August 2001 driving through Saskatchewan from Ft.Mac........queit Sunday Summer Evening & this came on the dial.........we never spoke , just listened, when song was finished we just looked across at each other and smiled.....we never felt so CANADIAN in our lives!
Gord speaks for us all. He tells our stories. He lives our lives. I will never forget him in my life. As noble and Canadian as one can be. Thank you Gord.
Gordie Downie was it, the “Real Thing” in Canadian Music. There were so many performers who came before and so many performers will who arrive after. Don’t get me wrong, there are many performers whom.will make if after Gordie. He was definitely one of the greatest in the world. I’m sure many others would agree with me. I think of Tom Petty, Shania Twain, Anne Murray .. and so, so many more. Thank You to each of the hundreds+ of you, and especially “The Tragically Hip”.
This man and basically the whole band played such a big role in my life when it came to music in the eighties and nineties. One of my all time favorite Canadian bands. Just listening to Gord's voice and lyrics always gave me chills. I was really affected when he died. We miss you and your voice Gord. R.I.P. Ps. I bet your singing away for people up there in Heaven.
Was listening to this on my way home from a camping trip at the lake, driving by the giant hockey stick in Duncan, drinking my Tim Horton's from the drive through, wearing my old Roots shirt. Had a good laugh about how Canadian I am. Thank you boys, for a lifetime catalogue of road trip music ❤
I'm 75 and just really and truly discovered you this weekend after the concert in Kingston and man have I got tears in my eyes ,boy you and the band are for real Peace Bro and God Bless Have Faith Kid
I'm sorry he didn't stick around longer, George. I'm lucky to have seen him perform live a handful of times and get a photo with him on one lucky night at House of Blues in Orlando. RIP Gord. I hope you're still listening.
I'm thirteen and have grown up listening to this amazing band thanks to my mom, this has always been my favourite song along with coffee girl, just watched the tribute to gord downie on CBC cried through the entire thing. So sad rest in peace gord
So glad The Hip made this song as a tribute to an innocent man wrongly convicted and jailed for so many years. Beautiful tribute to David. Glad someone did it. RIP Gord. The Hip are amazing storytellers.
A true master.Any of you people complaining about the way he sings here, use your huge intellect, write a song yourself, sack up, jump on a stage somewhere, and sing it. Otherwise shut your pie hole.
Excellent song! When I was watching the fantastic Kingston concert on CBC, I was asking that all the love being directed at you all across the country, be a catalyst for a spontaneous remission!
Beautiful and peaceful music!! I love 'The Hip' so much... Thanks to Todd, my first canadian costumer for let me know them!! Every time I listen them I´ll remember you!! RIP Gord Downie Thanks for that beautiful music!! Well...so long The Hip......
Fantastic performance and unmistakably the Hip Not Canadian either but wonderful band and RIP great man Been listening to them all day - still sound awesome in 2018
Some of my best memories of living the best Canadian life are marinated in Hip music. Seven years now since Gord left us, and fuck sakes do I miss this dude still. My RUclips algorithm feeds me a Hip video every now and then and I choke up every time. Saw them live when they and I were just young as hell and coming of age, figuring shit out. Saw them several more times when we were older, and again when much much older. Like most of you Canucks reading this, spent the largest junk of my life growing up with this band, they are like family. So happy for having had them, so dam sad for losing them, especially Gord. Rest in peace our old friend, if there is a place where our spirits go when we are done here, I hope we all meet up again.
Wheat Kings references "...Sundown in the Paris of the Prairies." As you'll read below, "Wheat Kings" tells the story of David Milgaard, a young Winnipeg-born hippie wrongly convicted of the grisly rape and murder of Saskatchewan nurse Gail Miller. Long before this incident, during the period of Western Canadian settlement that spanned 1896 to 1914, western immigration agents began flaunting the merits of their soon to be settled towns. As each agent was paid only on the percentage of settlers he could attract, stretching the truth became a common trick of the trade. Winnipeg, which at the turn of the 20th century was a dusty railway stop, was first to be called the "Paris of the Prairies," Calgary also billed itself as such later on. One pamphlet for Saskatoon, the town where the Milgaard saga unfolded, read: "The fastest growing city in the world, an astounding modern miracle. The eight wonder of the British Empire, it is the largest city in the world for it's age. The greatest example of town and city building in the worlds history." "...Wheat Kings have all their treasures buried." Atlantic Canada was built on endless fish stocks coupled with skilled and fearless maritime labourers. Central Canada was developed by the fur traders and couriers du bois. And in the Canadian West, the "breadbasket to the world," wheat was certainly king. Western Canada's wheat farmers and grain growers were known as Wheat Kings after the development of Marquis Wheat. This strain was specifically designed and engineered at the Canadian Experimental Farm in Ottawa. It grew in accordance with the shorter Canadian harvesting season. Without this development, it is questionable whether the West would have grown as fast, or at all. "Marquis" is French and refers to nobility or royalty. "...Twenty years for nothing, well that's nothing new Besides, no one's interested in something you didn't do." The Milgaard story is unfortunately one in a too-long list of wrongful convictions in Canada. Guy Paul Morin, Donald Marshall and Stephen Truscott have been through what Milgaard experienced. However none were so young at the time of their conviction, or lost so much of their lives, as David Milgaard. It may be a testament to the advocacy, appeal and investigative zeal of Canadian lawyers and legal professionals that so many high profile cases have been successfully overturned. Yet it may also point to a dark and shameful blight on the record of Canadian crime and punishment. In January of 1969, Milgaard and two friends took a road trip to Saskatoon. On the same night that the trio intended to briefly visit their friend Albert Cadrain, Gail Miller was attacked and killed in a downtown alley. Such a crime shook Saskatoon, and the local police were under serious pressure to find the killer and halt the minor hysteria that was spreading through the quiet Prairie town. After four months of no leads, the police used high pressure interview tactics and a $2,000 reward to coax a statement out of Cadrain. Although he and David's fellow road trippers kept changing their stories, Saskatoon's finest felt they had their man. The jury showed no sympathy for the hippie who had already been convicted of petty theft and taking a truck for a joyride at age 14. The evidence seemed to fit, especially since such a horrific murder had to have been committed by an outsider. No one in idyllic Saskatoon could do such a thing, the police had said so themselves. David became a 17 year old convicted murderer and was condemned to spend the next 23 years of his life in prison. Perhaps the most poignant and powerful aspect of the Milgaard story is that even though David had 20 opportunities for parole during his sentence, he did not once make a request for an early release. This would have required him to admit to the crime, something he was never prepared to do. Had David accepted responsibility for Gail Miller's death, he could have been released. "...Hung with pictures of our parents prime ministers." While David's life wasted away as a convicted murderer, five Prime Ministers of Canada held office and oversaw more than a dozen ministers of justice. Joyce Milgaard, David's mother and this story's heroic figure outside the prison walls, lobbied and personally pleaded her sons case with at least two of them. "...Late breaking story on the CBC A nation whispers, we always knew that he'd go free" Joyce Milgaard made it her life's mission to champion the cause of her wrongly convicted son. She was the public persona of the struggle to free David. She managed to famously confront Prime Minister Mulroney on television and demand a new trial. The CBC, which is Canada's publicly funded national broadcaster, not only gave heavy coverage to the Milgaard story on its newscasts, but also exposed the flaws and unanswered questions of David's initial conviction during special editions of their "Fifth Estate" and "The Journal" programs. Joyce Milgaard appeared on the networks popular "Front Page Challenge" to explain David's plight. She also managed to confront future prime minister, then Mulroney's justice minister, Kim Campbell. The CBC's cameras caught all of it. On April 16, 1992, after David had spent 8,355 days behind bars, CBC anchorman Peter Mansbridge announced what everyone knew was coming: David Milgaard was finally a free man. In 1997, Milgaard was completely cleared of the crime and legally absolved of all charges when DNA evidence proved he could not have killed Gail Miller. The same evidence linked another convicted killer with the murder. David accepted a 10 million dollar settlement from the Canadian and Saskatchewan governments. Although physically free, the ordeal took a psychological toll on David. Some incidents were publicly reported. His recovery and reconciliation process was long and difficult. Its early stages included a 1993 trip to meet The Tragically Hip and hear "Wheat Kings" played live for, and dedicated to, David Milgaard. Rob Baker told Ottawa radio station Chez 106 (and perhaps other affiliated stations) in 2016 that the famous loon call at the beginning of Wheat Kings was the source of some controversy. It seems the man who originally recorded that call recognized his work and send the band a legal threat. "We had to cut a substantial cheque in his name to Ducks Unlimited," recalled Rob.
It's based on a true story about an innocent man being convicted and no one is interested in the fact that he did nothing wrong. Our disgrace of a justice system in Canada.
This song was played after I did a college radio interview, and announced the death of a former college hockey player who was a popular guy. That was Mt. A in Sackville back in 1992. Another life time.
In my humble uneducated opinion a terrific song. Beautiful music and lyrics about an awful thing that happened to two innocent people. I remember I was around 18 when he was released. We talked about it at the dinner table and it was exactly my parents opinion that it was unfortunate that he was wrongfully convicted but it happens. We just move on from it. Just like the lyrics, 20 years for nothing well that’s nothing besides no ones interested is something you didn’t do. A nation whispers we always knew that he’d go free. I remember my old man saying he knew he was innocent.
RIP David Milgaard, I'm sure you and Gord will be able to have a beer together! Beautiful version of this song
August 2001 driving through Saskatchewan from Ft.Mac........queit Sunday Summer Evening & this came on the dial.........we never spoke , just listened, when song was finished we just looked across at each other and smiled.....we never felt so CANADIAN in our lives!
sammycircle iii
Love it
Gord speaks for us all. He tells our stories. He lives our lives. I will never forget him in my life. As noble and Canadian as one can be. Thank you Gord.
Aww what a sweet man. RIP Gord. Canada mourns your loss.
TheRazzaManazza i
Gordie Downie was it, the “Real Thing” in Canadian Music. There were so many performers who came before and so many performers will who arrive after. Don’t get me wrong, there are many performers whom.will make if after Gordie. He was definitely one of the greatest in the world. I’m sure many others would agree with me. I think of Tom Petty, Shania Twain, Anne Murray .. and so, so many more.
Thank You to each of the hundreds+ of you, and especially “The Tragically Hip”.
I’m canoeing on a frozen riverbank listening to him.
❤️❤️❤️❤️💔💔💔💔💔🤟🤟🤟🤟🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
Ever day ..tears. But pride. Sad news to cancer sucks
So sorry David....😢😢
This man and basically the whole band played such a big role in my life when it came to music in the eighties and nineties. One of my all time favorite Canadian bands. Just listening to Gord's voice and lyrics always gave me chills. I was really affected when he died. We miss you and your voice Gord. R.I.P. Ps. I bet your singing away for people up there in Heaven.
Was listening to this on my way home from a camping trip at the lake, driving by the giant hockey stick in Duncan, drinking my Tim Horton's from the drive through, wearing my old Roots shirt. Had a good laugh about how Canadian I am. Thank you boys, for a lifetime catalogue of road trip music ❤
Cringe
This is awesome!
Rest In Peace, David Milgaard.
Wow sometimes it's too much to think he is no longer here. Love that amazing voice.
I've seen them live 12 times they are my favorite live band and I'm not Canadian
Me too 9 times and only once in my Florida hometown. Usually 400 miles or more and always well worth it!
YES YOU ARE
Maybe a little… 🥳
Hands down, the greatest front man in history. I regret not discovering this band when i was younger.
Me too
You’re not wrong. He was mesmerizing live.
I'm from Québec, and that song was a significant part of my teens. I've got to drive west one day.
I'm 75 and just really and truly discovered you this weekend after the concert in Kingston and man have I got tears in my eyes ,boy you and the band are for real Peace Bro and God Bless Have Faith Kid
that was a nice message George
thumbs up !
George Pavlov beautiful
I'm sorry he didn't stick around longer, George. I'm lucky to have seen him perform live a handful of times and get a photo with him on one lucky night at House of Blues in Orlando. RIP Gord. I hope you're still listening.
you still here man?
This song still makes me cry. RIP David. RIP Gord.
😢❤
I'm thirteen and have grown up listening to this amazing band thanks to my mom, this has always been my favourite song along with coffee girl, just watched the tribute to gord downie on CBC cried through the entire thing. So sad rest in peace gord
You are being raised right. You need to go thank your parents right now!
Ken Bald dont worry i have. many, manyy times
I'm 14, can totally relate to you. Rip gord. Hip forever
Missing You....💜🙏
Awesome steel mr. Bakker
Sigh what a loss - Gord was one of Canada's poets - brilliant mind - I miss this band
This version is simply amazing,I love the slide guitar
Hello,I'm Smith Greg, What's your name?
i think its called a steel guitar here
A true inspiration. Truly the Canadian Shakespeare.
CANADA misses Him still!
Lyrical genius. I hope his loved ones can feel our nations love. Such a big part of our lives. Thank you Gord. ❤
Miss you Gord 😔 the world needs you more than ever right now
RIP Mr. Downie .. thank you for everything
Dont know why today..I need to listen to the Tragically Hip.
Unbelievable! I have been so so so fortunate to see The Hip from beginning to the future. I saw a rainbow today and I thought of you.
So glad The Hip made this song as a tribute to an innocent man wrongly convicted and jailed for so many years. Beautiful tribute to David. Glad someone did it. RIP Gord. The Hip are amazing storytellers.
This song gives me goosebumps. Brilliant writing
An ode to Milgaard. god rest his soul
Beautiful person and voice. My fav song.
RIP Gord. A country mourns
I wicked song written for a innocent man. I speand 19 years inside . Could not imagine if I was innocent.
This song makes me cry. David Milgaard is still fresh in my mind.
All I think Is how they never knew their band would be cut short due to a tumor at this time 😥 Love this one ❤
Clone Gord and bring him back. He is ahead by a century
@@San-w5p4i He had courage. And grace, too.
What a beautiful tribute to David, THANK YOU GUYS FOR SUCH A BEAUTIFUL SONG.
The Hip like Terry Fox, Tommy Douglas, David Suzuki, Don Cherry, Wayne Gretzky and many others are Canadian Royalty.
A true master.Any of you people complaining about the way he sings here, use your huge intellect, write a song yourself, sack up, jump on a stage somewhere, and sing it. Otherwise shut your pie hole.
Beautiful song by an incredible band about a horrible injustice
Proud to grow up neighbors to Canada. had many many good rimes on Canadian side of Niagara falls Clifton hill Canadian side amazing 😊
the song for my first dance at my wedding!
Really..? Do you know what the song is about..?
Rest in peace David. I only knew for a while but you are a true example of resilence and kindness.
still gives me goosebumps.
Miss these guys and Gord so much. 💙 💔🕯🙏🏼
Hello I'm smith Greg what's your name?
Bye Gord. So many memories attached to so many songs. You will be forever be missed and forever remembered. 😢
There never has been and there never will be another Gord. You are missed, my dear.
Excellent song! When I was watching the fantastic Kingston concert on CBC, I was asking that all the love being directed at you all across the country, be a catalyst for a spontaneous remission!
Hello I'm smith Greg what's your name?
We will appreciate what youve done man -Alberta
RIP DAVID ❤ SO DEEPLY SORRY NO ONE WOULD LISTEN & THAT YOU SPENT ALL THOSE YEARS TRYING TO PROVE YOUR INNOCENCE. ❤😢❤ YOU WERE SUCH A GREAT MAN ❤️😢❤️
My favorite hip song miss you gord❤
I Love & Live The Hip.
we all miss you Gord. you are a legend.
So good!! Man… missing Gord and The Hip.
R.I.P. Gord. You were a great talent.
Thanks for the memories Gord, Canada will miss you...
I like simplicity.
🌾I heard these guys on Spot***y about 9 months ago. I have loved everything I've heard from them. Awesome.. 👍❤ If one has passed it is tragic..
A tear in my eye......
Hello I'm smith Greg what's your name?
Miss this legend
rip gord , love the hip
Beautiful and peaceful music!! I love 'The Hip' so much... Thanks to Todd, my first canadian costumer for let me know them!! Every time I listen them I´ll remember you!! RIP Gord Downie
Thanks for that beautiful music!! Well...so long The Hip......
There are MANY stains on this country BUT look towards the future and make it better in the GREATEST country..
LOVE you CANADA and alll Canadians..🥰🥰
love this song. played downtown kitchner by the fountain. first song I played on my new guitar.
Fantastic performance and unmistakably the Hip
Not Canadian either but wonderful band and RIP great man
Been listening to them all day - still sound awesome in 2018
Happy He Was Chosen 💯💞💘💝🔥🔥
Some of my best memories of living the best Canadian life are marinated in Hip music. Seven years now since Gord left us, and fuck sakes do I miss this dude still. My RUclips algorithm feeds me a Hip video every now and then and I choke up every time. Saw them live when they and I were just young as hell and coming of age, figuring shit out. Saw them several more times when we were older, and again when much much older. Like most of you Canucks reading this, spent the largest junk of my life growing up with this band, they are like family. So happy for having had them, so dam sad for losing them, especially Gord. Rest in peace our old friend, if there is a place where our spirits go when we are done here, I hope we all meet up again.
We miss ya
Gord
If you listening up there
We miss ya buds
I love it it one of my Favorite Songs of my life
Gord's like an awesome box of chocolates. You never know what you're gonna get but it's always fucking good!
By far my favourite tragically hip song
well...i don't think i could handle watching this guy perform but i have to say they're dam good performing love
Being from Kingston (garage band) ...aren't they awesome? I love them tremendoulsy!! A fan forverrrrrrrrrr
Was at this concert. The only time I got to see them.
The 2009 tour was my favorite. Great shows.
Thirty one people, as of this counting, have no soul. Goodbye Gordon, you will be missed.
loved this song
why the the past tense brother?
All things Hip, my go to music.
Long live the memories 😢
goodbye Gord. thanks for the memories!
..no one's interested in something you didnt do. effing brilliant
I hear ya man...great line!!!
Wheat Kings references
"...Sundown in the Paris of the Prairies."
As you'll read below, "Wheat Kings" tells the story of David Milgaard, a young Winnipeg-born hippie wrongly convicted of the grisly rape and murder of Saskatchewan nurse Gail Miller.
Long before this incident, during the period of Western Canadian settlement that spanned 1896 to 1914, western immigration agents began flaunting the merits of their soon to be settled towns. As each agent was paid only on the percentage of settlers he could attract, stretching the truth became a common trick of the trade. Winnipeg, which at the turn of the 20th century was a dusty railway stop, was first to be called the "Paris of the Prairies," Calgary also billed itself as such later on. One pamphlet for Saskatoon, the town where the Milgaard saga unfolded, read: "The fastest growing city in the world, an astounding modern miracle. The eight wonder of the British Empire, it is the largest city in the world for it's age. The greatest example of town and city building in the worlds history."
"...Wheat Kings have all their treasures buried."
Atlantic Canada was built on endless fish stocks coupled with skilled and fearless maritime labourers. Central Canada was developed by the fur traders and couriers du bois. And in the Canadian West, the "breadbasket to the world," wheat was certainly king. Western Canada's wheat farmers and grain growers were known as Wheat Kings after the development of Marquis Wheat. This strain was specifically designed and engineered at the Canadian Experimental Farm in Ottawa. It grew in accordance with the shorter Canadian harvesting season. Without this development, it is questionable whether the West would have grown as fast, or at all. "Marquis" is French and refers to nobility or royalty.
"...Twenty years for nothing, well that's nothing new
Besides, no one's interested in something you didn't do."
The Milgaard story is unfortunately one in a too-long list of wrongful convictions in Canada. Guy Paul Morin, Donald Marshall and Stephen Truscott have been through what Milgaard experienced. However none were so young at the time of their conviction, or lost so much of their lives, as David Milgaard. It may be a testament to the advocacy, appeal and investigative zeal of Canadian lawyers and legal professionals that so many high profile cases have been successfully overturned. Yet it may also point to a dark and shameful blight on the record of Canadian crime and punishment.
In January of 1969, Milgaard and two friends took a road trip to Saskatoon. On the same night that the trio intended to briefly visit their friend Albert Cadrain, Gail Miller was attacked and killed in a downtown alley. Such a crime shook Saskatoon, and the local police were under serious pressure to find the killer and halt the minor hysteria that was spreading through the quiet Prairie town. After four months of no leads, the police used high pressure interview tactics and a $2,000 reward to coax a statement out of Cadrain. Although he and David's fellow road trippers kept changing their stories, Saskatoon's finest felt they had their man.
The jury showed no sympathy for the hippie who had already been convicted of petty theft and taking a truck for a joyride at age 14. The evidence seemed to fit, especially since such a horrific murder had to have been committed by an outsider. No one in idyllic Saskatoon could do such a thing, the police had said so themselves. David became a 17 year old convicted murderer and was condemned to spend the next 23 years of his life in prison.
Perhaps the most poignant and powerful aspect of the Milgaard story is that even though David had 20 opportunities for parole during his sentence, he did not once make a request for an early release. This would have required him to admit to the crime, something he was never prepared to do. Had David accepted responsibility for Gail Miller's death, he could have been released.
"...Hung with pictures of our parents prime ministers."
While David's life wasted away as a convicted murderer, five Prime Ministers of Canada held office and oversaw more than a dozen ministers of justice. Joyce Milgaard, David's mother and this story's heroic figure outside the prison walls, lobbied and personally pleaded her sons case with at least two of them.
"...Late breaking story on the CBC
A nation whispers, we always knew that he'd go free"
Joyce Milgaard made it her life's mission to champion the cause of her wrongly convicted son. She was the public persona of the struggle to free David. She managed to famously confront Prime Minister Mulroney on television and demand a new trial.
The CBC, which is Canada's publicly funded national broadcaster, not only gave heavy coverage to the Milgaard story on its newscasts, but also exposed the flaws and unanswered questions of David's initial conviction during special editions of their "Fifth Estate" and "The Journal" programs. Joyce Milgaard appeared on the networks popular "Front Page Challenge" to explain David's plight. She also managed to confront future prime minister, then Mulroney's justice minister, Kim Campbell. The CBC's cameras caught all of it.
On April 16, 1992, after David had spent 8,355 days behind bars, CBC anchorman Peter Mansbridge announced what everyone knew was coming: David Milgaard was finally a free man.
In 1997, Milgaard was completely cleared of the crime and legally absolved of all charges when DNA evidence proved he could not have killed Gail Miller. The same evidence linked another convicted killer with the murder. David accepted a 10 million dollar settlement from the Canadian and Saskatchewan governments.
Although physically free, the ordeal took a psychological toll on David. Some incidents were publicly reported. His recovery and reconciliation process was long and difficult. Its early stages included a 1993 trip to meet The Tragically Hip and hear "Wheat Kings" played live for, and dedicated to, David Milgaard.
Rob Baker told Ottawa radio station Chez 106 (and perhaps other affiliated stations) in 2016 that the famous loon call at the beginning of Wheat Kings was the source of some controversy. It seems the man who originally recorded that call recognized his work and send the band a legal threat. "We had to cut a substantial cheque in his name to Ducks Unlimited," recalled Rob.
It's based on a true story about an innocent man being convicted and no one is interested in the fact that he did nothing wrong. Our disgrace of a justice system in Canada.
This song was played after I did a college radio interview, and announced the death of a former college hockey player who was a popular guy. That was Mt. A in Sackville back in 1992. Another life time.
Love this song.
I love the wider vocal range and the amped up expressions this version gifts us with. Slower=more I think.
Hello I'm smith Greg what's your name?
Luv
This band is magic
In my humble uneducated opinion a terrific song. Beautiful music and lyrics about an awful thing that happened to two innocent people.
I remember I was around 18 when he was released. We talked about it at the dinner table and it was exactly my parents opinion that it was unfortunate that he was wrongfully convicted but it happens. We just move on from it. Just like the lyrics, 20 years for nothing well that’s nothing besides no ones interested is something you didn’t do. A nation whispers we always knew that he’d go free. I remember my old man saying he knew he was innocent.
🎶 💜
Sweet Gord, may you rest in peace.
Hello I'm smith Greg what's your name?
RIP Gordon. Hey man, thanks.
The way Gord sings it here is really cool
yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Really good...
Love hip
chills
RIP Gord Downie!
No ones interested in something you didn't do!!!!!! Get after it-pitter patter
❤
Glory days of Canada. Now the biggest bands in Canada sing in Punjabi
🙏
Seven years since Gordie passed, sadly missed