Music Video of the Day: Texas Goth by Sinnerella (2024, dir by Maximo Joaquin Vazquez)


It’s true!  There are goths in Texas.  There’s actually quite a few of them.  I experimented with being one back when I was eighteen and writing tortured poetry.

So, this video definitely speaks to me.

Enjoy!

Bonus Horror Song of the Day: Hanging Out With My Family by Damien Carter


Whenever I watch 2010’s Birdemic, I wonder how the birds could possibly want to destroy a civilization that is capable of something like Hanging Out With My Family.

Horror Song of the Day: Main Theme From Psycho by Bernard Herrmann


Today’s horror song of the day really needs no introduction.

From 1960, here is the main theme from Alfred Hitchcok’s Psycho, composed by Bernard Herrmann.

Horror Music Video Video Of The Day: Heads Will Roll by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs (2009, dir by Richard Ayoaode)


And indeed, heads do roll in this video!

The werewolf pays homage to Michael Jackson’s Thriller video.  Ironically, Jackson died just a few days before this video was released.  Director Richard Ayoade is the same Richard Ayoade who starred in The IT Crowd and The Watch.  (Remember The Watch?  It wasn’t that bad.)

By the way, this video is a part of a Halloween playlist put together by our own Patrick!

Enjoy!

Bonus Horror Song of the Day: Do It To Me by Riz Ortolani


Since I earlier shared the theme song from The New York Ripper, it only seems appropriate to share another 70s-style Italian horror theme song.  From the infamous House On The Edge of the Park, here is Riz Ortolani’s Do It To Me.

Seriously, this is a song that gets stuck in my head every time that I hear it.

Horror Song Of The Day: New York One More Day by Francesco De Masi


Tonight’s horror song of the day is perhaps not as well-known as some of the other songs that I’ve shared.  It appeared in Lucio Fulci’s controversial (to put it mildly) giallo, The New York Ripper.   That film is so infamous for its violence, nihilism, and killer who quacks like a duck that it is something overlooked that it features a great score from Francesco De Masi.

This is the main theme from The New York Ripper and it captures the movie’s mix of horror and police procedural.  It’s the 70s cop show theme from Hell.