So I missed out seeing The Hip live in concert. I think it might be one of the biggest regrets in my life.
My question is what you most regret?
My question is what you most regret?
I regret turning my back on someone I cared about...she needed me and I wasn't there for her...then she was gone.
If that is your biggest regret in life, then you have lived a very good life.
I regret going to business school and not going to medical or law school.
I regret not spending that one night with my terminally ill father that he asked to talk to me... in private. And instead going out with "friends" who I have not seen in several decades.
I regret not making more effort to keep in touch and continue to cultivate the friendships and relationships with so many incredible people around the world that I have had the incredible good fortune to meet and become my friends. I regret not taking more of them up on their invitations to visit, to travel, to events and parties and just up to their cottage or over to their house for a bbq.
I regret not living more.
This was the most recent and fresh on my mind. Travel is a big one for me too, and school.
Europe is somewhere that I haven't been to and really regretting at this time in my life. Had an chance in uni to go but didn't take it.I travel a lot! It is more important to me than "things". You and I agree... carpe diem!
Now For Plan A and a lot of their later albums came out when downloading music was and is still huge. I haven't bought more than 3 or 4 cd's in the last 10 years. I look at their concert ticket sales as a testament to their popularity. I'm pretty sure they have (over the duration of their career, once they became 'big'") had no problem selling out arenas across the country...I know on their previous tour prior to their farewell one they sold out the ACC twice. I didn't get a ticket for the past one but was lucky to see them at the ACC a few years ago...the love of the band was palpable by young and old that night.Interesting thread. A lot of Hip regrets, which I find interesting. I saw the Hip twice, the last of which was opening for Rush at Maple Leaf Gardens in the early 90s. This was the Hip at the height of their performance abilities and their popularity. As a result, I can have no regrets about not seeing them in this farewell tour.
The media attention to the legacy of the Hip has got me thinking a little. I believe only 2 Hip records sold 1 million copies - Road Apples and Fully Completely. While it is impressive that almost all of their sales were in Canada, and 1 million units is Canada is impressive, it does suggest that the Hip have (at most) approximately 1 million fans. Support for their farewell tour suggests quite a larger number have jumped on the bandwagon to be part of the "occasion". Most of their records sold in between 100,000 and 400,000 copies. Some of them only sold Gold (Now for Plan A), which is only 50,000 units in Canada.
I like the Hip, but I don't think they were as "universally" loved in their day as the support for them on their farewell tour would suggest.