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Sublime: The Tragic Death of Bradley Nowell & History Of The Band
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1,642,407 Views • Nov 18, 2021 • Click to toggle off description
Sublime: The Traic history of the Band

0:00 - Bradley Nowell's early years
1:11 - Early Sublime Years
3:46 - Sublime's Personal Problems
6:00- Sublime's First Hit/KROQ
7:55 - Sublime's Final Album
11:10 - Nowell's Death/Aftermath

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#subllime #bradleynowell #santeria

I cite my sources and they may differ than other people's accounts, so I don't guarantee the actual accuracy of my videos.

Sublime was a ska-punk and reggae band that never got to properly experience their success. By the time their third album came out the band ceased to exist and most of their new fans had no clue the group was done. Today let’s take a look at the history of the band Sublime.

Growing up in the long beach neighbourhood of belmont shore, Frontman and guitarist Bradley Nowell came from a musical family. His father worked as a homebuilder who played guitar in his spare time.. His father became known for playing covers of Jim Croce (crow-che()) songs at parties while his mother was a piano teacher. His parents would give him his first guitar lessons. But by the time he turned 10, his parents would divorce with his mother taking custody of her son. She would tell VH1’s behind the music that nowell was a needy child and struggled in school becoming disruptive and suffered from attention deficit disorder. Feeling overwhelmed by Bradley’s behavior, he started living with his father at the age of 11 who took his son on a sailing trip around the US virgin islands. It was here where he got his first exposure to Bob Marley and reggae music which would be a huge influence on Nowell’s career in music.

Upon returning home from the sailing trip, Nowell was now a teeanger who would play in punk rock bands in the early 80’with bassist Eric Wilson. Wilson would recall how early jam sessions weren’t very successful telling the LA Times
“He was making me play (reggae). I didn’t want to play it,” with Nowell adding
“I was trying to get them to do ‘Cherry Oh Baby,’ (a song popularized by British reggae band UB40), and it didn’t work. They tried, but it just sounded like such garbage,“We were horrible.”
Nowell and Wilson’s band would be put on the backburner while Nowell went off to college. He would attend UC Santa Cruz for two years before he decided to study finance and transfer to Cal state. He only had one semester left before he dropped out recalling to the lA Times
“I have all the hard classes left. . . . I doubt I’ll ever go back.”
By this time NOwell returned to Long Beach and it was 1988, Hed reconnec with Wilson who called an old neighbour he grew up with across the alley named of his Bud Gough (Gawww). Gaww was taught drums by Wilson’s father who was a jazz drummer. Sublime’s lineup was now born. They would jam in Gaww’s garage and one of the first songs they wrote would be, well since this is youtube i’m not going to say the song’s title because last time i said this word i got in trouble so let’s just called it Date Expletive. If you know Sublime then you’ll know which song im referring to.THe band soon established a big following playing backyard parties and dive bars in southern california in front of hundreds of kids, earning upwards of $250 a night .
Gaww would tell Spin Magazine “we were like the band that everybody in the scene would show up for. If you were having a party that night and you had us play there would be two other parties that night in the same neighbourhood, everybody was going to be at the sublime party.
Wilson would recall to the LA Times We played some pretty rough neighborhoods,” “You’d have to be afraid of your own safety. Gangster kids would show up at the parties, and there would be trouble. Somebody got stabbed one time.” The gigs were so rough that Spin Magazine reported that samoan guards would provide security at the gigs and the police would be a frequent presence hovering over the gigs in their helicopters if they played past the noise curfew.
In 1990 Nowell rescued a dalmatian named Louie sometimes referred to as Lou Dog which was named after his grandfather and became the group’s defacto mascot. He was also referred to as Nowell’s alter-ego He would join the band on the road and onstage. During the spring of 1990 Michael “Miguel” Happold (happol) a music student offered to manage the band enticing them with an offer of free studio time at the school he attended. He became the de-facto fourth member of the band, helping prodoce their music, helping run their affairs and record label. The band by this point had al
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Views : 1,642,407
Genre: Music
Date of upload: Nov 18, 2021 ^^


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YouTube Comments - 2,484 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@rnrtruestories

1 year ago

Favourite Sublime song?

103 |

@Lisabug2659

2 years ago

My son was killed in August. He loved Sublime. Played their music at his Celebration of Life. And, well I now have a Dalmatian named Guliver. Thanks for the video.

2.3K |

@mfrost228

1 year ago

Lou dog was also deaf as a door nail by the end of his life, due to sitting in front of amps and just chilling on stage. If you’re going to lose your hearing, hey not a bad way to do it, listening to Sublime on stage every night. RIP Lou dog

882 |

@ordinarypete

11 months ago

40oz To Freedom is one of the best albums to this day. I’m 42 and still love it. I put it on when I wanna just get away from this crazy 2023 life.

206 |

@nolongerblocked6210

1 year ago

I'll never forget when Brad died. I was living in the City(SF) & in a dark period of my own life. After hearing about Brad it scared the crap outta me & I tried to get clean... it took a few tries but eventually it took

376 |

@mikey2toes966

2 years ago

I started crying when he said Lou Dog was on top of the bed whining. He must have felt powerless seeing Bradly OD. Poor dog was the first to cry for him.

468 |

@ZemarRed

2 years ago

I remember driving to school my sophomore year of hightschool and hearing "what I got" for the first time on the radio that morning...couldn't really process what it was bc it was so unique and different, but it made an instant impact. Bradley was a rare one

748 |

@Rob-157

1 year ago

I saw them live countless times when they would play backyard keg parties in the early 90’s. Imagine that, $5 entry for almost all you can drink beer and Sublime playing live.

103 |

@BritBrat83

1 year ago

Being a young teenager in the 90's was amazing. We had the best music!!! 🧡🧡

194 |

@roddymac998

2 years ago

40 Oz to freedom is a classic album, these guys gave hope to all musicians who didn't have a penny but a tonne of talent . Never be another group like them. True passion you can hear on every song. Rip Brad and Lou dog ❤️

911 |

@rayanthonyrobles5162

2 years ago

This takes me back... in 95 I was 18, and I picked up a gig running monitors at a club in NYC, Sublime and Orange 9MM came in and did a show (they were doing an east coast swing together), and I got to mix them for a few months... So many memories, Bradley was a genuine guy, those guys were all really great. Fucking hurts and always makes me smile whenever I hear them on the radio, or some acoustic guitarist playing them in some bar. RIP Bradley

305 |

@kiiwiipotatojenn

2 years ago

I'm from Long Beach. Born and raised. The band lived behind us and I remember hearing them in the garage all the time. My mom used to serve them all the time at a restaurant in Long Beach. I met him once when I was little. Sublime had a huge impact on my life. And one of my sayings is STILL STRAIGHT FROM LONG BEACH. Rest Easy Brad.

70 |

@tonynature

6 months ago

I was first introduced to Sublime at the age of 22 1997 whilst working in American summer camps in New England. I'm from England with Jamaican parents and Sublime spoke to me so deeply being a reggae lover, hiphop loving skateboarder, I feel so blessed to have been introduced to them.

19 |

@jg7102

2 years ago

Looking forward to this video. RIP Bradley and Lou Dog.

444 |

@wtfRyantater

2 years ago

I really love brad Nowell's acoustic work. He really had soul, man.

272 |

@bryanjames5256

11 months ago

Huge metalhead here, but Sublime has always caught my ear and has had a huge influence on my writing. Brad had huge potential to be something greater than he was, but even so, i always thought he was s musical genius. RIP Brad and Lou Dog

17 |

@guyfish2637

1 year ago

I worked the graveyard shift at Kinkos on 7th and PCH in Long Beach in the early 1990s. Sublime would come in at least once a week to do their flyers for their next shows. I got to know them pretty good but I didn't realize how good they were at that time. They would always come to the store after 2am in a bread truck painted with Sublime on it. I love them today but back then I had a lot of bands come to the store so I just didn't pay much attention to them🤩

15 |

@johndalton3180

2 years ago

A friend of mine had tickets to see them in San Francisco. When they got to the venue, they learned the show was cancelled, but weren't told why. Next day they found out it was because Brad had died.

231 |

@loganmoreland5667

2 years ago

Eric Wilson and Bud Gaugh are one of the most underrated rythm sections ever!

379 |

@PhilP8980

2 years ago

I've loved them from the day I heard them. The fact that Brad died before anyone else ever got a chance to hear them is one of the saddest things in music history. They made 3 of my favorite albums I've ever listened to. Just my opinion.

32 |

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