from The Molson Centre, Montreal, Dec 7th, 2000)
4. Crack My Spine Like a Whip
5. Just As Well
6. Reformed Baptist Blues
Critically acclaimed for more than three decades, The
Tragically Hip have been at the heart of the Canadian musical zeitgeist, evoking a strong emotional connection between their music and their fans that remains unrivalled. The five-piece group of friends - Rob Baker (guitar), Gord Downie (vocals, guitar), Johnny Fay (drums), Paul Langlois (guitar) and Gord Sinclair (bass) - grew up in Kingston, Ontario. The
Tragically Hip have achieved both mass popularity with more than 10 million albums sold in Canada and over 1.5 million sold in the U.S, as well as peer recognition through 15 Juno Awards - picking up their last two for Group of the Year and Rock Album of the Year for Man Machine Poem. Their studio catalog includes their self-titled debut album The
Tragically Hip (1987), Up To Here (1989), Road Apples (1991), Fully Completely (1992), Day For Night (1994), Trouble At The Henhouse (1996), Phantom Power (1998),
Music @ Work (2000), In Violet Light (2002), In Between Evolution (2004), World Container (2006), We Are The Same (2009), Now For Plan A (2012), Man Machine Poem (2016) and Saskadelphia (2021). A
National Celebration was the final show of The Tragically Hip's Man Machine Poem Tour recorded on Aug. 20, 2016, at the K-Rock Centre in their hometown of Kingston, Ontario, and is their last performance as a five-piece band. Through their career, the band became a cultural touchstone in Canada and, despite their accolades and numerous recognitions, will always be proudest of the humanitarian work they have done over the years through numerous charitable organizations and causes.
See The
Tragically Hip in a rare performance with
Feist at The 50th Annual JUNO Awards, broadcast from Toronto on Sunday, June 6, 2021.