
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


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

62,800 Listeners

9,782 Listeners

20,316 Listeners

87,907 Listeners

575 Listeners

14,055 Listeners

1,958 Listeners

362 Listeners

9,626 Listeners

244 Listeners

14,552 Listeners

58,521 Listeners

16,464 Listeners

2,763 Listeners

10,884 Listeners