Entertainment

Tragically Hip to release album with 6 unreleased tracks

The Tragically Hip are giving their fans something to sing about with a new album of long-lost recordings.

Band will release collection Friday under the name Saskadelphia

A rock band with five members performs onstage.
The Tragically Hip, seen here at a 2016 concert, are releasing a new album. Frontman Gord Downie, centre, died in 2017. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

The Tragically Hip are giving their fans something to sing about with a new album of long-lost recordings.

The Kingston, Ont., band says they recently discovered six unreleased tracks, mostly from studio sessions for their 1991 album Road Apples.

The Hip will release the collection Friday under the name Saskadelphia, a nod to the original working title of their chart-topping third album, which included Little Bones and Long Time Running.

Saskadelphia includes lead single Ouch, a gritty bar-room fireball with the late Gord Downie growling lyrics against a wall of guitars, and Crack, among the band's most effervescent rock tracks.

The album is rounded out with a live version of Montreal, a song the band says was written shortly after the 1989 massacre at École Polytechnique. Recorded at what's now known as the Bell Centre on Dec. 7, 2000, the day after the 11th anniversary of the massacre, Downie introduces Montreal as a song about "the identification process."

Guitarist Rob Baker says he believes Downie was referring to the identification of a dead body, as the lyrics recount a family preparing their daughter for her funeral.

Saskadelphia will be released on streaming services, vinyl and CD on Friday.