THE HORRORS

Tour Dates
DATE VENUE CITY
6/10/2012 Wolverhampton Civic Hall Wolverhampton / GB

Connect To Baeble
BAEBLE NEWSLETTER

 
SUBSCRIBE
GET OUR APPS
iPhone app   iPhone app
Offical Website

Buy Music:
Baeble Videos

MUSIC VIDEO

MUSIC VIDEO

MUSIC VIDEO

MUSIC VIDEO

MUSIC VIDEO

MUSIC VIDEO

Editorial

BLOG: NEW MUSIC VIDEO: THE HORRORS
Remember the first time you watched 2001: A Space Odyssey and how the "Beyond the Infinite" section made absolutely zero sense, and it seemed like an excuse for hippies to drop acid and just watch the psychedelic visuals? It's not necessarily a criticism, but you're likely to get the same reaction from the newest music video from British post-punk band the Horrors....
READ MORE
BLOG: LATE NIGHT: THE HORRORS
Carson is back, but of late he's been sending out camera crews to local shows instead of hosting his own....
READ MORE
BLOG: STREAM: THE HORRORS DO BEYONCE
We truly enjoyed the ambient muddle of Skying, the most recent album from brit-rockers The Horrors. That's why we were enthused by their ambitious cover of Beyonce's diva jam "Best Thing I Never Had", but also curious—how would that gothy wash of sound correlate to Beyonce's sprightly R&B? As it turns out, surprisingly well....
READ MORE
BLOG: ALBUM REVIEW: THE HORRORS
The Horrors have done a few interesting things with Skying, their latest romp. The band integrates a few of modern alternative quirks quite well with an appealing and even-tempered sound on top; percussive oddities give way to pleasant choruses, and crunchy synths melt into reverberated hooks....
READ MORE
ALBUM REVIEW: THE HORRORS SKYING
The Horrors have done a few interesting things with Skying, their latest romp. The band integrates a few of modern alternative quirks quite well with an appealing and even-tempered sound on top; percussive oddities give way to pleasant choruses, and crunchy synths melt into reverberated hooks....
READ MORE
Artist Bio

With influences that include Edward Gorey, Screaming Lord Sutch, Joe Meek, and the Cramps, the Horrors craft a grimy, goth-tinged kind of punk rock that's almost as campy as it is catchy. The big-haired, black-clad quintet -- which features singer Faris Badwan, bassist Tomethy Furse, guitarist Joshua Von Grimm, drummer Coffin Joe, and keyboardist Spider Webb -- formed in the summer of 2005 and quickly gained notoriety around London for their look, sound, and brief but frantic live shows. Loog soon signed them, and the Horrors released their official debut single, Sheena Is a Parasite/Jack the Ripper, in spring 2006. The buzz around the band reached a peak that summer, with the Horrors DJing at the Troubled Minds club night, having to reschedule in-store appearances because of crowd concerns and releasing their second single, Death at the Chapel. They also reissued Sheena Is a Parasite as a limited-edition DVD single. The song's startling video was directed by Chris Cunningham and featured actress Samantha Morton as Sheena. Late that summer, the band signed to Stolen Transmission in the U.S. and released a self-titled EP that fall. They also issued the Count in Fives single in the U.K. around that time. The Gloves single arrived early in 2007, heralding the release of the Horrors' full-length debut, Strange House, which arrived in the U.K. that March and in the U.S. in May. For 2009's Primary Colours, the band opted for a very different sound, mixing shoegaze, post-punk, and goth; the album was released by XL that spring.