Out of curiosity I took out my three favorite Tracy Chapman albums (her first three), including Fast Car, and sampled various songs I remembered have significant bass lines, and used my spectrum analyzer software with the mic at my listening seat.
All three albums have similar spectrum signatures. Most of the low bass energy is +/- 10Hz of 50Hz, with some occasional dips on all three albums into the high 30Hz range, and one or two little spikes at 28Hz (on the Mountains O' Things track). Nothing to use in a subwoofer survey.
This sort of spectrum does excite many peoples' room modes, and with speakers that may have been designed with a low bass hump, and a little bass level bump on an AVR that many people I know use, could easily result in a 15db+ response peak at about 50Hz. Strong 50Hz can sound impressive to the uninitiated, and some sounds that reach down to 40Hz can lead people to believe these albums have a lot of bass, but they don't.
Played back on a relatively accurate system, these albums do have a prominent bass line from electric basses and synthesizers, but it shouldn't sound loud or out of proportion. The occasional 40-45Hz notes will sound like real bass on a good system, but that's most of what there is to hear.