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Click Link for Notes & Tab: https://tinyurl.com/y5rhzhfu Copyright © Universal Music Group On behalf of Universal Music Canada Song: Bobcaygeon Artist: The Tragically Hip Album: Phantom Power (1999) Original Bass Player: Gord Sinclair Bass: Steinberger XP-2 Strings: RotoSound Swing Bass 66, Roundwound (.045, 0.65, 0.80, .105) Software: Guitar Rig 5 Audio: Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 Video Editor: Windows Movie Maker Mixer: Phonic AM240 Camera: Canon VIXIA HF R700 Headphones: Behringer HPM1000 Standard Tuning "Bobcaygeon" is a song by Canadian rock band The Tragically Hip. It was released in February 1999 as a single from their sixth album, Phantom Power, and has come to be recognized as one of the band's most enduring and beloved signature songs. The song is named after Bobcaygeon, Ontario, a town in the Kawartha Lakes region about 160 km (100 mi) northeast of Toronto. The song's narrator works in the city as a police officer, a job he finds stressful and sometimes ponders quitting, but unwinds from the stress and restores his spirit by spending his weekends with a loved one in the rural idyll of Bobcaygeon, where he sees "the constellations/reveal themselves one star at a time" in contrast to the city's "dull and hypothetical" skies that are "falling one cloud at a time". In live performances, Tragically Hip singer Gord Downie has typically explained "Bobcaygeon" as a "cop love song," though the gender and identity of the narrator's beloved change from performance to performance. In the original video, the cop's partner is female, but Downie has sometimes introduced the song in concert as being "about a couple of gay cops that fall in love." According to Downie, the song was not specifically written about the town itself, but rather any small town would have worked for the theme and he settled on "Bobcaygeon" primarily because it was the only place name he could find that came close to rhyming with "constellation". A secondary theme of the song addresses racism and anti-Semitism; Downie has sometimes introduced the song with "This one asks the question: evil in the open or evil just below the surface?", and Rob Baker's guitar has "This machine kills fascists" written on it in the song's video. In the song's bridge, the British rock band The Men They Couldn't Hang are performing a concert at Toronto's Horseshoe Tavern ("with its checkerboard floors"); when they begin to perform their song "Ghosts of Cable Street", which is about the Battle of Cable Street riot in London in 1936, in an "Aryan twang", a similar brawl or riot appears to erupt between fascist and anti-fascist activists in the audience, which then weighs heavily on the officer's mind as he drives back to Bobcaygeon in the final verse. (In the video, however, the brawl is visually depicted as occurring at a concert by "The Constellations".) A common interpretation is that the lyrics obliquely reference the Christie Pits riot of 1933, which arose from tensions between Toronto's working-class Jewish community and anti-semitic Swastika clubs following a baseball game; although the song's otherwise contemporary setting leaves this interpretation in question, a similar although less famous public brawl between the Heritage Front and Anti-Racist Action did occur in Toronto in 1993 just a few years before Downie wrote the song.