Five songs that Gal Raver wishes she wrote:

My new HOLD ME DOWN doesnโ€™t come with a playlist (not yet). But enough folks have asked me what I was listening to while writing this rock-and-roll suspense that I realized I needed to think about the songs that inspired its tough protagonist, Gal Raver, a clubland survivor with a history beyond the hits. So, yeah, these songs are in regular rotation on my playlist. More to the point, theyโ€™d be on Galโ€™s, too.

L7: โ€œFast and Frighteningโ€

This one always gets me going โ€“ Donita Sparksโ€™ trilled โ€œr,โ€ the ferocity of Suzi Gardnerโ€™s punk-metal guitar. Whatโ€™s not to like? A slash-and-burn track by the founders of Rock for Choice, โ€œF&Fโ€ evokes the bandโ€™s live energy more than the better-known grunge grind of โ€œPretend Weโ€™re Dead.โ€ โ€œSheโ€™s got so much clit, she donโ€™t need no balls.โ€

Sleater-Kinney: โ€œTurn It Onโ€

True story: I was driving to work when this song came on WMBR, my local college station, forcing me to pull over and listen. A slow grind of passion that builds to something more desperate than orgasmic, this cut showcases the raw chemistry between Corin Tuckerโ€™s wailing vocals and Carrie Brownsteinโ€™s urgent guitar. A lot has been made of how this album, โ€œDig Me Out,โ€ chronicles the breakdown of Tucker and Brownsteinโ€™s romance, but this cut captures that moment when it just โ€ฆ has โ€ฆ to โ€ฆ happen.

A.K.A.C.O.D.: โ€œSun Burns Outโ€

Released as one of Monique (โ€œBourbon Princessโ€) Ortizโ€™s many low-rock projects, this cut features her heady contralto and liquid bass in its own quickie noir drama. When she lived in Boston, Ortiz was often referred to in relation to Mark Sandman/Morphineโ€™s bass-centric sound, but she has long held her own.

The Darts: โ€œRevolutionโ€

Power punk pop for now people! Amped-up garage rock, complete with Farfisa organ and a shout-along chorus led by the relentlessly chipper Nicole (โ€œLove Me Notsโ€) Laurenne, this gleeful anthem transcends the guilty-pleasure dome.

Deap Vally: โ€œSmile Moreโ€

A manifesto with hooks, delivered with a sardonic sneer, โ€œSmile Moreโ€ captures the complicated reality of being female today with punk directness. โ€œYes, I am a feminist, but that is not why I started doing this,โ€ intones the LA duoโ€™s guitarist/singer Lindsey Troy. Galโ€™s a survivor from another generation, but, hell yeah, she sings along.


A former journalist, Clea Simon is the Boston Globe-bestselling author of three nonfiction books and 29 mysteries. including the new psychological suspense HOLD ME DOWN. While most of these (like A Cat on the Case) are cat โ€œcoziesโ€ or amateur sleuth, she also writes darker crime fiction, like the rock and roll mystery World Enough, named a โ€œmust readโ€ by the Massachusetts Book Awards. Her new psychological suspense HOLD ME DOWN (Polis Books) returns to the music world, with themes of PTSD and recovery, as well as love in all its forms. She can be reached at www.cleasimon.com, on Twitter @Clea_Simon and on Instagram @cleasimon_author