The Tragically Hip, from L-R: Johnny Fay, Gord Downie, Rob Baker, Gord Sinclair and Paul Langlois, pictured in entrance of a tour bus.
Gordon Hawkins/Prime Video
It’s been virtually precisely seven years since Canadians misplaced The Tragically Hip frontman Gord Downie, and greater than eight years because the band performed their last-ever present in Kingston, Ont.
Time, elongated and obfuscated by the pandemic, appears merciless. Has it actually been that lengthy since we misplaced one in every of our nation’s most charismatic, beloved musicians? And has it actually been virtually a decade because the group of men fondly known as “Canada’s Band” ceased to play?
The Tragically Hip: No Costume Rehearsal, a four-part docuseries streaming on Prime Video beginning Sept. 20, gives an extremely intimate take a look at the band, from its humble beginnings in small-town Ontario to its glory days onstage.
Directed by Gord’s brother Mike Downie, all 4 hour-long segments of the docuseries are unapologetically uncooked, with vignettes from Gord himself and every of the band members because the plucky bunch of boys develop from youngsters dreaming of turning into rock stars into, effectively, rock stars in their very own proper.

Jaw-dropping live performance footage is featured all through — even die-hard Hip followers will see issues they’ve by no means seen earlier than (no spoilers right here!) — and there are interviews with household, pals and others who knew them throughout the journey. Canadian celebrities and followers, together with Dan Aykroyd, Jay Baruchel and Bruce McCulloch, amongst many others, categorical their love and incredulousness concerning the band, cementing what any fan already is aware of: The Tragically Hip had been one thing particular, and a sure form of musical magic Canadians might by no means see once more.
International Information sat down with Mike Downie and the remaining members of the band — Paul Langlois, Rob Baker, Gord Sinclair and Johnny Fay — to speak about what the docuseries means to them, what it was like accelerating to nationwide fame on the top of Canadian rock, and life after Gord’s loss of life.
When revisiting the entire archival footage, reflecting on previous performances and the whole lot that you simply’ve all been via collectively, how did it really feel to observe?
Gord Sinclair: It’s just like the drone shot in loads of methods. We all the time saved a reasonably slim horizon all through our careers, attending to the following gig after which the following alternative to make a file, subsequent alternative to take a while off, writing and stuff. If you step again and take a look at it, to me, it’s a sense of gratitude for the chance that we had…. We had been by no means certain whether or not we had been going to have the ability to make one other file after the earlier one.
Gratitude to the followers that got here alongside and the blokes I performed music with. Rewatching it made me actually admire what Mike went via. Mike moved with Gord from Amherstview after we had been solely 13, and he’s coming at it not solely as a pal, however honouring his household and honouring the group. I believe he did an exquisite job. Once more, it’s a pleasant look again, for certain.
The Tragically Hip sits on a sofa.
Prime Video
Why did you resolve on now because the time to place this docuseries on the market?

Get every day Nationwide information
Get the day’s high information, political, financial, and present affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox as soon as a day.
Mike Downie: I believe timing was an enormous a part of it, and it’s defined within the movie.
I do know for the blokes within the band, the years after Gord’s passing had been… somewhat bit misplaced. You simply form of retreat into your personal kind of expertise, and I had an analogous expertise as effectively. You understand, attempting to determine what it’s all about. However, after we went into our outdated highschool, it was vacant. It had been bought to Queen’s College. College students had been all gone, and in October of 2021, we had been capable of go in there for 4 days and actually simply form of take it over, use it as our set.
That was virtually 4 years to the day that Gord had handed. And I form of simply realized not too long ago that it was in all probability the correct quantity of time, prefer it was nonetheless actually shut. You see it within the interviews. However there was additionally sufficient distance to have some readability as effectively, and to begin fascinated with, or speaking about, the band and positively the early days as a result of it’s what we wished to do after we had been in highschool.
I keep in mind that feeling, the lump in my throat, you recognize, as we began speaking concerning the band and the whole lot. However quickly the story takes over. Gord’s not with us anymore, however he’s alive in these tales. It all the time acquired me after I’d hear one other story, clearly one thing I didn’t learn about my brother that these guys did. They had been spending most of their time away collectively. So, that was actually nice for me. And loads of that’s in all probability not within the doc, nevertheless it’s, you recognize, it’s in right here [gestures to his heart] endlessly now.
Gord Downie, former lead singer/frontman of The Tragically Hip.
Prime Video
Has diving into the movie, creating it, the whole lot, having the lump within the throat… has that helped every of you together with your sense of grief?
Rob Baker: I believe grief is all the time going to be with you. It by no means goes away. The nice instances, you bear in mind them; they’re like a pleasant cleaning tub or an evening out. You may have nice recollections of it. However grief is one thing that pierces your pores and skin and leaves scars, you need to reform the best way you progress via life, to accommodate. Time is absolutely simply the easiest way to cope with it. Like we did within the band, you set one foot in entrance of the opposite. We by no means centered on the horizon, conquering the world. It was all concerning the subsequent gig, the following track we’re going to write down. And it’s the identical factor with coping with grief.
We misplaced a brother. We went via the whole lot that we did collectively, very collectively and overtly collectively, after which all of us went off individually and grieved. Fully alone. And that was actually arduous.

Watching this footage is simply mind-blowing. It’s such as you’re proper there within the pit. Within the ’90s, Canadian rock was such a beast. What was it prefer to have a meteoric rise throughout that point?
Johnny Fay: It was enjoyable! I used to be pondering again to a few of the stuff that we had accomplished. We had this one gig we had been actually enthusiastic about, we had been opening for 54-40 on the Spectrum in Montreal. After which a yr to the day later, 54-40 opened for us at Penguin Park in Saskatoon.
I bear in mind speaking to some folks and so they stated to me, “It felt like we had been watching a aircraft take off, and also you guys went into the clouds!”
Having a dialog like that afterwards, it was like, “Actually?” 54-40, Blue Rodeo, The Northern Pikes… we had been all utilizing the identical PA corporations and stuff. We had been touring within the winter, which was fairly treacherous, and the truth that we went via that and lived is a narrative in itself. It was a fairly thrilling time to be a band that was enjoying rock ‘n’ roll on this nation at the moment. There have been some actually, actually nice bands on this nation. After which Nice Massive Sea out east, and it was like, yeah! We had been all doing it and we had been all having enjoyable. It was a good time to be making music as a result of it was pre-phones, which at our final present, that’s all you noticed. Some folks put the telephone down and watched it for actual, however (again then) was a fairly golden age of individuals going and listening to music.
Tragically Hip followers watch the band’s closing present from The Horseshoe Tavern in Toronto.
Prime Video
Canadian success vs. U.S. success: Does it matter if The Tragically Hip had been as in style within the U.S. as they had been in Canada?
Mike Downie: Definitely, after I was setting out to do that doc, I actually wished to reply this query as soon as and for all. As a result of, I really feel, for lots of people, there’s this asterisk about big success in Canada, however not practically as a lot in America. I believe we actually took run at it within the documentary, as a result of the reality is, it actually wasn’t about measuring nation to nation. It was actually this concept of validation that Canadians, particularly within the ’80s and ’90s, we’re our personal artists, our personal something and saying, “Yeah, that’s fairly nice, however what do the People assume?”
Again then it was virtually a parental approval form of factor that we wanted. And that’s what occurred to the Hip. After which after all, it flipped, as a result of then Canadians had been like, “Wait a minute, this implies the whole lot to us. We love this.” And we realized it doesn’t matter what the remainder of the world thinks as a result of it’s ours. That confidence wasn’t actually there earlier than. And I believe the band had this inherent confidence due to this brotherhood and this partnership and this collaboration. The band had this confidence of their songwriting and of their efficiency.
Canadians had been popping out of our shells, rising up within the shadow of Nice Britain and america. It simply took us some time to seek out our footing, and I imagine The Tragically Hip helped transfer that ahead in an enormous method.
The Tragically Hip as younger males, after they first began out.
Prime Video
One factor that stood out concerning the doc, proper off the highest, is that you simply had been all boys with a musical connection, fantasizing about turning into rock stars. And also you grew as much as be members of one of many greatest rock bands in Canadian historical past. Trying again, does it ever really feel like a dream?
Gord Sinclair: Very a lot so, I used to be simply fascinated with this yesterday. When (we had been teenagers), Rush performed the Jock Hardy Area, which is a small half-hockey area, possibly 2,000 folks… I do know most of you had been there with me [gestures at bandmates], as we’re from a small city and this was an enormous, huge live performance. I bear in mind they opened up with Bastille Day, and it was the loudest, most wonderful factor I’ve ever seen. It was really inspiring.
And yesterday we’re sitting there, and right here’s Ged (Geddy Lee, Rush frontman) on TV speaking about our tunes. The 16-year-old me is like, “Wow.” It’s wonderful. I nonetheless have issues trying that man within the eye as a result of it’s Geddy Lee! It’s fairly unimaginable, again after we had been enjoying on tennis racquets as children listening to the Rolling Stones, after which we’re having a pint with them. It’s arduous to imagine.
It’s form of like a dream come true, that degree of inspiration. It speaks to the ability of music for me, as a result of I nonetheless maintain these recollections actually, actually strongly. Music was the one factor I wished to do after seeing Rush play, and as a music fan to have the ability to do this… to have the ability to admire that on a winter’s evening in Saskatoon, or Pigtown, there’s a child on the market who’s possibly pondering the very same factor. You get that sense of group that music creates. Music is a good pressure for good.
—
‘The Tragically Hip: No Costume Rehearsal’ is now streaming throughout Canada on Prime Video.
This interview has been edited and condensed.