Gordon Bell (born 24 July 1969) is a Scottish singer-songwriter based in Basel, Switzerland.
He released fifteen albums. Nine of those albums were under the pseudonym Gustav Bertha. His breakthrough fifth album My Life as a Dog (distributed in Switzerland through RecRec) was well received: Swiss newspaper Der Bund called it 'Wunderbar',.[1] The Swiss press has also dubbed him with the slightly more ambiguous title, "The World's least-known Scot".[2] He stopped working under the Gustav Bertha pseudonym in 2008 to write and play as Gordon Bell. Bell's music could be compared to a strange cross between fellow Glaswegians Ivor Cutler and Alex Harvey. He has a penchant for storytelling in his songs. He also spent 15 years as lead singer with a tribute to The Sensational Alex Harvey Band – Not The Sensational Alex Harvey Band and now fronts the rock band Giant Stone Eater who play a mix of covers (especially songs connected with Alex Harvey) and Bell's own songs.
Year | Artist | Title | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1991 | One in Five | Five Flew Over the Hatchery | ||
1993 | Psychoannie | Amoeba | ||
1999 | plasticpsychobabble | StranGe enchantment | ||
2000 | submerging meadows green boundaries | |||
blurred visions for fuzzy strangers | ||||
The Secret Life of Andrew Aston | Caffeine Injunction | |||
2001 | Gustav Bertha | Songs for Gigi | ||
2002 | The Hose Room | |||
Café Crème | ||||
2003 | babble | |||
2004 | My Life as a Dog | |||
2005 | Defective | |||
2006 | z:06 (compilation) | |||
2007 | small adventures in the great domestic wilderness | |||
2008 | True North | |||
2009 | Gordon Bell | Songs for the Broken Hearted | ||
2010 | The Lost Art of Penance | |||
2011 | The 12 Uses of a Dead Tape Cassette | |||
Gordon Bell and the Sinking Ships | Animal Kingdom | |||
2012 | Gordon Bell | A Day Trip to the Sea |