0
Disrupt
Disrupt
band
1
Laura Macfarlane
Laura Macfarlane
Australian musician
2
Mars
Mars
American rock band
3
Poison Idea
Poison Idea
4
Controlled Bleeding
Controlled Bleeding
American band
5
Craw
Craw
band
6
Growing
Growing
American band
7
Clock DVA
Clock DVA
English band
8
Masters of the Obvious
Masters of the Obvious
garage punk band from New Hampshire, USA
9
Neptune
Neptune
noise music band from Boston
10
Dog Faced Hermans
Dog Faced Hermans
Scottish band
11
Eric Gaffney
Eric Gaffney
American musician
12
The Coctails
The Coctails
13
Crime
Crime
American punk band
14
Warning
Warning
UK-based doom metal band
15
FM
FM
Canadian progressive rock music group
16
Henrik Freischlader
Henrik Freischlader
German musician
17
We the People
We the People
18
Constantines
Constantines
band
19
Thinking Plague
Thinking Plague
American avant-rock group
20
The Stupids
The Stupids
21
Hellbastard
Hellbastard
English Band
22
Malignus Youth
Malignus Youth
23
Memphis Jug Band
Memphis Jug Band
band
24
Stealers Wheel
Stealers Wheel
Scottish Rock Band
25
Dirty Rotten Imbeciles
Dirty Rotten Imbeciles
American crossover thrash band
26
Shiner
Shiner
band
27
Swirlies
Swirlies
American band
28
Helena Espvall
Helena Espvall
musician
29
Pylon
Pylon
US rock band
30
Pussy Galore
Pussy Galore
American garage rock band
31
The Choir
The Choir
32
Agoraphobic Nosebleed
Agoraphobic Nosebleed
band
33
Holger Czukay
Holger Czukay
German bass-guitarist and co-founder of "Can"
34
The High Water Marks
The High Water Marks
Intro
Canadian band

The Nihilist Spasm Band (NSB) is a Canadian noise band formed in 1965 in London, Ontario. The band was founded by Hugh McIntyre, John Clement, John Boyle, Bill Exley, Murray Favro, Archie Leitch, Art Pratten, and Greg Curnoe. Leitch has since retired, Curnoe was killed in a bicycle accident in 1992, and McIntyre died of heart failure in 2004. The band members are mostly local artists. They were one of the artists named on the Nurse with Wound list

The term "spasm band" refers to a band that uses homemade instruments. Most of the NSB's instruments are modifications of other instruments, or wholly invented by the members. In addition to the homemade instruments, members are encouraged to improvise. The range of the improvisation is such that instruments are not tuned to each other, tempos and time signatures are not imposed, and the members push the ranges of their instrumentation by engaging in constant innovation and ever-increasing volume over the course of a performance.

Zev Asher's documentary film What About Me: The Rise of The Nihilist Spasm Band premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2000. Drawing from the inspiration of finding a copy of the Nihilist Spasm Band's first L.P. No Canada in the pile of 1970's ephemera in his family's basement; the documentary explores the legacy of the NSB as Canadian noise music pioneers.