Underneath a mass of dark hair, skinny jeans and a pouting gothic gloom, The
Horrors take the stance of a zombified gang of 1960s garage punks resurrected to
save the UK music scene from a sea of indie clones. United by a love of dusty
vinyl, The Cramps and all manner of obscure pre-punk guitar bands, the members
of The Horrors met while DJ-ing around London and Southend-on-Sea in 2005 and
were soon being hyped to the eyeballs by the NME. Stark and confrontational,
their debut album Strange House in 2007 shot savage blasts of snarling rock &
roll at stunned audiences and divided ...