Create account Log in

Fully Completely (Deluxe Version)

[Edit]

Download links and information about Fully Completely (Deluxe Version) by The Tragically Hip. This album was released in 1992 and it belongs to Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 27 tracks with total duration of 01:47:46 minutes.

Artist: The Tragically Hip
Release date: 1992
Genre: Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 27
Duration: 01:47:46
Buy on iTunes $19.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Courage (For Hugh MacLennan) 4:26
2. Looking For a Place To Happen 4:17
3. At the Hundredth Meridian 3:20
4. Pigeon Camera 4:33
5. Lionized 3:20
6. Locked In the Trunk of a Car 4:42
7. We'll Go Too 3:23
8. Fully Completely 3:30
9. Fifty-Mission Cap 4:10
10. Wheat Kings 4:18
11. The Wherewithal 2:54
12. Eldorado 3:45
13. Radio Show 4:39
14. So Hard Done By 2:57
15. At the Hundredth Meridian (Live) 3:53
16. Fifty-Mission Cap (Live) 4:10
17. We'll Go Too (Live) 3:56
18. Fully Completely (Live) 3:54
19. Pigeon Camera (Live) 4:32
20. Twist My Arm (Live) 3:50
21. Lionized (Live) 3:34
22. Wheat Kings (Live) 4:06
23. Eldorado (Live) 4:08
24. Looking For a Place To Happen (Live) 4:50
25. Courage (For Hugh MacLennan) [Live] 4:13
26. Locked In the Truck of a Car (Live) 4:52
27. The Wherewithal (Live) 3:34

Details

[Edit]

Fully Completely is where Kingston, Ontario's Tragically Hip finally come to the apex of their talent. Lead singer Gord Downie sounds crisp and full of life, and the songs he verbally dramatizes are rich in lyrical sharpness and instrumental color. With more than half of this album's songs being released to Canadian radio, it established the Hip as a mainstream contender and rescued them from their bar band persona. Songs like "Courage" and "At the Hundredth Meridian" glimmer with Downie's poetic finesse while basking in the dimmed glow of background guitar. "Fifty-Mission Cap" is centered around their interest in hockey nostalgia, and "Locked in the Trunk of a Car" simmers with an R.E.M.-type brusqueness that hovers in mystery. The astuteness of "Wheat Kings" comes off as one of their best slow songs, once again elevated from Downie's peculiar unequivocalness. Letting him glide into each song with his complex philosophical idioms was a step in the right direction, a feat that was almost mastered on 1991's Road Apples, but fell just inches short. The Tragically Hip prove on Fully Completely that their level of maturity and musical craftsmanship have finally come to fruition. [The 2004 Zoe edition of Fully Completely, Rovi