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"My Music at Work" is a song by Canadian rock group The Tragically Hip. It is the first single and title track from the band's seventh studio album, Music @ Work . The song was a hit in the band's native country, peaking at No. 2 on Canada's Rock chart .
Music @ Work is the seventh studio album by Canadian rock band The Tragically Hip. The album was leaked via the internet six weeks before its official release in June, 2000. [ 4 ] It won the 2001 Juno Award for Best Rock Album .
The Tragically Hip, often referred to simply as the Hip, was a Canadian rock band formed in Kingston, Ontario in 1984, consisting of vocalist Gord Downie, guitarist Paul Langlois, guitarist Rob Baker (known as Bobby Baker until 1994), bassist Gord Sinclair, and drummer Johnny Fay. They released 13 studio albums, one live album, one EP, and over ...
Mike Downie previously worked with his brother on music videos for “Bobcaygeon,” “Something On” and “Poets,” and did his first ever documentary back in 1993 on the Tragically Hip’s ...
The light-hearted music video for "The Darkest One" featured Don Cherry and the Trailer Park Boys. The song "Throwing Off Glass" was also released on the Men with Brooms soundtrack album. At the Juno Awards of 2021 , in the band's first live performance as a unit since Gord Downie 's death in 2017, the band performed "It's a Good Life If You ...
The song is named after Bobcaygeon, Ontario, a town in the Kawartha Lakes region about 160 kilometres (99 mi) northeast of Toronto.The song's narrator works in the city as a police officer, a job he finds stressful and sometimes ponders quitting, but unwinds from the stress and restores his spirit by spending his weekends with a loved one in the rural idyll of Bobcaygeon, where he sees "the ...
Gordon Edgar Downie CM (February 6, 1964 – October 17, 2017) was a Canadian rock singer-songwriter, musician, writer, poet, and activist. He was the singer and lyricist for the Canadian rock band The Tragically Hip, which he fronted from its formation in 1984 until his death in 2017.
The music video for the song features a transition between the band playing on a soundstage and a man locked in a car trunk with his hands tied in rope, as another man (played by the band's road manager Dave Powell) drives the car around the Canadian Prairies. [2] The video was directed by Peter Henderson and produced by Eric Yealland.