Day for Night (The Tragically Hip album)
Day for Night is the fourth studio album by the Canadian rock band The Tragically Hip. It is named for the film of the same name.
Day for Night | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | September 24, 1994 | |||
Studio |
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Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 59:26 | |||
Label | MCA | |||
Producer |
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The Tragically Hip chronology | ||||
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Singles from Day for Night | ||||
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Commercial performance
The album was very successful in Canada, with domestic sales of 300,000 units within four days of its release.[1] It was the band's first album to debut at #1 on the Canadian Albums Chart.[2] The album has been certified 6x platinum in Canada.[3] Promotional tours for the album included stints touring with The Rolling Stones and Page and Plant.[4]
Saturday Night Live
The band appeared on Saturday Night Live in 1995, thanks in large part to the finagling of fellow Canadian and Kingston-area resident Dan Aykroyd. A fan of the band, Aykroyd appeared on the show just to introduce them, despite John Goodman being the host of the episode. The band performed two songs from Day for Night, "Grace, Too" and "Nautical Disaster".[5]
Critical reception
In Have Not Been the Same, the authors note that "the initial response was mixed" due to the "darkness" of the album and its stemming "from the unconscious.".[6] Although AllMusic.com's rating is a lukewarm 3 out of 5, the review calls the album's "signature lyrical mysteries... lush, but much more dark-spirited" than previous albums. "Day for Night stands on the minimalism of Downie's poignancy -- nothing is overproduced and the songs themselves are left alone to arrive on their own." [7] In Chart, Jason Schneider wrote that this was the album that made The Tragically Hip more than "just a rock 'n' roll band... miraculously, the vast distances they had been absorbing for the previous five years merged with the equally limitless vistas of Gord Downie's imagination via a Daniel Lanois-inspired sonic canvas. Day For Night got inside the Canadian psyche in a terrifying way that simple nationalistic tall tales never could. The songs remain gloriously impenetrable, but their landscapes feel like home."[8]
In ChartAttack's three Top 50 Canadian Albums of All Time polls, the album placed #37 in 1996, #13 in 2000 and #21 in 2005.
Track listing
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [9] |
Rolling Stone | (favourable)[10] |
All songs were written by The Tragically Hip.
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Grace, Too" | 5:34 |
2. | "Daredevil" | 3:46 |
3. | "Greasy Jungle" | 4:27 |
4. | "Yawning or Snarling" | 4:54 |
5. | "Fire in the Hole" | 3:16 |
6. | "So Hard Done By" | 3:29 |
7. | "Nautical Disaster" | 4:43 |
8. | "Thugs" | 4:43 |
9. | "Inevitability of Death" | 3:52 |
10. | "Scared" | 5:08 |
11. | "An Inch an Hour" | 3:21 |
12. | "Emergency" | 3:34 |
13. | "Titanic Terrarium" | 4:34 |
14. | "Impossibilium" | 4:05 |
Personnel
- Greg Calbi – Mastering
- Jim Herrington – Photography
- Mark Howard – Producer, Engineer, Mixing
- Andrew McLachlan – Design
- Andrew Simon – Drawing
- Mark Vreeken – Producer, Engineer, Mixing
References
- "A Breakthrough Year For Canadian Acts". Billboard. 24 December 1994. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- "Top Albums/CDs - Volume 60, No. 11, October 03 1994". RPM. Archived from the original on 2017-10-20. Retrieved 2011-12-03.
- "Gold Platinum Database: The Tragically Hip - Day For Night". Archived from the original on 2013-09-21. Retrieved 2011-12-03.
- Have Not Been the Same: The CanRock Renaissance 1985-1995, by Michael Barclay, Ian A. D. Jack, Jason Schneider
- Usinger, Mike (July 17, 2016). "The Tragically Hip's most fabled failure made it Canada's greatest-ever band". The Georgia Straight. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
- Have Not Been the Same: The CanRock Renaissance 1985-1995 By Michael Barclay, Ian A. D. Jack, Jason Schneider
- http://www.allmusic.com/album/day-for-night-mw0000627518
- http://www.chartattack.com/news/2000/06/30/top-50-canadian-albums-of-all-time-20-to-11/
- "Allmusic review".
- "Rolling Stone review".