The Bell

Band members (from left to right): Nicklas, Mathias, Jan. Photo  courtesy of Bad Man Recording Co.

The Bell are Nicklas Nilsson, Mathias Stromberg and Jan Petterson, from Malmö and Stockholm, Sweden. Last month they released Great Heat, their second record, which they put together with a great deal  of help from modern technology. I carried it around with me on my iPod for a week or so, and then, intrigued by their beats, made use of technology myself, and had an email chat with Mathias and his bandmates:

Mathias, I see that you sing, but which instruments do the rest of the band play?

Jan and Nicklas play all instruments, but write most of the songs on guitar and keyboard/piano. They fiddle with the computers and then we record vocals (all of us even though I do lead) and produce/mix everything together the three of us.

 

Why did you name the band The Bell?

There really is no specific answer to this question, it springs from a lot of things. From “For Whom The Bell Tolls” by Hemingway, which is just such an excellent title – to just sounding neat. We like the singular notion of One Bell, as well. THE Bell. It sounds alarming and like enlightenment.

 

I checked a map to see just how far apart Malmö and Stockholm are, and it looks like it’s approximately the same distance, as, say, New York City to the tip of Cape Cod, in Massachusetts, or about a six hour drive. I know you managed to record and mix the record while living in the different cities, but how did you all meet in the first place? And also who lives in Malmö and who lives in Stockholm?

Jan and Nicklas are small town boys both geographically and by heart. Jan’s from the north of Sweden originally and Nicklas from the south. I’m from and in Stockholm. Me and Jan go to know each other out on the town, as he used to live here. We realized we were into the same music (and books, films, wine and fonts) so we hung out more and more. Then he moved to Malmö for love.

 

Fonts? Which ones? Which font do you both appreciate the most, and why?

Today I would have to say old Poster Bodoni. Getting that fifties Italian café vibe …

 

Did you ever meet in the middle, as it were, to work on things? Or was the entire record made solely with the help of modern technology?

As mentioned earlier, we did most of the groundwork over the web and then met up to do vocals and production, both in our “home studio” in Malmö and rented spaces both in Malmö and Stockholm. So in short: we were creative online and anal producers in studio.

 

How did you all get interested in this particular kind of dark, drum-propelled synth-pop?

We all got laid for the first time in the eighties. So that’s where our very most primal love lies. For me personally, there was a lot of great synth clubs in Stockholm (and not very much else apart from horrible metal places where you’d get beaten up unless you looked like a muscular transvestite) so when I started to go out in my teens I tended to go to goth caves getting into EBM and electronic stuff. All this sort of evolved over time into more guitar driven stuff such as the Factory and Creation stuff in the late eighties.

 

The Stockholm club scene sounds like an “it’s all ABBA or Opeth” kind of situation. It is an interesting dichotomy, that “Swedish music”, or at least what Americans know of it, swings between two wildly different extremes of bright, bubbly pop and/or dance music and, well, death-metal.

Well, this it was it used to be like. Nowadays we get a lot of different clubs, ranging from obscure indie and electronica to just plain … well, bad stuff. So although I think these extremes exist (even if the death metal scene really is Norweigan rather than Swedish – here, the long hairs do garage rock or sleaze it seems) it is not as it once was.  And for this we’re very thankful. Swedes have always been an extremely open minded people so that narrow mindset does not work for the younger generations.

 

Which episode of Jersey Shore did your song end up in, and which song was it? Have there been any recent placements that top that one?

Can ANYTHING top Jersey Shore??? No but seriously, checking online the episode was called “The Tanned Triangle” … haha. How great is that? We had a song from our last album in Vampire Diaries last spring and a recent placement in No Ordinary Family and hoping to get a few more in the next few months.

 

A Jersey Shore appearance is indeed pretty epic, even if I can’t bear to watch that show at all, not even with the sound off.

I would like to be diplomatic and state that “it’s great that they’re doing their thing” but that would be indicating it had some level of artistic integrity.

 

And then the three that I ask everyone, the modified Proust Questionnaire, if you will:

What was your transformative song – the rock and roll lightning strike?

Matthias: Today I would have to say There is a light that Never Goes Out by The Smiths. It’s when I discovered heart & soul in music. Before that it was all … surface. Obviously, this soundtracked long make-out sessions when I was 14 together with the rest of the tracks on The Queen is Dead. Such a beautiful work of art. After that I realized that the alternative came in different flavours.

Nicklas: I had a friend who had a synthesizer. One evening while he was out in the kitchen eating with his parents I learned to play The Model. I think I was 8 years old at that time. Music became more transparent after that.  I suddenly knew I could play the same melodies and harmonies that were actually pressed on vinyl. Strange and shocking. I still sometimes revisit that feeling when using keyboards today.

Jan: Television – Venus

 

What was your first show (that you attended, not that you played)?

Matthias: Kraftwerk in Stockholm in … 1985, I think. It was fucking excellent.

Nicklas: 1982. A local new romantic band with loads of delay on vocals and guitars. The drummer had a white shirt with lace and very very long sleeves. The volume was so high that I lost my balance every now and then. I can’t remember a single tone they played. But I still want a shirt like that.

Jan: Ian Hunter in my home town of SkellefteÃ¥. I was 10 years old and I desperately tried to copy Ian’s haircut.

 

What was the first record/tape/etc that you bought? What was the last one?

Matthias: The first of any importance was Yazoos You and Me Both in 1983 and the last … I’m sorry, I’m from Sweden. We don’t really buy records. We subscribe to Spotify. But on that note, I listened to The Crystal Stilts new album just a minute ago and that is awsome!

Nicklas: I bought Tintin Red Rackham’s Treasure. Not much good music on that one. But almost immediately I traded it for Kraftwerk’s Radio-Activity. The last one was a pretty lousy demo by a local band. I can’t mention the band name. I know the guitarist.

Jan: Donny Osmond – Puppy Love and The Maccabees – O.A.V.I.P


An example of their groove: Today, from their new record, Great Heat:

Bits: Booker T. Jones, Buddy Holly, Willie Nelson’s Country Throwdown, The Kills, Strand of Oaks, The Imperial Rooster,

  • Booker T. Jones’ new album The Road from Memphis is out today. You can see and hear his recent Tiny Desk Concert for NPR here.
  • Fantasy Records will be putting out a Buddy Holly tribute album, Rave On Buddy Holly, on June 28, and the contributor list is wild. You can hear the Black Keys’ contribution, a cover of “Dearest”, here. And if you visit Liza Richardson’s May 7 KCRW show, you can hear Modest Mouse’s take on “That’ll Be the Day” (at the 6:00 mark) and Cee-Lo doing “(You’re So Square) Baby, I Don’t Care” (around 36:35).
  • A free 8-song sampler from artists on Willie Nelson’s Country Throwdown Tour, including Austin Lucas, is available from iTunes.
  • Take a trip over to Vinyl Hounds to see a cool mini documentary about the Kills.
  • KDHX has a live in-studio set from the always beautiful Strand of Oaks.
  • A reminder that our friends The Imperial Rooster will be playing at El Farol in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on May 10 at 6 PM MST and the set will be broadcast live on Radio Free Santa Fe (you can catch it on the web at the Radio Free Santa Fe website or in the Santa Fe area on 98.1). They will also be a part of the Thirsty Ear Festival going on in Santa Fe June 10-12. They’ll be joining the likes of Calexico, the Handsome Family, the Cedric Burnside Project and many more.

Patrick Sweany at the Lockview, Akron, OH, 5.8.11

 

Patrick Sweany should be a household name. I believed that before I saw him live, and that belief grew tenfold last night. Setting up in a little corner of a little restaurant/bar back on his old home turf, accompanied by his dad on washtub bass, Sweany played a three-hour, acoustic show (with a short break in the middle) that drew from almost every one of his five albums as well as including a healthy dose of covers. Weaving in and out of favorites by Joe Tex, Howlin’ Wolf, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Sam Cooke, Guitar Slim, Bob Wills and Willie Nelson, Sweany laid down his own fans’ favorites like “After Awhile”, “Your Man” and “Them Shoes”.

 

 

And, of course, as it was the day that would have been the 100th birthday of Robert Johnson, a blues-influenced musician like Sweany wasn’t going to get away without playing a Johnson song. Though instead of echoing the covers of “Cross Road Blues” and “Sweet Home Chicago” that were surely being played in bars throughout the nation, Sweany chose the lesser known “Walking Blues”, treating the crowd to some delicious slide action. Though, I have to say, my favorite cover of the night was Sweany’s take on Howlin’ Wolf’s “Moanin’ at Midnight”.

Early Sweany tracks like “Sleepy Town”, “Bring the Money Home” and “Bad Luck, Bad Luck” nestled seamlessly with the old blues and country covers, showing how artfully he has incorporated his influences while still making it all truly his own. Sweany’s newest, and sweetest – on a number of levels, album That Old Southern Drag was, of course, well-represented with rockers like “Sleeping Bag”, “Heavy Problems (Peavey Rage)”, the bouncy “Shoestring” and the heartfelt “Same Thing”.

 

 

The highlight of the evening was probably “More and More”, a song written for and dedicated to Sweany’s soon-to-be-wife Missy. He poured his heart into it, and I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a man happier about his upcoming nuptials.

Seeing Patrick Sweany live not only amplifies just how skilled and talented the man is as a vocalist and guitarist – he’s the kind of player who has probably frustrated more than one hopeful young guitar player because he makes it look so damn easy – but shows that his stage presence and charm are equal to his musical gifts, joking with his dad and the audience (ask him about his imaginary dead brother Chip sometime) and making everyone feel like a friend.

Sweany and his pops finished the show with a cover of “Having a Party” that gave truth to the title, and, had there been room for it, there would have been dancing. Instead, the audience used that energy to call Sweany back for an encore that ended with a tour-de-force version of “Smokestacks” that included nods to everything from “Smoke on the Water” to the Rolling Stones and left everyone smiling.

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sat, May 7| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    Cloud Nothings
    Afternoon Naps
    Fishtank Apostles
    $8
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sun, May 8| 7 PM (6:30 PM door)
    A Benefit for Crazy Marvin & Blues Boy Lonnie

    Vernon Jones Blues Cartel
    Blue Lunch
    Schwartz Brothers

    Also appearing –
    Butter Scotch
    Hollywood Slim
    Wallace Coleman
    Collin Dusault
    Becky Boyd
    Alan Greene
    Fletcher Barton
    Donnie Baker

    $10
    Ballroom | All Ages

  • Tue, May 10| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Bad Manners
    Wanyama
    All Over The Place
    $15
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Tue, May 10| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Vandaveer
    Ferraby Lionheart
    Lowly The Tree Ghost
    $8.
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Wed, May 11| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Les Nubians
    Torrey Canyon Ltd.
    $18 adv / $20 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Wed, May 11| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs
    Scissormen
    Rebekah Jean
    $10
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Thu, May 12| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Greensky Bluegrass
    JP & The Chatfield Boys
    One Dollar Hat & Louise Keller Square Dance
    $12
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Thu, May 12| 8 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Mahavishnu Orchestra Project
    Dave Hammer’s Power Supply
    The Sleestaks
    $5
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Fri, May 6| 8 PM
    The Death Set
    Win Win
    The Very Knees
    MisterBradleyP
    $10
  • Sat, May 7| 8 PM
    The Foreign Exchange
    The Funny Sound
    Hosted by Q-Nice
    $20 adv / $25 dos
  • Thu, May 12| 8 PM
    honeyhoney
    Winters Warm
    Heelsplitter
    $10

Now That’s Class

  • Sat, May 7| 2 PM
    A.D.D. Short Film Festival
    (6 hours of short films start @ 2 PM, a DIY film fest that will feature low-budget, no-budget films, microcinema and student work, plus live music afterward)
    Dikes of Holland
    Mr. California
    Leah Lou
    Cereal Banter
    The Possibilitarian Puppet Theater
    $3
  • Wed, May 11| 9 PM
    Sawyer Family
    Viva le Vox
    Scoliosis Jones
    $5
  • Thu, May 12| 8 PM
    Horrible Fest Day 1
    Alarm Clocks
    Darvocets
    Prisoners
    Apache Dropout
    Mr. California
    $8
  • Fri, May 13| 8 PM
    Horrible Fest Day 2
    Human Eye
    Cola Freaks
    Natural Child
    Tinsel Teeth
    Psandwhich
    Plates
    Buzzards Luck
    $10

Happy Dog

  • Fri, May 6| 9 PM
    Omine Eager
    Jill Hartmann
    John Kalman
    Bill Fox

Peabody’s

  • Thu, May 12| 7 PM doors
    T.S.O.L.
    Shot Baker
    (@ Pirate’s Cove)
    $12 adv / $14 dos

The Warehouse

  • Fri, May 6| 7 PM
    Shivering Timbers
    Ashley Brooke Toussant
    $5

Annabell’s Bar & Lounge

  • Sat, May 7| 10 PM
    Shivering Timbers
    The Chocolate Horse
    Good Morning Valentine

The Lockview

  • Sun, May 8| 7 PM (5 PM doors)
    Patrick Sweany

Austin Lucas: Constant Sound of Thundering Rails

 

As has likely become obvious to regular NTSIB readers, I’m a sucker for a good voice. A voice full of pathos and urgency – and especially one that has been roughened with whiskey and cigarettes – will get me every time. Austin Lucas has a classic bluegrass voice. “High lonesome” is a good phrase for it. And while this sort of voice would seem best paired with quiet instrumentation and pretty guitars, as Lucas has often used in the past, on his latest album A New Home in the Old World, Lucas shows that bringing up the intensity of the music to match the intensity of the voice benefits both the singer and the song. Check out a little of what I mean on my favorite song from the album, opening track “Run Around”.

 

Run Around by Austin Lucas

 

It’s a sharp smack in the face of an introduction to an album that pulls a taught thread of emotional intensity throughout. Later on in the album, such as on lead single “Thunder Rail”, electric guitar is pulled into the mix, recalling some of the best roots-minded alt.rock.

 

Thunder Rail by Austin Lucas

 

Lucas is an earnest songwriter, but New Home doesn’t fall into the usual singer/songwriter trap of using the music as nothing more than a bed of lettuce for the entrée of the lyrics. This is not a poetry reading. This is music flowing with blood, guts, yearning and hope.

You can purchase the album directly from Last Chance Records (my advice is to purchase directly from the label whenever possible – they’ll put much more care into your order than a megawarehouse would and often at a better price), where a live album from Lucas is also available. You can also catch him on Willie Nelson’s Country Throwdown 2011 Tour that starts up toward the end of this month.

 

Austin Lucas Official Website

 

Video Grab Bag: Panic! at the Disco, Christina Perri, Industries of the Blind and Empires

This video for Ready to Go (Get Me Out of My Mind), Panic! at the Disco‘s second single off of their new record Vices & Virtues, just came out yesterday, and, you guys, I really just love it so much. Not only is it a great song (turn it up!), but the video is beautifully shot and lit AND there is fabulous choreography. There are also fun costumes, because the whole thing is a visual tribute to musicals, including Grease, Mary Poppins and Singin’ in the Rain. Oh and also SOMEONE GETS SHOT OUT OF A CANNON. It is just delicious.

 

Panic! At The Disco: Ready To Go [OFFICIAL VIDEO]

 

Continuing with the movie theme, this is the lyric video for Arms, from the upcoming lovestrong by Christina Perri, which features words “projected” onto old-fashioned movie screens. I’ve already confessed to typography nerdery; what I especially like about this one is the way the letters shuffle and jump and sometimes arrive as snarled little knots that then expand into words and phrases.

 

Christina Perri - Arms [Official Lyric Video]

 

Next up is music that sounds like it should be in movies, from Industries of the Blind. This video is a teaser trailer for their upcoming record Chapter 1, and so doesn’t contain a full song. It does, however, give you the chance to see all nine (!) of them in action. I haven’t yet had the chance to see them live, but once this semester is over and law school (temporarily) stops interfering with my social life, I’m going to venture out to Brooklyn and catch one of their shows. In the meantime I put it on while I’m working on writing projects, because it is perfect for making all of the other noise in my head settle down so I can focus and concentrate on the task at hand.

 

Industries of the Blind - Chapter 1 promo

 

And in conclusion, a band that I hope gets their Hollywood ending: that’s right, Empires, the little rock band that could/band of my heart, has made it all the way to Round Three of the Rolling Stone cover contest. If they make it to Round Four, they have a shot at playing a battle-of-the-bands style show with the other finalist at Bonnaroo,  and, of course, being on the cover of Rolling Stone.  As an enticement to vote for them as often as you can before the contest closes on May 13, I submit TWO new videos for songs written and recorded during the contest, Night is Young and Hard Times. There is also a third song, Hells Heroes, which is available for free from their website. If you join their mailing list while you’re there, you’ll periodically get epistles addressed “Dear Scholars,” which is one of the very many reasons this band is the band of my heart.

 

 

Bits: The Imperial Rooster, Bang Bang Boogaloo, Modest Mouse & Big Boi, Craig Wedren, The Twilight Singers, Wolfgang’s Vault

  • The Imperial Rooster will be playing at El Farol in Santa Fe, New Mexico, on May 10 at 6 PM MST and the set will be broadcast live on Radio Free Santa Fe. Tune in locally at 98.1 or via the Radio Free Santa Fe website.
  • New York label Bang Bang Boogaloo has put together a killer compilation of unsigned New York bands called New York Rock & Roll 1. You can listen to and download it for free on their website.
  • Big Boi revealed, via Twitter, that he’s working on an album with Modest Mouse. “Been camped out in the Lab with Modest Mouse all week, workin on the new mouse LP, coolest cats ever. Long Live The Funk.” Cannot wait to hear the results of that collaboration.
  • Both Craig Wedren and the Twilight Singers are offering new songs for free download. Wedren’s “Cupid” is a Shudder to Think-era tune re-purposed for his upcoming solo album, WAND. The Twilight Singers’ “Don’t Call” is a non-album track, as well as being a Desire cover.
  • Wolfgang’s Vault has added a video section to their mammoth live music archives. While you’ll find the old stand-bys you’d expect from WV – the Rolling Stones, the Grateful Dead, the Allman Brothers Band – you’ll also find some NTSIB favorites like A Place to Bury Strangers, the Builders and the Butchers and even the Gutter Twins. Worth a dig.

Feel Bad For You, May 2011

Feel Bad For You hosts a monthly mixtape comprised of submissions from music bloggers and Twitterers, and it’s always a good time. This month’s compilation has a theme, killer basslines, and you can enjoy it all below, by stream (maybe, barring technical difficulties) or by download.

Download

Title: Waiting Room
Artist: Fugazi
Album: 13 Songs (1989)
Submitted By: Romeo Sid Vivicious
Comments: This one took no thought at all. The opening to this song is what comes to mind any time any one mentions a bass line. This album this one is off of was an icebreaker between me and my now best friend when we first met and to this day still makes my playlists 22 years later. God damn it now I feel fucking old…

Title: Chicken Strut
Artist: The Meters
Album: Struttin’ (1970)
Submitted By: Phil Norman – @philnorman – www.bluemoonshineband.com
Comments: I dig the current neo-funk-soul revival of bands like Sugarman 3, but I dig The Meters even more. Also, this song has chicken noises.

Title: Yes
Artist: Morphine
Album: Yes (1995)
Submitted by: April @ Now This Sound Is Brave
Comments: Since the general makeup of Morphine was drums, baritone sax and two-string slide bass, nearly every song they recorded was built around a killer bassline. But the bassline on “Yes” is the one that most frequently makes me rock out and say, “Damn.”

Title: Queen of Canton Street
Artist: Eleven Hundred Springs
Album: Welcome to Eleven Hundred Springs (1999)
Submitted By: @mikeorren
Comments: In my mind, the best country acts use bass to create an R&B rhythm behind the fiddle, slide and twang. This is one of my favorite examples, as well as some nice songwriting from Matt the Cat. (Hint: “Naomi” was one of Dallas’ best country bars, not a woman.)

Title: Comfortable In Your Arms
Artist: Tom Freund
Album: Copper Moon (2005)
Submitted By: toomuchcountry
Comments: Before pursuing his solo career, West Coaster Freund played in a couple of fantastic bands: first with then unknown Ben Harper and later with The Silos. His bass playing is as smooth as a tumbler of Kentucky bourbon. Be sure to check out the video of this song at www.youtube.com/watch?v=l98sRV-TXkY.

Title: Testarossa
Artist: Sir Mix-a-Lot
Album: Mack Daddy (1992)
Submitted By: Autopsy IV (ninebullets.net)
Comments: The 808 kick drum makes the girlies get dumb.

Title: Young Man Blues
Artist: The Who
Album: Live at Leeds (1970)
Submitted BY: Rockstar_Aimz
Comments: I recently heard the Foo Fighters cover of this song, and while their version is good, Nate Mendel is no John Entwistle. This song has so many killer parts, but it’s Entwistle’s driving base line that makes it kick so much ass. Although it’s not an original, this song represents The Who musically at their very best

Title: People, Let’s Stop The War
Artist: Grand Funk Railroad
Album: E Pluribus Funk (1971)
Submitted by: Truersound
Comments: What Homer Simpson calls “The bong-rattling bass of Mel Schacher”

Title: Mona
Artist: Quicksilver Messenger Service
Album: Happy Trails (1969)
Submitted By: Shooter Jennings

Title: The Real Me
Artist: The Who
Album: Quadrophenia (1973)
Submitted By: erschen
Comments: My introduction to this song was by the 80′s Metal Band W.A.S.P. Which got me to look into deeper cuts from The Who. Thanks, Blackie!! John Entwistle sure could play. What a rhythm section, Keith Moon & John Entwistle.

Title: The Escape
Artist: Radio Moscow
Album: Brain Cycles (2009)
Submitted By: @popa2unes
Comments: Comprised of singer/songwriter/guitarist Parker Griggs, drummer Corey Berry and bassist Zach Anderson –the rebirth of the Power Trio. Call it blues rock, call it psychedelic, call it hard-grooved stoner rock, it’s Cream on steroids

Title: Nice ‘n’ Sleazy
Artist: The Stranglers
Album: Black and White (1978)
Submitted By: The Second Single
Comments: With regards to killer basslines, when in doubt, pull out some late ’70s/early ’80s British punk.

Title: My Generation
Artist: The Who
Album: My Generation – Deluxe Version (2002)
Submitted By: Simon
Comments: No choice to make on the track, other than which version to submit.

Title: Potential Suicide
Artist: The Wipers
Album: Is This Real
Submitted By: verbow1
Comments: Another band I discovered thanks to one Mr. Kurt Cobain. Very heavy song – and pretty depressing – stay away from the handguns after listening to this one.

Title: Myage
Artist: Descendents
Album: Milo Goes To College (1981)
Submitted By: @marioegarcia (@imperialrooster)
Comments: If we’re talking killer basslines it’s hard not to submit something by Motorhead or the Minutemen (or Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five). I’ve been struggling with this selection for a little bit but decided to submit this Descendents song. It’s the song that made me fall in love with punk rock, a relationship that has alternately ruined my life and made my life worth living at various points. Let’s talk about that bassline. The Ventures after about six pots of coffee this is one of those lines that’s guaranteed to get my motor going in the morning, especially when Bill Stevenson’s Wipeout drums lock in time with the bass.

Title: The Hanging Garden
Artist: The Cure
Album: Pornography (1982)
Submitted by: Slowcoustic
Comments: Because I was every alternative outcast character of a mid 80′s John Hughes film, I listened to said ‘alternative’ music because it made me better than the rest of the Junior High/High School normals. Because of this early emo angst, I was introduced to The Cure. And it changed music for me forever. The bass lines on the album might not be killer, as they are fairly straight forward, but are also quite pronounced. The album is dark & echoing due to the heavy bass & percussion aspect, and it almost pushed me to eyeliner….almost.

Title: Your Mama Wants Ya Back
Artist: Betty Davis
Album: They Say I’m Different (Originally released in 1974; reissued with bonus tracks in 2007)
Submitted By: BoogieStudio22
Comments: This was a very tough choice. Whittled my library down to 32 songs with “killer bass lines”. Then down to five songs. In the end, went with this Betty Davis track, with nasty sounding vocals to complement the “killer bass line”. BTW, Betty Davis was married to Miles Davis in ’68, divorced in ’69.

Title: Six Pack
Artist: Black Flag
Album: The First Four Years
Submitted by: AnnieTUFF
Comments: After a lot of thinking about Killer Bass lines, and about technical skill vs just sounding badass. I had to choose this song. Because it doesn’t matter where I am, who I’m with or what is going on with my life, when I hear the first couple of notes of this song I wanna get rowdy. And who doesn’t wanna get rowdy?

Title: Belle
Artist: Al Green
Album: The Belle Album (1977)
Submitted By: Adam Sheets
Comments: Great bass here courtesy of Reuben Fairfax Jr. and an excellent performance from the undisputed King of Memphis soul. This is perhaps Green’s most ambiguous number and those who aren’t paying close attention to the lyrics are likely to interpret this one far differently than the artist intended.

Songs About… Fornicating

It’s springtime in America.

Well, for a given value of spring in some parts of the country.

Anyway, springtime means spring fever, and the link between music and sex is well-documented, multi-faceted and enjoys a long and robust history. There are songs to woo, songs about The Act, songs about the morning after… every aspect of the coupling dance that goes on between humans has had a song written about it at some point. Hell, if you took away all of the songs related to getting someone into bed, you might have two albums left in your whole music collection.

Some of NTSIB’s Twitter friends helped us put together a list of favorite songs about the dirty, ugly, funny, horrifying, ecstatic, beautiful act of sex, and we present the list here with some accompanying video highlights. (No, not those kinds of video highlights.)

Submitted by @austinlucasIND:
Songs About Fucking, Big Black

Submitted by April (@nowthissound):
“Call of the Playground”, Shudder to Think
Gentlemen, The Afghan Whigs

Submitted by @amanjo:
“Full Grown”, The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion

Submitted Jennifer (@rufus_):
“First of May”, Jonathan Coulton
“Closer”, Nine Inch Nails
“The Man That I Am with My Man”, The Hidden Cameras
“Cheat On Your New Lover With Me”, Jail Weddings
“Pink Cadillac”, Bruce Springsteen
“Cream” and “Little Red Corvette”, Prince
“Supernova”‘ Liz Phair
“Striptease”, Hawksley Workman
“I Want Your Sex”, George Michael
“I Touch Myself”, The Divinyls

Submitted by @Truersound:
“Who Were You Thinking Of?”, Texas Tornados

Submitted by @cowbelle78:
“One For The Cutters”, The Hold Steady (for the line “getting nailed against dumpsters behind townie bars”)

Submitted by @davepolak:
“Why Me, God? (Everybody’s Fucking but Me)”, Durwood Douche

Submitted by @lilykerson:
“Fucking in Rhythm and Sorrow”, The Sugarcubes
“I Like Fucking”‘ Bikini Kill
“Orgasm Addict”, The Buzzcocks
“Pony”, Ginuwine

Submitted by @leighbee:
“Sex (I’m a…)”, Berlin
“Let’s Get it On”, Marvin Gaye

Submitted by @simon2307:
“Squeeze Box”, The Who

Submitted by @andiamkate:
“Angel”, Massive Attack

Submitted by @popa2unes:
“She Makes Me Feel Big”, The Fools

Notable Shows in the Greater Cleveland Area

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sat, Apr 30| 8 PM (7:30 PM door)
    The Volcanos
    The Madeira
    DC 3
    $8 adv / $10 dos
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Sun, May 1| 5:30 PM (5 PM door)
    “Rebels With a Cause” PetFix Benefit
    Exhibit A
    Hillbilly Idol
    State Road
    $12 adv / $15 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Wed, May 4| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    .357 String Band
    Hiram Rapids Stumblers
    Blue Ribbon Bluegrass Band
    $8
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Sat, Apr 30| 10 PM
    Southeast Engine
    The Modern Electric
    Extra Medium Pony
    $7
  • Mon, May 2| 8 PM
    Devin The Dude
    Coughee Brothaz
    $14 adv / $16 dos
  • Tue, May 3| 8 PM
    Beats Antique
    Beard-O-Bees
    Glacial 23
    $12 adv / $14 dos
  • Wed, May 4| 7 PM
    Ted Leo
    Max Stern
    @ B Side Liquor Lounge
    $10 adv / $12 dos
  • Wed, May 4| 8 PM
    Dax Riggs
    Not So Good Ol Boys
    The Unclean
    $10 adv / $12 dos
  • Thu, May 5| 8 PM
    Revolution Brass Band
    Johnny & the Apple Stompers
    FREE
  • Fri, May 6| 8 PM
    The Death Set
    Win Win
    The Very Knees
    MisterBradleyP
    $10

Now That’s Class

  • Mon, May 2| 9 PM
    Tyler Jon Tyler
    Basement Hahas
    X of V’s
    FREE
  • Thu, May 5| 9 PM
    Filmstrip
    Field Trip
    Fucking Cops
    All Dinosaurs
    $3
  • Happy Dog

  • Fri, Apr 29| 9 PM
    New Lou Reeds
    Tadpoles
    The Very Knees

Wilbert’s

  • Tue, May 3| 8 PM
    Kinky Friedman

Musica

  • Sat, Apr 30| 8 PM
    Buffalo Killers
    Rachel’s Secret Stache
    The Suede Brothers
    The Heights Band
    $8
  • Thu, May 5| 7 PM
    Koo Koo Kanga Roo
    Nite -N- Day
    Valley Fall
    Official Seals
    $8