iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn’t open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
iTunes 9

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Primary Colours by The Horrors, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes 9 for Mac + PC

Primary Colours

The Horrors

View More by this Artist

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

A four-on-the-floor beat with a wash of synths isn't exactly the expected way for a Horrors album to begin, but that's exactly how "Mirror's Image" kicks off Primary Colours, which is such a big departure from the band's debut, Strange House, that it's fitting it's on a different label. Though Strange House's final tracks suggested that the band was looking for ways to expand on its resurrection of freakbeat and garage rock, very little suggested that its next album would be the triple point where goth, post-punk, and shoegaze met. This time out, Faris Badwan sings more than he screams, Spider Webb's keyboards sparkle rather than stab, and the guitars bend and blur instead of slamming out power chords (Primary Colours' out-of-focus cover photo even upholds the rule that shoegaze-inspired albums have to have hazy artwork to match the sounds within). Even their attitude is completely different: rather than dismissing an ex by snarling "She was the new thing," Badwan sighs, "I know you're better off this way." Then again, the Horrors always seemed artier and more ambitious than a lot of garage rock-inspired bands, from their cartoon-goth look to collaborating with visionary director Chris Cunningham. Now, Cunningham acts as one of Primary Colours' co-producers, along with Portishead's Geoff Barrow; having masters of sophisticated spookiness like these in their corner helps the Horrors make such a drastic change to their sound convincing. While Strange House's sound was fun and distinctive — and that campy glee is occasionally missed here — it might have also been limiting, something that can't be said of the band's experiments with these songs. The album's epic lead single, "Sea Within a Sea," is also its most stunning track, traveling through a motorik beat, taut keyboards, and massive guitar drones that suggest whale cries before it opens into a sparkling, arpeggiated coda.

Several other songs are nearly as exciting, even — or maybe especially — when they keep some of the pop structures from the Horrors' previous incarnation. The excellent "Three Decades" sounds a little like a song from Strange House being played underwater, with busy drums the only constant as everything else billows and blows around them. "Who Can Say" pays homage to the band's enduring Joe Meek fetish with "Telstar"-like synth tones, and to their fondness for '60s pop in general with a spoken word bridge that puts the lyrics from Jay & the Americans' "She Cried" to a Phil Spector-inspired boom-boom-boom-crash! beat. This mix of '60s meets '90s sounds fresher than the moments where the Horrors try to re-create the shoegaze sound more faithfully, as on the title track and "Do You Remember," both of which sound, for better or worse, like the work of one of the many forgotten bands that popped up after Loveless was released. Their forays into post-punk (or maybe post-post-punk) are also mixed: "I Only Think of You" doesn't quite live up to its seven-minute length, but "Scarlet Fields," which sounds like Kevin Shields guesting on an Interpol song, is one of the album's highlights. The Horrors fare better when they bare their teeth on the violent, hypnotic "New Ice Age" and "I Can't Control Myself," a piece of strung-out dream blues that gives Spiritualized a run for their money. As bold and listenable as it is, Primary Colours is occasionally scattered, giving the impression that the band is trying on different sounds for size — although the fact that most of it works so well is actually more surprising than how different it is from their earlier work. At its best, it shows that the Horrors can do far more than what anyone expected from them. ~ Heather Phares, Rovi

Customer Reviews

What the Hell Happened?
     

The Horrors - an English quintet, notable for wearing circulation-inhibiting black jeans and too much makeup; a band whose member’s names range from Spider Webb to Coffin Joe.
Strange House - The Horror’s debut album that was once labeled Zombie Garage Punk; an album that appealed to a very small demographic group of estranged Goth kids; an album that featured lead singer Faris Badwan screaming incoherently in a manner that was only marginally decipherable to the untrained ear.
Yes the gothic, vampire shtick was entertaining, but nobody expected them to go anywhere.
And now, 2 years later, The Horrors have released their sophomore album, Primary Colours.
A band that was once known for spitting on their audience during shows, are now being dubbed the saviors of Rock n’ Roll.

The sound of Primary Colours is so different to The Horror’s first attempt at music that many fans are asking the simple question, “What the hell happened?” Did the band really experience such drastic changes in their lives that they decided to change their sound completely? Or did The Horror’s have it in them the whole time, and have just been eluding the public with their morbid image. Or is this simply proof that The Horror’s are a lot more talented and multi-faceted then we were led to believe. Whatever metamorphism the band experienced it certainly has helped them reach out to a much wider audience and will inevitably result in an increase of record sales and commercial success.

Primary Colours has an amalgamation of different shoegaze and post-punk influences.
My Bloody Valentine, The Jesus and Mary Chain and even The Cure are just a few of the bands that The Horrors pay homage to.

From ethereal atmospheric melodies, to front man Faris Badwan’s indolent yet passionate tone, Primary Colours explores new musical territory, whilst keeping The Horror’s signature deathly undertone alive.

I Can't Control Myself!!
     

I didn't have to wait 'til May 4th for this??? wow..

anyway, on to the review:
It's a wonder to think that Faris can do things other than scream into a mic!! haha

Overall, I like what I'm feeling with this album. First, know that it takes a few listens to get under your belts! It's complex.

The Horrors, my friends, have grown.

I fell in love with them for their harsh first record Strange House, but it seems that I'm still grooving along to Primary Colours just the same. Slightly electronic and simplistic feel that I definitely did not expect from them, yet the piercing guitar still seems to be present. Also, their rustic punk feel has held solid.

Let's face it, if they had stuck to the same style, we would've put them away as sophomore slump material. Put this stuff next to their old material, and it's a full spectrum of perfection.

listen to tracks: Sea Within a Sea, Mirror's Image, I Can't Control Myself, Scarlet Fields, and Who Can Say.
(well, that's almost the whole album isn't it? exactly.)

breathtaking
     

how are the horrors this impeccably versatile?! from the manic-agony of Strange House to this... this epic, tortured piece of work. i'm astonished. confused. and thrilled. the horrors just might save rock & roll...

Biography

Formed: 2005

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s

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....
Full Bio

Top Albums and Songs by The Horrors