If I Had $1000000

Composed by founding members Steven Page and Ed Robertson, the sing-along track has become one of the band's best-known songs, and is a live show staple, despite never having been a true single and without an accompanying music video.

The Gordon version was then included on Disc One: All Their Greatest Hits, bringing the total album count for the song to eight.

On the way home from camp, Robertson played the tune for the campers, randomly listing amusing things he would buy with a million dollars.

In response, the band released a statement on the issue: While hinting at romantic intentions, the lyrics offer eccentric ideas about purchases one would make with a million dollars.

Page incorrectly sang the "cruel" lyric in the studio as a joke, which Robertson found so funny that the rest of the band decided to leave it in the finished song.

[3] A line in the song inspired fans to begin throwing packages of Kraft Dinner at the band during concerts.

The tradition began with a single box thrown onstage during a 1991 show at the Danforth Music Hall in Toronto.

The packets of cheese powder included in the boxes sometimes burst open, resulting in a putrid odor when they were exposed to the heat of the stage lights, and some fans even threw cooked pasta.

The band ultimately requested that their audiences end the tradition and instead donate the boxes to their local food banks, using bins set up in the venue lobby for this purpose.

All royalties from the sale of "If I Had 1,000,000 Flavours" are donated to the ABC Canada Literacy Foundation, a Toronto-based organization that promotes reading to children at home.