Real places mentioned by name in PSB songs
"I love to mention real places."
— Neil commenting on "The Resurrectionist" in the Format booklet interview
Much like the preceding list, this list includes only places that are actually mentioned by name in PSB songs. Those many places merely alluded to without their names being mentioned aren't included here. I also don't include the earth itself and celestial bodies: the sun, the moon, planets, stars, etc.
- Afghanistan ("It's Alright" and "London")
- Amalfi ("Dancing Star")
- America/U.S.A. ("Jack and Jill Party" and "We're All Criminals Now")
- Amsterdam ("Homosexuality")
- Argentina ("Tall Thin Men," via that song's mention of "Don't Cry for Me, Argentina")
- Barcelona ("Single")
- Bart's (St. Bartholomew's Hospital in London, mentioned in "The Resurrectionist")
- Beijing ("A Certain 'Je Ne Sais Quoi'")
- Berkeley Square ("Bright Young Things")
- Berlin ("A Certain 'Je Ne Sais Quoi'" and "Mongrel"; it's also of course mentioned in the title, though not the lyrics, of "Wedding in Berlin")
- The Betty Ford Clinic ("DJ Culture")
- Beverly Hills ("Love etc.")
- Biba (a famed London clothing store of the 1970s, mentioned in "Requiem in Denim and Leopardskin")
- Blackfriar's Bridge (in London, mentioned in "The Resurrectionist")
- Bletchley Park ("The Enigma")
- Blitz (a questionable entry considering that the Blitz referred to in "Party in the Blitz" is undoubtedly not a place but rather a historical phenomenon of World War II, but a metaphorical "echo" related to the famed circa 1980 London club by that name cannot be completely ruled out)
- Bonn ("Single")
- Brick Lane ("Brick England")
- Britain (as part of the name of the comic book hero Captain Britain, mentioned in "Building a Wall")
- Broadway ("New York City Boy" and "Rent")
- Brooklyn ("Homosexuality")
- Brussels ("Single")
- Cafe Picasso ("The Ghost of Myself")
- California ("We Came from Outer Space" and "The Pop Kids" (Full Story Mix)
- Calvary ("Viva la Vida")
- Cambridge ("He Dreamed of Machines")
- Chelsea Harbour Pier (in London, referred to simply as "Chelsea Piers" in "Beauty Has Laid Siege to the City," although it's possible it may instead allude to New York City's Chelsea Piers in Manhattan)
- China ("A New Life")
- Chihuahua (a dog breed mentioned in the lyrics of "I Want a Dog," but since the breed is named for the Mexican state of Chihuahua, it slips in on a technicality)
- Le Colisée (a nightclub in World War II-era Paris, mentioned in "In the Night")
- Copenhagen ("Dancing Star")
- Crimea ("London")
- Culver City ("The Way It Used to Be")
- The
Dive Bar* (mentioned in "West
End Girls")
*I had always interepreted it as a reference to a generic "dive bar," but Neil has noted on more than one occasion that he's referring specifically to the actual but now-defunct Dive Bar in the basement of the King's Head Pub on Gerrard Street in the Soho section of London. - Dreamland (an amusement park in the coastal town of Margate in southeastern England, used metaphorically in the song with that title but inspired by the actual place)
- The East End (of London, in "West End Girls" and "Out of My System")
- Embankment Gardens ("The Survivors")
- England ("Love Is a Bourgeois Construct," "Other Ranks," and "Brick England")
- Eurasia ("It's Alright")
- Europa (German and/or archaic/poetic language for Europe, used in "The Schlager Hit Parade")
- Finland Station ("West End Girls")
- Fire Island ("Homosexuality")
- The Firth of Forth ("Legacy")
- Flood Street ("The Ghost of Myself")
- The Fortune of War (an old London pub mentioned in "The Resurrectionist"; it was demolished in 1910)
- France ("A New Bohemia")
- Gaul ("Building a Wall")
- Germany ("The Enigma")
- Goldhawk Road (a street in London mentioned in "Love Is a Bourgeois Construct")
- Gomorrah ("The Sodom and Gomorrah Show")
- Grantchester ("He Dreamed of Machines")
- The Guggenheim (presumably the New York museum, mentioned in "Run Girl Run!")
- Guy's (Guy's Hospital in London, mentioned in "The Resurrectionist")
- Hallesches Tor (a station on Berlin's U-Bahn, mentioned in a sampled recording of a station announcement in "Will-o-the-wisp")
- Hanslope Park ("Other Ranks")
- Heaven* ("Closer to Heaven" and "A New Life")
- Hollywood ("Love etc." "Requiem in Denim and Leopardskin", "A New Bohemia," and "New London Boy")
- Hong Kong ("What Are We Going to Do About the Rich?")
- The House of Commons* ("Shopping")
- The House of Lords* ("The Former Enfant Terrible")
*I suppose it's a matter of debate as to whether the House of Commons and the House of Lords are actual places or simply governmental institutions that meet in a place that's more accurately referred to as the Houses of Parliament or the Palace of Westminster. Since it is a debatable point, I'm including them in the list. - Jerusalem ("Viva la Vida")
- JFK (as New York's John F. Kennedy Airport is referred to in "Home and Dry")
- Kensington ("Hit Music")
- Kenya ("The Trial")
- The King of Denmark (an old London pub, closed in 2011, mentioned in "The Resurrectionist")
- King's Cross ("King's Cross," referring to both the subway station and its vicinity)
- Knightsbridge ("Beauty Has Laid Siege to the City")
- L.A. (abbreviation for Los Angeles, spoken by Neil in an unreleased Chris Zippel edit of "E-mail")
- Lake Geneva ("West End Girls")
- Let It Rock (a popular London clothing shop of the 1970s, mentioned in "Requiem in Denim and Leopardskin")
- London ("London," "Something Special," "The View from Your Balcony," "In His Imagination," "The Pop Kids," "Dancing Star," and "New London Boy")
- Luna Park ("Luna Park"although there are many Luna Parks, and this one is metaphorical)
- Manchester ("The Trial"; the Manchester Royal Infirmary is also mentioned)
- Manderley* (an alternate spelling of Mandalay, used in "King of Rome")
*As noted below in my list of songs that contain literary references, this is essentially a reference to the fictional estate "Manderley" in the Daphne Du Maurier novel Rebecca, but it also can be readily perceived as a reference to the real-life city, so it belongs in both lists. - Marseilles ("Don Juan")
- Memphis ("Searching for the Face of Jesus")
- Midlands (a region of England, mentioned in "Other Ranks")
- Mitte (literally "center" or "middle," the name of a district in Berlin, mentioned in "You Are the One")
- Mornington Crescent (a London street and subway station mentioned in "Party in the Blitz")
- Moscow ("A Certain 'Je Ne Sais Quoi'")
- New Orleans ("Vampires")
- New York ("New York City Boy," "Paninaro," "Paninaro '95," "Two Divided by Zero," "The Way It Used to Be," and "Dancing Star")
- Newcastle ("The Truck-Driver and His Mate")
- Newgate Street (in London, mentioned in "The Resurrectionist")
- Nice ("Party Song")
- Nollendorfplatz (a square and train station in Berlin, mentioned in "Will-o-the-wisp")
- Norway ("My Night")
- Oklahoma (by virtue of the Broadway musical of that name mentioned in "Tall Thin Men")
- Odessa (mentioned in the titles, though not in any lyrics, of the tracks "Odessa" and "After All (The Odessa Staircase)")
- Orly Airport (in Paris, mentioned in "Dancing Star")
- Oxford ("Hoping for a Miracle")
- Oxford Road (a street in Manchester mentioned in "The Trial")
- Paris ("Homosexuality," "My Night," "Paris City Boy," and "Dancing Star")
- Philadelphia ("Philadelphia")
- Piccadilly ("Beauty Has Laid Siege to the City")
- The Ritz (a luxury hotel in London's Piccadilly neighborhood, referred to in "Party in the Blitz")
- The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (referred to as an institution in "How Can You Expect to Be Taken Seriously?" but it's an actual place in Cleveland, Ohio)
- Rome ("It's Just My Little Tribute to Caligula, Darling!" "King of Rome," "The Way It Used to Be," and"A Certain 'Je Ne Sais Quoi'")
- Rough Trade (a famed London record shop since the late 1970s mentioned in the lyrics of the unreleased song "She's So Eclectic")
- Russia (via its adjectival inflection, "Russian," in "Mongrel")
- St. Petersburg ("Dancing Star")
- Salzburg ("Wiedersehen")
- San Francisco ("Electricity," "Homosexuality," and "Dancing Star")
- Scandinavia ("Believe in Love")
- Scapa Flow ("Legacy")
- Scotland Yard (the London police agency, but also a placethe name of its original headquartersmentioned in "Do I Have To?")
- Select (another wartime Parisian nightclub mentioned in "In the Night")
- The Serpentine (a London lake mentioned in "That's My Impression")
- Seventh Avenue ("New York City Boy")
- Sherborne (the name of a British public school as well as the town in which it's located, mentioned in "Natural Wonders Every Child Should Know")
- Siberia ("Dancing Star")
- Smile (a famed London hair salon mentioned in "Requiem in Denim and Leopardskin")
- Sodom ("The Sodom and Gomorrah Show")
- The Sorbonne ("Opportunities")
- South Africa ("It's Alright")
- Spain ("Nothing Has Been Proved")
- Spanish Harlem ("Hit Music")
- Statue of Liberty ("Ego Music"; whether this is a "place" or simply a "thing" is subject to debate, but since it is debatable, I'll err on the side of inclusion)
- Stockwell (a section of Greater London mentioned in "We're All Criminals Now")
- The Strand ("The Theatre")
- Teheran ("A Certain 'Je Ne Sais Quoi'")
- Tenth Avenue (probably New York City's, in "The Way It Used to Be")
- Thieving Lane (a popular Victorian nickname for London's Bow Street, used in "The Resurrectionist")
- Trafalgar Square ("Up Against It")
- Truth or Consequences (a town in New Mexico, mentioned in "The Last to Die")
- Uhland (the abbreviated name of a street and an underground train station in Berlin, Uhlandstraße, mentioned in "Will-o-the-wisp")
- The United Kingdom ("A Man from the Future")
- The United States ("The Enigma")
- The V&A (popular slang for London's Victoria and Albert Museum in "The Ghost of Myself")
- Vienna ("Dancing Star")
- Warschauerstraße ("Warsaw Street," a major Berlin thoroughfare and the train station named for it, mentioned in "Will-o-the-wisp")
- Waterloo Bridge ("Hoping for a Miracle")
- Wedding ("A Wedding in Berlin"—a stretch for inclusion here only because Neil has acknowledged a pun in the title since "Wedding" is also the name of a district in Berlin)
- The West ("Living in the Past"—though it's another questionable inclusion since, while it does refer collectively to the United States, Canada, and Western Europe, "The West" is more a geopolitical concept than an actual geographical "place")
- The West End (of London, in "West End Girls")
- York Minster ("Legacy")
- Zanzibar (a bar/restaurant in 1970s London mentioned in "Requiem in Denim and Leopardskin," named of course for the island off the east coast of Africa)
- Zehlendorf (a locale in Berlin mentioned in "You Are the One")
*In case you're wondering why I include "Heaven" in this list of "real places" but not "Hell," it's really quite simple: I personally believe in Heaven, but I don't believe in Hell. You may disagree with one or the other of these precepts, but remember—it's my website. Now, if you would like for learn more about why I believe as I do, feel free to ask me about it. But—fair warning—we'll be delving into my personal religious beliefs, and you asked for it.
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