Fully Completely
Fully Completely is the third studio album by the Canadian rock band The Tragically Hip, released on October 6, 1992, and produced by Chris Tsangarides.[1][2]
The album features twelve tracks, including notable singles such as "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)", "At the Hundredth Meridian", and "Locked in the Trunk of a Car", characterized by the band's signature blend of alternative rock with cryptic, Canada-centric lyrics exploring themes of history, identity, and geography.[3][4]
Fully Completely achieved significant commercial success in Canada, debuting at number one on the RPM albums chart, selling over 200,000 copies within five weeks of release, and eventually earning diamond certification for sales exceeding one million units.[4][5]
Critically acclaimed for refining the band's sound and lyrical style, it contributed to their breakthrough as Canada's premier rock act, earning a Juno Award for Rock Album of the Year in 1993 and later recognition including a high retrospective rating from Pitchfork.[6][7][8]
Background and Development
Prior Albums and Band Evolution
The Tragically Hip originated in Kingston, Ontario, where core members Gord Downie (vocals), Rob Baker (guitar), Johnny Fay (drums), and Gord Sinclair (bass) began performing together in the early 1980s as high school friends, initially incorporating saxophone before Paul Langlois joined on rhythm guitar in 1986.[9] [10] The band honed a raw rock and roll style influenced by 1970s acts like the Rolling Stones, building a local following through relentless live performances at university bars and small venues around Queen's University.[11] This grassroots approach emphasized energetic shows over immediate commercial success, fostering a dedicated Canadian audience amid the 1980s new wave landscape.[12] Their debut full-length album, Up to Here, released on September 5, 1989, via MCA Records, marked their breakthrough with blues-infused rock tracks recorded at Ardent Studios in Memphis, Tennessee.[13] Key singles included "Blow at High Dough" and "New Orleans Is Sinking," which propelled extensive touring across Canada and introduced Downie's stream-of-consciousness lyrics paired with driving guitar riffs and rhythmic grooves.[11] The album's 11 tracks, spanning 43 minutes, solidified their roots rock foundation while highlighting improvisational live energy translated to studio polish, achieving gold certification in Canada through word-of-mouth and radio play.[13] Following this momentum, Road Apples arrived on February 19, 1991, recorded in September 1990 at Ultrasonic Studios in New Orleans, Louisiana, expanding their sound with humid, southern-tinged production that amplified gritty textures and narrative depth.[14] [15] Singles such as "Little Bones," "Twist My Arm," and "Long Time Running" drove further chart success, with the 12-track, 49-minute release earning platinum status in Canada and reinforcing themes of personal struggle and regional identity through Downie's evocative storytelling.[15] The album's reception underscored the band's maturation, blending arena-ready hooks with introspective edges honed by non-stop tours totaling hundreds of shows by 1991.[14] This progression from Up to Here's raw debut to Road Apples' refined grit reflected the band's evolution toward a signature Canadian rock idiom: jangly guitars, propulsive basslines, and lyrics rooted in everyday realism rather than abstraction, all while prioritizing live circuit dominance over U.S. breakthroughs.[11] [14] By late 1991, with two platinum albums and a JUNO Award for Group of the Year in 1990, the Hip had transitioned from regional act to national staple, setting the stage for deeper historical and thematic explorations in subsequent work through intensified road-testing of material.[16]Inspirations for the Album
The inspirations for Fully Completely primarily stemmed from frontman Gord Downie's deep engagement with Canadian history, cultural icons, and literary influences, which he wove into narrative-driven lyrics emphasizing national specificity and introspection rather than universal rock tropes. Downie drew from real events and figures to craft songs that evoked a distinctly Canadian ethos, often blending tragedy, resilience, and myth-making without overt didacticism. This approach marked a maturation in his songwriting, prioritizing poetic ambiguity and historical allusion over straightforward storytelling, as seen in the album's reliance on obscure yet resonant references to foster a sense of shared cultural memory.[4] Key tracks illustrate this: "Fifty-Mission Cap" was inspired by Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman Bill Barilko, who scored the 1951 Stanley Cup-winning goal and vanished shortly after on a fishing trip, with the team enduring an 11-year drought until his plane wreckage was discovered in 1962, symbolizing hockey's grip on Canadian identity.[17] Similarly, "Locked in the Trunk of a Car" references the 1970 October Crisis, specifically the abduction and murder of Quebec Labour Minister Pierre Laporte by Front de libération du Québec (FLQ) militants, whose body was found in a car trunk after a broadcast tip-off, capturing themes of political violence and remorse from the perpetrator's perspective.[17] "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)" pays homage to Canadian author Hugh MacLennan, echoing phrases from his novel The Watch That Ends the Night to explore perseverance amid inexplicable hardship.[4] Other songs expanded this historical lens, such as "Wheat Kings," rooted in David Milgaard's wrongful conviction for a 1969 Saskatchewan murder, leading to 23 years of imprisonment before his 1997 exoneration via DNA evidence, highlighting injustices in the justice system. "Looking for a Place to Happen" alludes to explorer Jacques Cartier's 16th-century voyages, tying into broader motifs of searching for belonging in Canada's vast landscape. These elements collectively reflect Downie's muse as a curator of overlooked Canadian tales, informed by research into archives, news accounts, and personal reflections, rather than fictional invention, underscoring the album's role in elevating regional lore to universal emotional resonance.[4][17]Recording and Production
Studio Environment and Timeline
The recording sessions for Fully Completely occurred at Battery Studios, an independent facility located in Willesden, northwest London, England, during the summer of 1992.[18] The studio, established in 1980, featured spacious live rooms designed for ensemble tracking, providing an airy and versatile environment conducive to rock band performances.[19] Its secure perimeter, including high walls and barbed wire, isolated the sessions from external distractions, enabling focused work in a professional setting equipped with a range of analog and digital recording tools.[20] Producer Chris Tsangarides, known for his work with acts like Judas Priest and Concrete Blonde, oversaw the sessions, emphasizing a live band approach to capture the group's raw energy while refining their sound for broader appeal.[18] This marked a departure from prior albums produced domestically by Don Smith, with Tsangarides' international experience influencing a more structured yet dynamic process tailored to the band's evolving style.[21] The tight timeline—from summer tracking to mixing at the same studio and mastering—facilitated a swift completion, aligning with the album's release on October 6, 1992, via MCA Records.[18]Production Techniques and Challenges
The album Fully Completely was produced by Chris Tsangarides, a British engineer known for his work with acts like Judas Priest and Thin Lizzy, at Battery Studios in London, England, commencing in the spring of 1992 and spanning over five weeks.[10][22] This marked a departure from the band's prior collaborations with producer Don Smith on Up to Here (1989) and Road Apples (1991), which favored a raw, live-in-the-room recording ethos to mirror their energetic stage performances.[23] Tsangarides instead adopted a layered approach, constructing tracks through overdubs and meticulous instrument-by-instrument assembly, which enhanced clarity and separation in the mix while yielding a polished, radio-friendly rock sound.[23][22] Gord Downie's lead vocals were tracked in a compressed three-day window toward the end of the sessions, prioritizing immediacy and emotional delivery over extensive takes to preserve lyrical spontaneity amid the album's thematic density.[24] This technique contrasted with the more iterative processes of earlier albums, reflecting Tsangarides' emphasis on efficiency and band cohesion under studio pressure. Instrumentation featured prominent guitars from Paul Langlois and Rob Baker, with Baker's suggestion of Tsangarides driving the producer selection to inject fresh dynamics into arrangements like the driving riffs in "Fifty-Mission Cap."[23] Key challenges arose from the stylistic shift: the band grappled with Tsangarides' methodical, effects-heavy methods, which initially clashed with their preference for organic capture, leading to some reservations about losing the unpolished vitality of live recordings.[25] Relocating to London also imposed logistical strains, including cultural adjustment and intensified creative scrutiny during an exploratory phase for the group, as they sought to refine their sound without alienating core fans.[26] Despite these hurdles, the production elevated the album's commercial viability, achieving diamond certification in Canada through its balanced blend of arena-scale energy and intricate detailing.[24]Musical Style and Composition
Instrumentation and Arrangements
The core instrumentation on Fully Completely comprises the Tragically Hip's longstanding quintet lineup: lead vocals by Gord Downie, guitars by Rob Baker and Paul Langlois (with Langlois also providing backing vocals), bass guitar and backing vocals by Gord Sinclair, and drums by Johnny Fay.[1][2] Album credits list no guest musicians, session players, keyboards, or other supplementary instruments beyond this configuration.[1] Song arrangements emphasize the interplay between Baker's and Langlois's guitars, featuring layered riffs, rhythmic drive, and occasional harmonic overlays that support Downie's lyrical delivery within mid-tempo rock structures.[27] Producer Chris Tsangarides, known for work with heavy metal acts, prioritized capturing the band's live performance energy through clear instrument separation and prominent vocals, diverging from the rawer production of prior albums like Road Apples.[27] This approach yielded a polished yet dynamic sound, evident in tracks like "At the Hundredth Meridian," where guitar textures build tension alongside steady bass and drum patterns.[7]Songwriting Approach
The Tragically Hip's songwriting for Fully Completely centered on lead vocalist Gord Downie's lyrics, which drew extensively from Canadian historical events, literature, and cultural touchstones to create narrative-driven songs, marking a maturation in his poetic style compared to earlier, more whimsical efforts.[4] Downie incorporated specific real-life stories, such as the 1970 abduction and murder of Quebec Labour Minister Pierre Laporte by the Front de libération du Québec (FLQ) during the October Crisis, into tracks like "Locked in the Trunk of a Car," narrated from the perpetrator's perspective and referencing details like the body's discovery in a car trunk following a radio broadcast.[17] Similarly, "Wheat Kings" addressed the wrongful conviction of David Milgaard for a 1969 Saskatchewan murder, evoking rural Canadian imagery with loon calls, while "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)" paraphrased themes from the Canadian author's novel The Watch That Ends the Night, emphasizing complex human motivations with lines like "There's no simple explanation / For anything important any of us do."[4][17] The band's musical contributions involved collaborative jamming to build arrangements around Downie's words, with input from all members—guitarists Rob Baker and Paul Langlois, bassist Gord Sinclair, and drummer Johnny Fay—ensuring songs evolved through group refinement rather than individual dominance. This process reflected Downie's broader philosophy of iterative practice, where writing stemmed from lived experiences and required honing through repetition, allowing lyrics to integrate personal observation with factual anchors like explorer Jacques Cartier in "Looking for a Place to Happen" or hockey player Bill Barilko's 1951 plane crash disappearance in "Fifty-Mission Cap."[28][4] The result was an album where lyrics prioritized causal storytelling over abstraction, grounding emotional and thematic depth in verifiable historical realism.[17]Lyrics and Themes
Narrative Storytelling
The lyrics of Fully Completely are distinguished by Gord Downie's narrative storytelling technique, which constructs self-contained vignettes blending fictionalized drama with factual anchors, often unfolding like short stories or cinematic scenes to evoke emotional and cultural resonance. This approach prioritizes character-driven plots, sensory details, and temporal progression, allowing listeners to inhabit the perspectives of protagonists facing moral dilemmas, historical upheavals, or personal reckonings. Downie's method draws from literary influences, emphasizing causality and consequence over abstract poetry, as evidenced in songs where events cascade from inciting incidents to unresolved climaxes.[17][7] In "Locked in the Trunk of a Car," the narrative builds suspense through a first-person account of confinement and impending doom, mirroring the real 1970 kidnapping of Quebec Labour Minister Pierre Laporte by Front de libération du Québec militants during the October Crisis; Laporte was strangled and left in a car trunk on October 17, 1970. The lyrics trace the victim's sensory isolation—darkness, muffled sounds, futile escape attempts—culminating in resignation, transforming historical reportage into a claustrophobic thriller that underscores themes of vulnerability and state fragility. Downie confirmed the song's basis in Laporte's fate, using the story to explore powerlessness without explicit moralizing.[17] "Fifty-Mission Cap" employs a biographical narrative arc chronicling Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman Bill Barilko's 1951 Stanley Cup-winning goal followed by his mysterious disappearance in a 1951 plane crash while fishing; the "fifty-mission cap," a World War II bomber crew memento, symbolizes elusive glory and untimely loss. The song's structure mimics a fan's obsessive retelling, layering archival details—like Barilko's overtime goal on April 21, 1951—with mythic undertones of fate, where the cap's preservation in Leafs lore parallels the hockey drought ending only in 1967. This storytelling device personalizes collective memory, framing individual heroism against broader existential voids.[17] "Wheat Kings" delivers a linear injustice tale based on David Milgaard's 1969 wrongful conviction for the murder of Gail Miller in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, leading to 23 years of imprisonment until DNA evidence exonerated him on July 21, 1997; the narrative voice shifts between observer and accused, detailing procedural failures, small-town prejudice, and enduring scars through stark imagery like "wheat kings have built our prison walls." Downie's restraint in resolution amplifies the story's realism, highlighting systemic flaws via cause-effect chains rather than sentiment, a technique he refined to distill complex human tragedies into accessible, haunting prose.[17]References to Canadian History and Identity
The album Fully Completely draws extensively on Canadian historical events, geographical markers, and cultural symbols in its lyrics, embedding narratives that resonate with themes of national injustice, sporting mythology, literary heritage, and regional divides. These allusions, often drawn from Gord Downie's fascination with lesser-known stories, position the record as a touchstone for Canadian self-reflection, distinguishing it from broader rock archetypes by prioritizing localized specificity over universal abstraction.[4][29] "Wheat Kings," the album's closing track, recounts the wrongful conviction of David Milgaard, a 17-year-old from Winnipeg convicted in 1970 for the 1969 rape and murder of Saskatoon nurse Gail Miller despite lacking physical evidence linking him to the crime. Milgaard served 23 years in prison before DNA evidence exonerated him in 1997, exposing flaws in the Canadian justice system's handling of eyewitness testimony and forensic practices during the era. The song's imagery of prairie vastness and institutional betrayal—"20 years for nothing and that's nothing new"—highlights systemic failures in Western Canada's legal landscape, predating Milgaard's official vindication and amplifying public awareness of the case.[30][31] "Fifty-Mission Cap" evokes the lore of hockey as a cornerstone of Canadian identity through the story of Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman Bill Barilko, who scored the overtime goal securing the 1951 Stanley Cup on April 21, 1951, before vanishing in a floatplane crash over northern Quebec on August 26, 1951, during a fishing excursion. Barilko's body and wreckage were recovered in 1962 near Button Bay, coinciding with the Leafs' subsequent Cup victory and fueling superstitions about his "curse" on the team. Lyrics like "Bill Barilko disappeared that summer / He was on a fishing trip" romanticize this episode, underscoring hockey's grip on collective memory and the rugged, frontier ethos of mid-20th-century Canada.[32][33] The opening track, "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)," pays homage to the Canadian novelist Hugh MacLennan (1907–1990), whose works such as Two Solitudes (1945) dissected the English-French cultural schism and national fragmentation post-Confederation. Downie's tribute frames artistic persistence amid obscurity—"Watch the band through a bunch of dancers / Quickly follow the unknown / You got to do it for yourself"—mirroring MacLennan's themes of individual resolve against societal indifference, thereby linking personal endeavor to broader Canadian literary traditions of grappling with unity and isolation.[34] "At the Hundredth Meridian" references the 100th meridian west, a longitudinal line traversing the Prairies that climatologically separates the humid east from the arid west, symbolizing economic and cultural shifts toward resource extraction and isolation in Alberta and Saskatchewan. The song critiques Eastern presumptions about the West—"Me debunk an American myth? / And take my life in my hands?"—while nodding to oil culture and urban-rural tensions, encapsulating debates over regional identity within Confederation since the 19th-century westward expansion.[35] Additional nods include "Looking for a Place to Happen," which invokes explorer Jacques Cartier (1491–1557), who claimed the St. Lawrence Valley for France in 1534–1542, evoking foundational myths of European settlement and the search for purpose in Canada's expansive terrain. These elements collectively forge a mosaic of historical specificity, fostering a sense of shared inheritance that elevated the Tragically Hip's status as chroniclers of Canadian particularity.[29]Artwork and Packaging
Cover Design Process
The cover artwork for Fully Completely was commissioned from Dutch artist Lieve Prins following a suggestion by Tragically Hip guitarist Rob Baker.[26] Baker, who had encountered Prins's prior collage-style works, proposed to the band's art director a theme evoking a bacchanalian or pagan revelry scene to capture the album's energetic and thematic spirit.[26] Prins executed the design as a mixed-media collage produced primarily through a Canon colour laser copier process in 1992.[36] This involved photocopying and layering approximately 30 distinct images, which were then pasted and assembled to form the final composition.[37] The resulting surreal tableau features intertwined figures in dynamic poses, including nude women dancing amid abstract and symbolic elements, creating a dense, visually intricate scene that rewards close inspection.[38] Upon completion, the band purchased the original physical artwork from Prins, integrating a reproduction into the album packaging released on October 6, 1992.[39] This hands-on acquisition reflected the group's appreciation for the piece's alignment with the record's raw, unpolished aesthetic and thematic depth.[26]Interpretations and Symbolism
The artwork for Fully Completely consists of a surreal collage assembled by Dutch artist Lieve Prins using color photocopies from a Canon machine, incorporating approximately 30 distinct images layered together to create a dense, intricate composition.[40] This technique results in a visual field where finer details—such as fragmented figures, landscapes, and abstract elements—emerge upon closer inspection, encouraging prolonged viewer engagement akin to unpacking the album's narrative lyrics.[41] Guitarist Rob Baker conceived the core idea, directing Prins toward a "bacchanalian sort of scene" evoking decadence, decay, and rebirth, elements drawn from a notion of Dutch life cycles.[26] This directive intentionally left room for Prins's interpretation, yielding a chaotic tableau of revelry blended with ruin, which band members purchased as the final piece.[39] Critics and fans have interpreted the imagery as paralleling the record's thematic fixation on historical fragmentation and renewal, such as in tracks referencing Canadian injustices and mythic self-examination, where personal and collective stories decay into legend before potential revival.[42] The cover's puzzling, interpretive quality—featuring nude figures amid decayed opulence—mirrors the album's cryptic storytelling, resisting straightforward narrative in favor of evocative ambiguity that rewards decoding.[43] This symbolism underscores a broader artistic ethos of cyclical human experience, aligning with the band's portrayal of endurance amid national and existential entropy.Release and Promotion
Launch and Marketing Strategy
Fully Completely was released on October 6, 1992, by MCA Records, marking The Tragically Hip's third studio album.[44] Promotional efforts began prior to launch, including a performance on Canada Day, July 1, 1992, at the Molson Brewery in Barrie, Ontario, as part of celebrations for the country's 125th anniversary; the event was broadcast live on MuchMusic, helping to generate anticipation.[7] MCA's marketing approach emphasized a polished production to enhance radio compatibility, with producer Chris Tsangarides selected specifically to deliver a punchier sound suited for broader airplay, particularly targeting a U.S. breakthrough following the band's prior domestic gains.[7] In Canada, the strategy leveraged regulatory requirements for Canadian content (CanCon) on radio, aligning with the album's thematic focus on national identity to secure heavy rotation and capitalize on existing fan momentum from Road Apples.[7][10] The campaign yielded immediate results in Canada, where the album sold 200,000 copies within two weeks of release, but faltered internationally; U.S. sales underwhelmed, leading MCA to halt marketing support after just two weeks.[10][7] This regional disparity underscored the band's entrenched Canadian appeal, with promotion relying more on live broadcasts and domestic media exposure than expansive international advertising.[4]Singles and Media Exposure
"Locked in the Trunk of a Car", released in October 1992 as the lead single from Fully Completely, peaked at number 11 on Canada's RPM Singles chart.[45] Its accompanying music video won Best Video at the 1993 Canadian Music Video Awards, boosting visibility on MuchMusic, Canada's primary music channel at the time.[45] "Fifty-Mission Cap", issued in January 1993 as the second single, reached number 40 on the RPM Singles chart.[46] The track, referencing Toronto Maple Leafs player Bill Barilko's Stanley Cup-winning goal in 1951 and his disappearance, resonated with Canadian audiences through radio play, though it received less video rotation than the lead single.[46] "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)", the third single, charted at number 10 on the RPM Singles chart and earned a 1994 Juno Award nomination for Single of the Year.[47][10] Drawing inspiration from Canadian author Hugh MacLennan's novel Barometer Rising, the song gained traction via rock radio formats and live performances, enhancing the album's thematic exposure.[47] "At the Hundredth Meridian", released in April 1993 as the fourth single, peaked at number 18 on the RPM Singles chart.[48] Evoking Canada's geographical and cultural divides, it benefited from targeted promotion on Canadian airwaves, though international media pickup remained minimal, reflecting the band's primary domestic audience.[48] Overall, the singles drove Fully Completely to number-one status on Canadian album charts, with heavy rotation on rock radio stations and MuchMusic contributing to over 500,000 units sold domestically by 1993.[10] U.S. exposure was limited, with no Billboard Hot 100 entries, underscoring the band's entrenched Canadian market focus amid modest crossover attempts.[10]Reception
Critical Reviews
Fully Completely received acclaim upon its October 6, 1992, release, particularly in Canada, where it marked a commercial and artistic breakthrough for The Tragically Hip, blending blues rock with narrative-driven lyrics steeped in national history.[49] Reviewers praised its maturity in songcraft, with Gord Downie's cryptic, poetic vocals delivering stories drawn from events like the disappearance of hockey player Bill Barilko in "Fifty-Mission Cap" and the wrongful conviction in "Wheat Kings."[50] The album's mix of driving rock, atmospheric art elements, and references to figures such as author Hugh MacLennan in "Courage" contributed to its reputation as a defining work of Canadian rock.[49] [50] Retrospective assessments have reinforced its enduring status, with Sputnikmusic awarding 4.5 out of 5 stars in a 2007 review, deeming it the band's peak for its gritty sound, innovative roots-blues fusion, and enduring playlist staples like "At the Hundredth Meridian" and "Pigeon Camera."[50] In 2023, Classic Rock magazine via Louder Sound highlighted its propulsion of the band to "Canada's Band" through authentic storytelling and influences from R.E.M. and Midnight Oil, though noting the dense, regionally specific themes might limit broader appeal.[49] Aggregate critic scores, such as 88/100 on Album of the Year based on three professional reviews, reflect consistent high regard for its craftsmanship.[51] A 2025 Pitchfork retrospective assigned a 9.4/10 rating, lauding it as "the sound of national icons coming into their own, and confronting the foundational myths of their country," emphasizing its swirling complexity and challenge to simplistic national narratives without noting significant flaws.[7] Critics across sources attribute its strength to Downie's evolved lyricism—rich in history, poetry, and subtle critique—paired with the band's tight instrumentation, though some observe the inward, Canada-centric focus as a barrier to international breakthrough despite universal rock elements.[7] [50] No major reviews identify outright weaknesses, positioning Fully Completely as a cornerstone of the band's catalog.[49]Commercial Success and Sales Data
Fully Completely, released on October 6, 1992, by MCA Records, marked a commercial breakthrough for The Tragically Hip, primarily within Canada. The album quickly ascended to the top of the RPM Top 100 Albums chart, holding the number one position and reflecting strong domestic demand.[52] Initial sales were robust, with over 200,000 copies sold in Canada within the first few months, driven by radio airplay of singles like "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)" and "At the Hundredth Meridian."[4] By 2007, cumulative sales reached one million units in Canada, earning a Diamond certification from Music Canada, equivalent to ten times platinum status.[53] Outside Canada, commercial performance was modest; the album did not achieve notable chart placement on the US Billboard 200 or significant international sales, underscoring the band's entrenched appeal in their home market.[7] Overall, Fully Completely contributed to The Tragically Hip's status as one of Canada's top-selling acts, with the album's one million units placing it among their highest performers domestically.[53]Touring and Performances
Tour Schedule and Venues
The Fully Completely Tour, undertaken in late 1992 and into 1993 to promote the album, comprised 15 documented concerts, predominantly in Canadian venues that underscored the band's strengthening national presence following the record's October release.[48] Performances emphasized new material from Fully Completely integrated with selections from prior albums like Road Apples, often in mid-sized theaters and halls suited to the group's rock-oriented live style. Key stops included Massey Hall in Toronto on November 19, 1992, a storied venue where setlists featured album openers such as "Fully Completely" and "The Wherewithal."[54] Additional venues spanned western and eastern Canada, such as Northlands AgriCom Hall B in Edmonton, Alberta, highlighting the tour's cross-country scope amid rising demand from domestic audiences.[55] While primarily confined to Canada with no extensive U.S. or international legs documented for this specific outing, the tour laid groundwork for broader exposure, paving the way for festival headlining. Support acts varied, including Crash Vegas for select dates like June 2, 1993, at Club Soda in Montreal.[56] The effort aligned with the album's commercial ascent in Canada, where sustained touring helped propel sales past 300,000 units by year's end, though exact attendance figures remain unverified in primary records. This phase transitioned into larger-scale events, including the 11-date Another Roadside Attraction festival in summer 1993, where the Hip headlined multi-act bills across Canada, further embedding Fully Completely tracks into live repertoires.[48]Live Interpretations of Tracks
Tracks from Fully Completely were prominently featured in The Tragically Hip's live sets during the supporting tour from 1992 to 1993, with "Little Bones" often opening shows, followed by staples like "Fully Completely," "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)," "At the Hundredth Meridian," "Locked in the Trunk of a Car," and "Blow at High Dough" appearing regularly in average setlists.[57] These performances amplified the album's studio polish—produced by Chris Tsangarides to evoke the band's raw live energy—with extended instrumental sections, intensified rhythms, and spontaneous vocal ad-libs by Gord Downie that varied nightly.[4] "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)," the album's lead single released October 1992, transitioned in live settings to emphasize Downie's emotive delivery and shifting phrasing, diverging from the recorded version's structure to heighten narrative tension drawn from historical events.[17] Performed at the 1993 Juno Awards on April 10, 1993, it showcased the track's adaptability, later evolving with audience sing-alongs and subtle rhythmic builds in mid-1990s shows.[58] Similarly, "At the Hundredth Meridian" expanded beyond its four-minute studio length into epic renditions, incorporating layered guitar interplay from Rob Baker and Paul Langlois, as heard in 2004 Toronto performances where the song's geographic themes resonated through prolonged solos.[59] "Locked in the Trunk of a Car," inspired by the 1970 October Crisis, gained propulsion live through driving bass from Gord Sinclair and occasional harmonica additions, such as Dan Aykroyd's guest appearance on February 23, 2008, in Kingston, Ontario, transforming the tense storytelling into a communal anthem.[60] The title track "Fully Completely" exemplified early-tour vigor, with a 1994 Brussels recording highlighting Johnny Fay's dynamic drumming and collective band fire that outpaced the album's controlled dynamics.[61] Downie's improvisational rants and lyrical deviations, a hallmark of the band's concerts, infused these tracks with unpredictability, allowing reinterpretations tied to current events or venue atmospheres while preserving core riffs.[62] Later tours, including Woodstock '99 on July 24, 1999, preserved this approach, with "Fully Completely" and others sustaining high-energy crowd engagement despite the festival's chaotic context.[63]Reissues and Expansions
Anniversary Re-releases
In October 2022, The Tragically Hip issued a deluxe vinyl box set to mark the 30th anniversary of Fully Completely, originally released on October 6, 1992.[64] The set comprises three 180-gram remastered LPs and a Blu-ray disc, featuring the core album alongside a complete live recording from the band's September 13, 1992, performance at Toronto's Horseshoe Tavern, plus bonus studio outtakes including "Radio Show" and "So Hard Done By."[18][65] This vinyl edition reissued content from a prior 2014 deluxe package, adapting it for analog format in response to fan demand for high-fidelity pressings.[66] The release represented the inaugural entry in a planned series of vinyl reissues for the band's catalog, emphasizing audiophile-quality remastering to preserve the album's production by Chris Tsangarides.[67] Limited to 3,000 copies initially, the box set included updated liner notes detailing the recording process and cultural context of the 1992 sessions.[1] No subsequent anniversary editions have been announced as of 2025, though the 2022 package has sustained collector interest amid ongoing vinyl revivals for the band's discography.[66]Added Content and Remastering
In 2014, a deluxe edition of Fully Completely was released as a two-disc (plus DVD) set, featuring the original album remastered from analog tapes by engineer Bob Ludwig.[68] This edition appended two bonus tracks sourced from the 1992 recording sessions: "Radio Show" and an alternate original version of "So Hard Done By".[69] The second disc captured a complete live performance from the Horseshoe Tavern in Toronto on September 13, 1992, early in the album's promotional cycle, including renditions of tracks like "At the Hundredth Meridian" and "Fifty-Mission Cap".[70] The 2014 release marked the 20th anniversary observance, emphasizing archival material to highlight the album's production context under Chris Tsangarides at Metalworks Studios.[71] The remastering aimed to enhance audio fidelity while preserving the raw alternative rock dynamics, with the live disc providing unpolished interpretations that contrasted the studio polish.[68] For the album's 30th anniversary, a vinyl-focused deluxe box set was issued on October 7, 2022, reissuing elements of the 2014 edition in 180-gram audiophile pressings.[72] This included a newly remastered version of the original album, the Horseshoe Tavern live recording with integrated bonus tracks "Radio Show" and "So Hard Done By", and a Blu-ray disc featuring Dolby Atmos and 5.1 surround sound mixes of the full album.[18] The Blu-ray also contained a remastered edition of the 1993 tour documentary Heksenketel, incorporating concert footage and behind-the-scenes content from the era.[73] Additional packaging comprised a 56-page booklet with liner notes and five lithographs, positioning the set as a comprehensive archival expansion.[64] These reissues prioritized high-resolution audio upgrades and unearthed session material, reflecting sustained demand for expanded editions amid the band's enduring Canadian popularity, without altering the core 1992 track sequence.[67]Credits
Track Listing
All tracks written by The Tragically Hip.[1]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)" | 4:27 |
| 2. | "Looking for a Place to Happen" | 4:18 |
| 3. | "At the Hundredth Meridian" | 3:21 |
| 4. | "Pigeon Camera" | 4:34 |
| 5. | "Lionized" | 3:21 |
| 6. | "Locked in the Trunk of a Car" | 4:24 |
| 7. | "We'll Go Too" | 3:56 |
| 8. | "Fully Completely" | 3:31 |
| 9. | "Wheat Kings" | 4:18 |
| 10. | "Fifty-Mission Cap" | 4:10 |
| 11. | "The Wherewithal" | 2:55 |
| 12. | "Twist My Arm" | 3:33 |