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Bartees Strange faces his fears. The Baltimore musician’s eclectic new album, “Horror,” is about the things that scare him most — namely, trying to please you.
These episodic horror games claim to be rooted in true stories, and each of them takes on a different story of survival. The ...
Baltimore-based Strange (real name Bartees Leon Cox Jr.) set his reputation as a kinda-indie-rock darling who also mixed in folk, arena rock, and rap with his debut album, Live Forever in 2020.
Major spoilers for "Strange Darling" follow. Director J.T. Mollner's indie horror flick "Strange Darling" has finally opened in U.S. theaters with the wind of good publicity at its back. In a ...
Strange might be facing his real-life fears, but Horror still sleeps with a nightlight, clinging to pastiche and ideas of who Bartees Strange should be. For all its dedication to bravado, Horror is ...
At first glance, the cute, three-story home with the black shutters and wrought-iron fence looks like an American Dream. Then you realize: it’s that house. The five-bed, four-bath Dutch Colonial ...
Universal Studios in both Hollywood and Florida is taking fans back to the terror of Camp Crystal Lake 45 years after the film’s release.
On his new album, "Horror," Bartees Strange, who will perform in Atlanta, continues to mix and blur genres including indie rock, rap, house and soul.
The Horrors formed in 2005 and released their debut album, Strange House, in 2007, but really found their footing with 2009’s Primary Colours and 2011’s Skying, which featured the anthemic “Still Life ...
Stylistically, Horror paints with his broadest canvas, synthesizing hip-hop, country, classic rock, indie rock, and house influences into Strange’s own sound.
We’re in a golden age of horror. Here are 10 books that stood out in a year filled with fantastic releases. Credit...Karan Singh Supported by By Gabino Iglesias Gabino Iglesias is a writer ...