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This week on The Tragically Hip On Shuffle, we pulled a heavyweight.
Nautical Disaster.
jD is joined by Scott from Lunenburg and Dave from St. Louis for a deep dive into one of the most cinematic, structurally daring, and emotionally layered songs in The Tragically Hip catalogue.
From that opening Gord Sinclair bassline to the fade-up intro, no traditional chorus, and the full minute-plus instrumental outro, this episode unpacks why Nautical Disaster breaks the rules — and why it still works.
As jD puts it, it’s “a rhythm poem” and possibly the keystone of Day for Night .
Scott, a longtime broadcaster and station owner, breaks down the musicianship — especially Sinclair’s bass work — while Dave reflects on discovering The Hip from the U.S. through MuchMusic tapes and the cult-like conversion experience .
Thirty-plus years later, the panel agrees: this one has no shelf life.
It’s cinematic. It’s conversational. It’s haunting without being theatrical. And it rewards repeat listens in a way casual fans may miss on first pass .
If you’ve ever wondered why Nautical Disaster still hits like it does — or why it feels bigger than a “radio single” ever should — this episode is for you.
🎧 Listen now and join the conversation.
#TheTragicallyHip #NauticalDisaster #DayForNight #TheHip #TTHOnShuffle #GordDownie
By The Tragically Hip Podcast Series.5
5353 ratings
This week on The Tragically Hip On Shuffle, we pulled a heavyweight.
Nautical Disaster.
jD is joined by Scott from Lunenburg and Dave from St. Louis for a deep dive into one of the most cinematic, structurally daring, and emotionally layered songs in The Tragically Hip catalogue.
From that opening Gord Sinclair bassline to the fade-up intro, no traditional chorus, and the full minute-plus instrumental outro, this episode unpacks why Nautical Disaster breaks the rules — and why it still works.
As jD puts it, it’s “a rhythm poem” and possibly the keystone of Day for Night .
Scott, a longtime broadcaster and station owner, breaks down the musicianship — especially Sinclair’s bass work — while Dave reflects on discovering The Hip from the U.S. through MuchMusic tapes and the cult-like conversion experience .
Thirty-plus years later, the panel agrees: this one has no shelf life.
It’s cinematic. It’s conversational. It’s haunting without being theatrical. And it rewards repeat listens in a way casual fans may miss on first pass .
If you’ve ever wondered why Nautical Disaster still hits like it does — or why it feels bigger than a “radio single” ever should — this episode is for you.
🎧 Listen now and join the conversation.
#TheTragicallyHip #NauticalDisaster #DayForNight #TheHip #TTHOnShuffle #GordDownie

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