Smooth Rock Falls
Paul Langlois
Paul Langlois’s Smooth Rock Falls is a surprise 2026 solo album from the longtime Tragically Hip guitarist, arriving more than a decade after the band’s final show and over a decade after his previous solo record, Not Guilty. Named after a small Northern Ontario town, the 10‑song, 36‑minute album leans into unvarnished, mid‑tempo rock built around chiming guitars, steady rhythm sections, and Langlois’s plain‑spoken, slightly roughened voice. Released initially as a digital drop with a limited, signed vinyl and CD run, it has the feel of an intimate, home‑grown project rather than a glossy major‑label comeback.
Lyrically, the record circles themes of grief, aging, and everyday perseverance, with Langlois explicitly describing music as an outlet for processing life after The Hip and the loss of Gord Downie. Songs like “Hardly Holding On,” “Wrapped In A Bow,” and “Is This What You Want” frame these reflections in plain, conversational lines and direct choruses, while tracks such as “Into The Night” and “No Problem In The Daylight” balance darker undercurrents with a stubborn, clear‑eyed optimism. Throughout Smooth Rock Falls, the arrangements stay modest—more “bar band at twilight” than arena rock—which lets the focus rest on Langlois’s songwriting: sturdy chord changes, singable melodies, and an emotional tone that’s less about catharsis than about quietly staying honest and true.
Smooth Rock Falls
Paul Langlois
Paul Langlois’s Smooth Rock Falls is a surprise 2026 solo album from the longtime Tragically Hip guitarist, arriving more than a decade after the band’s final show and over a decade after his previous solo record, Not Guilty. Named after a small Northern Ontario town, the 10‑song, 36‑minute album leans into unvarnished, mid‑tempo rock built around chiming guitars, steady rhythm sections, and Langlois’s plain‑spoken, slightly roughened voice. Released initially as a digital drop with a limited, signed vinyl and CD run, it has the feel of an intimate, home‑grown project rather than a glossy major‑label comeback.
Lyrically, the record circles themes of grief, aging, and everyday perseverance, with Langlois explicitly describing music as an outlet for processing life after The Hip and the loss of Gord Downie. Songs like “Hardly Holding On,” “Wrapped In A Bow,” and “Is This What You Want” frame these reflections in plain, conversational lines and direct choruses, while tracks such as “Into The Night” and “No Problem In The Daylight” balance darker undercurrents with a stubborn, clear‑eyed optimism. Throughout Smooth Rock Falls, the arrangements stay modest—more “bar band at twilight” than arena rock—which lets the focus rest on Langlois’s songwriting: sturdy chord changes, singable melodies, and an emotional tone that’s less about catharsis than about quietly staying honest and true.
