Guilty Pleasure: Sublime – Sublime

By Maria Murriel on September 30th, 2009 in Guilty Pleasure

Sometimes, a girl just can’t keep waiting for summertime. Even if your hometown is devoid of seasonal changes and it’s sunny out all year long, there comes a time in between March and May when the heat is just too damn much. Seriously, all you want to do is grab that six pack that looks so inviting sitting there in that gas station refrigerator and head to the closest body of water for some quality chillin’. When this time comes, and you’re itching to drop all responsibility and dive into your summer vacation, what better soundtrack than Sublime’s third and last studio album, their self-titled groove machine?

Released mid-summer in 1996, Sublime was the band’s only album to come out under the wing of a major record label (Gasoline Alley/MCA), and what’s tragic about it is that frontman Bradley Nowell didn’t even make it alive long enough to see it hit the stores. Nevertheless, Nowell’s heroin-related death didn’t prevent his last work from going Platinum five times and becoming this little lass’s party predilection.

Although some may say Sublime was just an unfortunate product of the 90s lowlife Cali crowd, or a mindless surfer boy experiment, I’m repping the LBC all the way. With tracks as classic as “Garden Grove”, “April 29, 1992”, “Doin’ Time”, “Caress Me Down”, and basically almost every other one on the album, I’m more than proud to bare my guilty pleasure. From beginning to end, Sublime captures the band’s ska, punk, & reggae kicks, offering a variety of styles from the radio-friendly, super boppy “What I Got”, to the slow, drawn out, sexy guitar of “Pawn Shop”, hardcore punk of “Paddle Out”, and chill hip-hop & latin vibes in “Doin’ Time”. This last track might be my sole favorite. It’s the perfect blend of soft congas, looping drum and bass, and the seductive serenade style that was Nowell’s forte.

I’m not much of a reggae fan, but listening to that man’s voice glide over their dubs, I can’t help but start hopping. There is such a decadent sexiness in his voice when it joins forces with the cadence of his guitar in numbers like “Pawn Shop”, it makes my hips just come alive and once the gyrating starts, it becomes contagious. It’s that neo-reggae funk that, for me, makes Sublime the band that means summertime.

Regardless of their obvious struggle with hard drugs, the guys in the band were able to produce carefree music, sometimes even incorporating a grimy sense of humor into their lyrics (see “Wrong Way”). They speak so clearly about a life of beer, weed, and desolate career prospects — a life I’ve come to know so well living in Miami, surrounded by twenty-somethings without direction and a love for days off. It always seemed to me like Nowell, bassist Bud Gaugh, and drummer Eric Wilson lead the same kind of existence. Southern Cali seems to be the 305 of the West Coast, and because our homes parallel each other, it’s easy for me to identify with their music, especially during times of leisure. This album, specifically, is great when you’re in the mood to take a load off and loosen up, maybe get a little raunchy, and break it down to “Caress Me Down”. This song masters the Long Beach dub beat and kills with its lyrics in Nowell’s broken Spanish, which is dirtier than a month-old litterbox.

Knowing the band’s history, their music also inspires a sort of rebellious nostalgia in me, especially tracks like “April 29, 1992”, which is truly more like an anthem than just a single. The second the bass kicks in after the cops are talking on the radio, a feeling of camaraderie is born within you. The song screams 1990s revolution with that killer bass line and the dropping of a “187” so casually in there. Perhaps there is just something extremely gratifying about hearing your hometown shouted out in a song about a riot. What’s great about Sublime’s version of rebellion is that it’s liberating without carrying that Cobain-esque aura of suffocation, which makes it more empowering rather than teenage angst-y. “Can’t fight against the youth!” declares Nowell in “Jailhouse”, and tell me that’s not just the kind of idealism you love to be a part of.

There are three basic elements that make Sublime worthy of keeping it in your iPod, even after you think you couldn’t bear to hear these songs more than you already have. First off, they had Brad Nowell for a vocalist at the time. The guy’s voice is like a lullaby that acts as a social lubricant. His soft moans and “everyman lyrics” always bear a sensuality that rolls so well over, around, and underneath the second reason to love them: Their beats are just so frickin’ laid back. Always kickin’ it with a relaxed bass and a backyard-band style drum beat that, together, invite you to join their group and their atmosphere by simply hanging out. Lastly, they couldn’t be Sublime without the synth dubs. In “Garden Grove”, they finish off the song with a sick turntable jam that follows Nowell’s listing of all his miserable activities. Marshall Goodman’s scratching combined with the slow drums and the song’s traditional ska/punk guitar make for a tune that is really just — there’s no other way to put it — sublime.

TAGGED AS: ,

comments (22)

  • why on earth would you call this a guilty pleasure???

    will next week be?

    Guilty Pleasure: Led Zeppelin, Led Zeppelin IV

    brycerosen October 2, 2009 at 2:26 am

  • Oh JJ the same can be said for your self, What are message boards for any way? Has anyone seen what those douche’s write on the festival out look pages? Get a life, have some fun and get over it. You are all lame assholes by the way.

    Ken October 1, 2009 at 7:49 am

  • guilty pleasures are dumb, imo. by that, i mean, the idea and concept of them. it basically implies that you are supposed to feel guilty about genuinely liking something. if you care about other people’s looks and opinions regarding your tastes, i can see how a “pleasure” can feel “guilty”, but i dont buy it. sublime will never be a guilty pleasure for me, just a purely dirty and glorious pleasure.

    and ken, either you know the writer personally and have some grudge against her so you feel you have to belittle her writing (which was pretty good, imo) with your fifth grade diction or you’re a douche for the sake of being a douche and you know it. hell, you even said it:

    “First off whats the point of a message board if you can fuck with people…”

    btw, did you mean “can’t”?

    so if that’s the only reason you’re here, you are a sorry piece of wasted birth. get a life, you know? do what you said you should do and get a job as a writer. I know the job market’s not doing that good now, but i’m sure you’ll find a job writing a cafeteria menu or something of the sort… dillhole

    Hunter "S" October 1, 2009 at 6:12 am

  • Definitely in my top five all time and probably will be forever. Just a great album from start to finish.

    Clark Griswald September 30, 2009 at 11:52 pm

  • yesssssssssssssssss!!!!!!!!!!!

    Ken September 30, 2009 at 9:49 pm

  • great album. great band. ken is a douche.

    nick September 30, 2009 at 9:21 pm

  • Your 8:54 posting is priceless, you basically defend yourself by saying everyone else stopped listening to them, who did you blow to write this article? Because I want to write also, can you get me a number or an email? I guess you really do suuuuuuuuuuck!!!!!!

    Ken September 30, 2009 at 9:16 pm

  • First off whats the point of a message board if you can fuck with people and… your article sucked, choose your words better if your going to write, which brings to my last post, try flipping burgers, walking the streets, or renting chairs at the beach, but you don’t know shit about writing about music. You should start a column about giving jr high girls make up and dating advice then work your way up to something important like community theater, but leave the music alone cuz you suuuuuuuuuck!!!!!!!

    Ken September 30, 2009 at 9:13 pm

  • Most of the time it was growing up, when at one point everyone was into them. Then suddenly they stopped their Sublime craze and started to listen to, I don’t know, whatever was new and hip at the time.
    I, however, NEVER stopped. Most of my friends got tired of them. So it was just that.

    Wish they were still around with the original lineup, but rest in peace, Bradley dear.

    We still love you.

    Maria Murriel September 30, 2009 at 8:54 pm

  • anyone that picks on you for loving this band that much is nuts. everyone i know loves this band but if you feel guilty then so be it but i don’t think you should though. i just think of guilty pleasures as the kind of music that when you’re listening to it really loud and someone pulls up next to you in traffic and you turn it down so you don’t get that look like wow what a loser.

    Anonymous September 30, 2009 at 8:43 pm

  • Jeez man, Ken.
    Talk about taking oneself seriously.
    No need to get so brutal over a damn personal preference.

    Nobody even said anything bad about the band, in fact, this is about how good they are…
    Time to relax.

    Maria Murriel September 30, 2009 at 8:36 pm

  • Well I grew up on the coast and Sublime is by far from a guilty pleasure, get your fucking nose out of the air and realize music can be fun once in a while and stop taking yourself so seriously. Dead or Alive, that’s a guilty pleasure Dead eye Dick, that’s a guilty pleasure, you suck, get a new job and get new friends who don’t make fun of an awesome band, You are all lame assholes!!!!!!

    Ken September 30, 2009 at 8:23 pm

  • I think a guilty pleasure depends a lot on who you talk to, and I’ve always gotten a lot of shit for being a hardcore, diehard, truly loving Sublime fan.

    Also, I picked it because it’s the one album that I like so much that every time I hear it I enjoy it so much it’s a little obscene. Haha. Love these guys forever.

    Maria Murriel September 30, 2009 at 7:45 pm

  • I’m with everyone else who commented. This is not a guilty pleasure, its a pretty much universally loved album.

    Dan September 30, 2009 at 7:07 pm

  • This is probably my favorite album of all time. Not a guilty pleasure ;)

    jshimmy September 30, 2009 at 4:49 pm

  • I bought this for $2 off my fellow Catholic-school-hater classmate. I played “Under my Voodoo” in my room on repeat with no mercy.

    Zoe September 30, 2009 at 4:40 pm

  • One of my favorite albums of all time. Guilty pleasure? Why?!

    Matt September 30, 2009 at 4:35 pm

  • I don’t think I could be friends with anyone that did not enjoy some part pf this album. It was the first CD I owned. I played the shit out of this thing.

    Adam September 30, 2009 at 4:28 pm

  • That is a great album. No reason to feel guilty

    Concertgoer September 30, 2009 at 4:20 pm

Leave a Reply