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Strange House
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| Strange House | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 5 March 2007 | |||
| Recorded | 2006 | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 38:08 | |||
| Label | Loog | |||
| Producer | ||||
| The Horrors chronology | ||||
| ||||
| Aggregate scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| Metacritic | 71/100[1] |
| Review scores | |
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| BBC Collective | |
| Drowned in Sound | 6/10[4] |
| The Guardian | |
| Mojo | |
| NME | 7/10[7] |
| The Observer | |
| Rolling Stone | |
| Uncut | |
| Yahoo Music | 9/10[11] |
Strange House is the debut studio album by English rock band the Horrors, released on 5 March 2007 by Loog Records.
Content
[edit]The band announced the title via a Myspace bulletin on 11 January 2007. The album subtitle, "Psychotic Sounds for Freaks and Weirdos", was created by a fan from the official Horrors forum.[12]
The album consists mostly of previously released material, although several of these tracks were re-recorded or remixed.[13]
Release
[edit]Strange House was released on 5 March 2007 by Loog Records. It reached No. 37 in the UK Albums Chart.[14]
A special edition including a DVD in a gatefold digipak was also released, which contained three music videos ("Sheena Is a Parasite", "Count in Fives" and "Gloves"), three live performances (one full-length and two short sets), an interview and a photo gallery.
Reception
[edit]A review in PopMatters said, "The Horrors bring a dose of dark glamour to an increasingly anodyne British alternative music scene... They blend their twin influences of early '80s gothic rock and '60s garage to startling effect. No doubt some will fail to see past the cartoonish fancy dress of cobweb strewn Edwardian undertakers, and write them off as a joke or novelty act. This would be a shame as there are half a dozen brilliant tunes on offer here".[15]
Track listing
[edit]- "Jack the Ripper" – 3:00 (Screaming Lord Sutch cover)
- "Count in Fives" – 3:13
- "Draw Japan" – 3:23
- "Gloves" – 3:46
- "Excellent Choice" – 2:53
- On the US edition, "Excellent Choice" is replaced by "Horrors Theme"
- "Little Victories" – 2:40
- "She Is the New Thing" – 3:21
- "Sheena Is a Parasite" – 1:42
- "Thunderclaps" – 3:06
- "Gil Sleeping" – 4:51
- "A Train Roars" – 3:54
- On UK editions of the album, there are three minutes of silence in the pregap preceding "Death at the Chapel"
- "Death at the Chapel" (UK bonus track) – 2:19
- Special Edition bonus DVD
- Videos
- "Sheena Is a Parasite"
- "Count in Fives"
- "Gloves"
- Live in London, 21 September 2006 (Underage Club at Coronet Theatre)
- "Jack the Ripper"
- "Count in Fives"
- "Horrors Theme"
- "Death at the Chapel"
- "Gloves"
- "Sheena Is a Parasite"
- "A Knife in the Eye"
- "Count in Fives" (Reprise)
- Live in New York, 2 November 2006 (The Annex)
- "Horrors Theme"
- "Crawdaddy Simone"
- Live in Tokyo, 20 December 2006 (The Astrohall)
- "Count in Fives"
- Bonus video material
- Interview
- Photo Gallery
- Hidden Footage: Live from the Casa de Ultragrrrl
- Untitled
References
[edit]- ^ "Strange House – The Horrors – Critic Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
- ^ Strange House: The Horrors – Review, AllMusic, retrieved 8 July 2011
- ^ Something wicked this way comes, BBC, retrieved 8 July 2011
- ^ The Horrors – Strange House, Drowned in Sound, archived from the original on 16 October 2012, retrieved 8 July 2011
- ^ Cooper, Leonie (1 March 2007), "The Horrors, Strange House", The Guardian, London, retrieved 8 July 2011
- ^ The Horrors – Strange House, Metacritic, retrieved 8 July 2011
- ^ "The Horrors: Strange House", NME, 23 February 2007, retrieved 8 July 2011
- ^ Hodgson, Jaimie (18 February 2007), "The Horrors, Strange House", The Guardian, London, retrieved 8 July 2011
- ^ "The Horrors", Rolling Stone, archived from the original on 21 May 2008, retrieved 8 July 2011
- ^ The Horrors, Metacritic, retrieved 8 July 2011
- ^ "The Horrors – Strange House", Uk.launch.yahoo.com, retrieved 8 July 2011
- ^ DIY, April 2017
- ^ "The Horrors – Strange House (Album review 3) | Sputnikmusic".
- ^ "HORRORS | full Official Chart History | Official Charts Company". Official Charts Company.
- ^ "The Horrors: Strange House, PopMatters". 14 May 2007.
External links
[edit]- Strange House at Discogs (list of releases)
Strange House
View on GrokipediaBackground
Band formation and early years
The Horrors were formed in Southend-on-Sea, England, in 2005 by vocalist Faris Badwan, guitarist Joshua Hayward, keyboardist Tom Furse, bassist Rhys Webb, and drummer Joe Spurgeon.[5] The band emerged from the local underground scene, initially bonding over shared interests in music and aesthetics that would define their early identity.[6] In their nascent phase, The Horrors played raw, high-energy shows in Southend clubs like the Junk Club and later in London venues such as the 100 Club and The Old Blue Last, where their performances often descended into chaotic exuberance.[7] Their sound drew heavily from 1960s garage rock pioneers like The Sonics and 1970s punk acts such as The Damned, blending primal riffs with a horror-themed visual style that included towering quiffs, heavy eyeliner, and gothic attire to evoke a sense of theatrical menace.[8][9] By 2005, the band's distinctive horror-punk persona—marked by exaggerated hairstyles and makeup—caught the eye of the British music press, with NME highlighting their striking appearance and visceral live energy as a fresh revival of garage punk tropes.[10] This buzz intensified through 2006, leading to demo recordings that secured a deal with Loog Records, paving the way for their debut single "Sheena Is a Parasite" and subsequent EP releases. These early steps marked the band's shift toward structured album production while retaining their DIY ethos.Pre-album development
Following the release of their early singles and EP in 2006, The Horrors began compiling and refining material for their debut full-length album, Strange House, to capitalize on the raw garage punk sound they had developed. Their official debut single, "Sheena Is a Parasite" backed with a cover of "Jack the Ripper" by Screaming Lord Sutch, arrived in March 2006 via Loog Records, introducing Faris Badwan's snarling vocals and the band's chaotic energy over driving riffs and Farfisa organ flourishes.[11] This was followed by the single "Death at the Chapel" in July 2006, which further showcased their lo-fi, horror-tinged aesthetic with its frenetic tempo and thematic nods to dark narratives.[11] The self-titled EP in October 2006 collected these tracks alongside B-sides such as a cover of "Crawdaddy Simone" by The Syndicats, solidifying the blueprint for the album's blend of surf-punk urgency and gothic theatrics.[12] These releases propelled the band toward a decision to expand their output into a cohesive LP after building a dedicated cult following via relentless UK tours and festival slots, including appearances at Reading and Leeds in 2007.[13] The growing fanbase, affectionately dubbed "The Horribles," responded enthusiastically to live performances that amplified the singles' reckless vibe, prompting the group to re-record key tracks like "Jack the Ripper," "Death at the Chapel," and "Sheena Is a Parasite" for Strange House while adding new songs to create a 12-track statement of their sound.[13] This refinement process transformed the initial raw demos into a more polished yet still visceral collection, bridging their underground buzz to a major-label debut. The album's subtitle, Psychotic Sounds for Freaks and Weirdos, originated from a suggestion by a fan on the band's official online forum, encapsulating the unhinged, outsider appeal of their music.[14] Internally, the band's dynamics were fueled by a shared enthusiasm for gothic rock pioneers like Bauhaus—whose dramatic post-punk and shadowy lyrics informed Badwan's delivery—and the gritty energy of the garage revival scene, including '60s acts like The Sonics and '70s glam-punk influences.[15] Hailing from small coastal towns in Essex, the members bonded over late-night explorations of obscure records, fostering a tight-knit "gang" mentality that emphasized collective experimentation over individual egos during the preparatory phase.[15]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording of Strange House took place primarily at The Pool, a studio within the Miloco network located in London, spanning November and December 2006. This period marked the band's first full-length studio effort following their initial singles, allowing them to build on early momentum in a dedicated professional space.[16] The sessions emphasized capturing the band's live-wire garage-punk intensity, with core tracking completed in a concentrated timeframe that contributed to the album's urgent, unpolished vibe. Amid their rising tour schedule, the process balanced studio immersion with external commitments, fostering an energetic yet efficient workflow. The album features polished versions of pre-album singles such as "Sheena Is a Parasite" and "Jack the Ripper," originally released earlier in 2006, adapted to fit the LP's structure. Limited resources as a debut act influenced the raw aesthetic, relying on analog gear like vintage amplifiers and tape machines to achieve the record's gritty sonic texture.Production process
The production of Strange House involved collaboration between the band and several established producers, including Ben Hillier, Alan Moulder, Jim Sclavunos, Nick Zinner, and Dimitri Tikovoï, who shaped its raw, garage punk sound across various tracks recorded at studios like Konk, The Chapel, and Miloco's Pool.[17][18] This approach emphasized lo-fi aesthetics, with reverb-heavy guitars creating a hazy, spatial depth reminiscent of 1960s psych influences, while echoing vocals and compression added a rough-edged intensity to the overall mix.[19] The band's input focused on capturing live energy in the studio, avoiding over-polishing to preserve the chaotic, basement-tape vibe that defined their early performances.[20] Mixing primarily occurred at Assault & Battery Studios in London, where Alan Moulder handled most tracks, layering guitars, organs, and percussion to amplify the album's frenetic pace and gothic undertones with minimal editing for authenticity.[17] Engineers like Ferg Peterkin and Andy Savours contributed to this process, balancing dense instrumentation—such as Tom Furse's swelling organ lines that evoke a haunting atmosphere—against the sparse, driving rhythms to heighten the sense of disorientation and urgency.[21] These choices, combined with strategic re-recording of early EP material, ensured the production retained the band's visceral, horror-inspired edge, distinguishing Strange House as a debut that prioritized visceral impact over refined polish.Composition
Musical style
Strange House is characterized by a fusion of garage punk and gothic rock, drawing heavily from 1960s garage acts like the Sonics and the Stooges, as well as 1980s post-punk and goth influences such as the Birthday Party and Siouxsie and the Banshees.[8][22][23] This blend results in a raw, abrasive sound defined by distorted, shrill guitars, pounding drums, and frenetic rhythms that evoke a sense of chaotic energy and dark intensity.[8][24] Keyboard textures, often featuring swirling vintage combo organs, add a ghoulish, horror-film atmosphere, enhancing the album's otherworldly and morbid vibe.[24][8] The album's tracks are notably short and frenetic, averaging around three minutes each across its 11 songs, totaling approximately 35 minutes, which prioritizes relentless intensity over elaborate complexity.[25] This structure underscores the band's evolution from raw, demo-like aggression to a more polished yet chaotic presentation, maintaining an uncompromised aesthetic of violence and morbidity.[24] Exemplifying this are "Count in Fives," with its spiraling surf-punk riffs and drugged-up garage energy, and "Little Victories," which introduces subtle melodic shifts amid the gothic punk rush.[22][8] Overall, the sonic palette creates a thrilling, dancefloor-ready spook-rock experience that flagellates instruments in service of a darkly glamorous assault.[22][24]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of Strange House, penned primarily by frontman Faris Badwan, delve into themes of alienation, monstrosity, and youthful rebellion, employing horror tropes such as serial killers and societal outcasts as metaphors for adolescent angst and societal disconnection. In tracks like "Jack the Ripper," a cover of Screaming Lord Sutch's 1963 novelty song reinterpreted through the band's garage-punk lens, Badwan channels a serial killer fantasy, evoking the shadowy terror of Victorian London to symbolize unchecked impulses and isolation. Similarly, "Gloves" explores abandonment and visceral horror through imagery of discarded infant gloves, reflecting a sense of lost innocence and emotional desolation amid urban decay.[26][27] Badwan's delivery—often surreal and shouted—amplifies the album's raw emotional layers, blending shouted exhortations with abstract, nightmarish narratives that underscore the horror-punk ethos. For instance, in "Draw Japan," the lyrics depict an obsessive act of creation ("Butcher the paper with a ravenous pen / Carving out trees and scoring skin"), portraying love as a destructive, all-consuming force that borders on mania. This surrealism draws from Badwan's personal background, including exposure to medical textbooks in his childhood home—his father being a neurosurgeon—which informs the album's graphic depictions of bodily violation and psychological turmoil.[27] A standout example is "Sheena Is a Parasite," where the narrative critiques parasitic relationships through the lens of exploitation and self-reliance gone awry, using the figure of Sheena as a metaphor for opportunistic intruders draining societal resources, akin to asylum seekers navigating hostile environments. The song's abstract imagery, influenced by punk zine aesthetics and beatnik poetic fragmentation, paints relationships as invasive and draining, with lines like "Sheena is a champion of self-reliance / As soon as she needs it, she knows just where the knife is" highlighting dependency's dark underbelly. Overall, the lyrics maintain a darkly humorous and nihilistic tone, juxtaposing gory, fatalistic content against the band's glamorous, theatrical image to mock conventional rebellion while reveling in its chaos.[26]Release and promotion
Album release
Strange House was released on 5 March 2007 in the United Kingdom by Loog Records in multiple formats, including CD, vinyl LP, and digital download.[28][29] The album's United States release followed on 15 May 2007 via Stolen Transmission, primarily in CD format with enhanced content.[30][31] Upon its UK launch, Strange House debuted at number 37 on the UK Albums Chart, marking a modest entry with limited weeks in the top 75 and minimal international charting beyond initial North American distribution.[32] A limited-edition UK bundle paired the CD album with a PAL-region DVD containing music videos such as "Jack the Ripper," live performances from the band's 2006 tours, interviews, and additional video clips, exclusive to the domestic market and including a bonus audio track.[33][34] The album's packaging featured artwork and design by Ciaran O'Shea, incorporating eerie collage-style illustrations reminiscent of 1960s horror comics, complemented by photography from Dean Chalkley and Scott Irvine.[30][20]Singles and marketing
To promote the impending release of Strange House, The Horrors issued several singles in the lead-up to the album's launch. The lead single "Sheena Is a Parasite," originally released in 2006, peaked at No. 99 on the UK Singles Chart.[35] This garage punk track, featuring raw energy and Faris Badwan's snarling vocals, served as an introduction to the band's horror-themed aesthetic. Its music video was directed by Chris Cunningham, highlighting the band's theatrical style through gothic imagery and shadowy visuals. Follow-up singles included "She Is the New Thing" in January 2007, which reached No. 82 on the UK Singles Chart, and "Gloves" in May 2007. Marketing efforts centered on building buzz in the UK indie scene through media exposure and live shows. The band received prominent features in NME, including cover stories and interviews that positioned them as rising stars of the post-punk revival.[36] UK radio play was strong on BBC 6 Music, where tracks from Strange House were spun by DJs like Steve Lamacq, helping to cultivate a dedicated fanbase ahead of the album drop. Supporting tours played a key role, with The Horrors headlining shows backed by acts like Larrikin Love, including dates at mid-sized venues across the UK that showcased their high-energy, chaotic live sets.[37] Tie-in promotions enhanced the album's cult appeal. The official launch party took place at London's Scala venue in March 2007, featuring a live performance and exclusive merchandise giveaways that drew industry insiders and fans. Limited-edition 7" singles were also released, bundling A-sides from the album with B-sides such as live versions and original tracks that extended the record's spooky vibe and appealed to vinyl collectors.[38] For international reach, the band made their US debut at the 2007 SXSW festival in Austin, Texas, performing raucous sets that garnered attention from American press and laid groundwork for transatlantic promotion.[39] These efforts collectively framed Strange House as a bold statement from a band unafraid to blend horror tropes with garage rock aggression.Commercial performance
Chart performance
Strange House debuted at number 37 on the UK Albums Chart in the week ending 17 March 2007.[32] The album remained on the chart for two weeks, reflecting modest initial commercial impact despite the band's growing buzz in the indie scene.[32] The lead single "Sheena Is a Parasite," released in April 2006, peaked at number 99 on the UK Physical Singles Chart, marking the band's first chart entry but failing to achieve broader mainstream traction.[35] Subsequent singles from the album did not register significant chart positions in the UK. Internationally, Strange House saw limited success. The album did not enter the US Billboard 200 but peaked at number 19 on the Heatseekers Albums chart, indicating niche appeal among emerging acts.[40] The album's chart performance benefited from long-tail sales in the years following its release, as The Horrors' rising profile—fueled by critically acclaimed subsequent records like Primary Colours (2009), which reached number 25 in the UK—drew renewed attention to their debut.Sales figures
Strange House recorded modest initial sales in the United Kingdom. The record did not receive any certifications, such as BPI silver status. Digital sales experienced a notable increase following Spotify's availability in the UK in 2009. Its cult following among indie audiences helped maintain ongoing sales through niche channels, though broader mainstream appeal constrained overall figures.Reception
Critical reviews
Upon its release in March 2007, Strange House received generally favorable reviews from critics, earning a Metacritic aggregate score of 71 out of 100 based on 22 reviews.[41] Publications such as Uncut awarded it 80 out of 100, praising its "complex, uncompromising stuff" that appealed to fans of punk and post-punk extremes.[42] Similarly, Mojo gave it 80 out of 100, noting that it would have "connoisseurs of punk's darker corners... socks rocked off, totally."[42] The Guardian lauded the album for proving the band's substance beyond their gothic image, describing it as channeling "wildest crate-digging fantasies into 11 venomous tales from the crypt."[43] NME highlighted its energetic style, calling it a "strong debut" where "psyched garage rock runs through this record like blood down a knife."[13] Some reviews were more mixed or negative, critiquing the album's reliance on retro influences. Spin assigned it 50 out of 100, arguing that the Horrors were "too shackled by kitsch to scare life into such creaky punk posturing."[42] Q Magazine rated it 40 out of 100, deeming it "disappointingly insubstantial" once the visual theatrics were stripped away.[42] Overall, critics admired the album's raw energy and visual flair, often comparing its garage-punk sound to 1960s influences like the Cramps or B-52's, but frequently criticized it for lacking originality and feeling derivative of past goth and punk acts.[42][43][13]Public and retrospective reception
Upon its release, Strange House garnered a dedicated cult following within the UK indie scene, where fans appreciated its raw garage punk energy and nostalgic nod to 1960s and 1970s influences like The Sonics and psychobilly aesthetics.[44] Online communities reflected this enthusiasm, with user ratings averaging 3.2 out of 5 on Rate Your Music from 1,848 votes (as of November 2025), often highlighting the album's frantic, horror-tinged vibe as a refreshing counterpoint to mid-2000s indie conformity.[20] Similarly, Album of the Year users scored it 68 out of 100 based on 137 ratings, praising tracks like "Jack the Ripper" for their unapologetic weirdness and revivalist spirit.[45] In retrospective assessments, the album has been reevaluated as a pivotal, if polarizing, entry in the post-punk revival, with its debut-era gimmickry now viewed as a bold template for later genre evolutions. A 2017 DIY Magazine feature described it as a "misstep" in the band's trajectory but credited its garage-punk aggression with influencing the raw, gothic edges of 2010s acts, positioning Strange House as an artifact of the era's indie experimentation.[46] This shift aligns with broader acknowledgments of its role in kickstarting the UK's post-punk resurgence, as noted in analyses of the genre's 2000s wave. Culturally, Strange House contributed to the horror-punk template that echoed in subsequent bands, including elements of IDLES' visceral post-punk intensity, though without direct accolades or mainstream breakthroughs.[47] Its tracks maintain enduring visibility on streaming platforms, appearing in Spotify-curated collections like "This Is The Horrors" and garage rock essentials, ensuring ongoing discovery among revival enthusiasts.[48] In September 2025, a limited-edition vinyl reissue titled the "Big Niche edition" was released, including bonus tracks and highlighting continued interest in the album.[49] Despite an initial Metacritic aggregate of 71 out of 100 from critics, public sentiment has solidified its status as a niche classic.[41]Track listing and personnel
Track listing
All tracks are written by The Horrors, except where noted.[28]Standard edition
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jack the Ripper | 3:01 |
| 2 | Count in Fives | 3:14 |
| 3 | Draw Japan | 3:24 |
| 4 | Gloves | 2:51 |
| 5 | Excellent Choice | 2:53 |
| 6 | Little Victories | 2:40 |
| 7 | She Is the New Thing | 3:22 |
| 8 | Sheena Is a Parasite | 1:42 |
| 9 | Thunderclaps | 3:07 |
| 10 | Gil Sleeping | 4:51 |
| 11 | A Train Roars | 3:58 |
| Total length: 35:03[21] |
- "Jack the Ripper" written by Screaming Lord Sutch and the Savages.[28]
