“It could hardly have been more in tune with the gothic scene’s aesthetic preferences if it had come with free bat wings”: The pioneering British punk band who embraced the darkness to make a classic 80s goth album
The Damned, often dismissed by the music press as punk rock's goofball clowns, always had a darker, more theatrical streak running beneath their chaotic energy. This tendency eventually crystallised into Phantasmagoria, the 1985 album that saw the band fully embrace gothic rock and become closely associated with the emerging goth scene, cementing frontman Dave Vanian's image as one of the genre's defining figures.
Signs of this darker sensibility were present from the start: the band's 1977 debut, Damned Damned Damned, included tracks such as Fan Club and Feel The Pain, which paired Vanian's rich baritone with a sense of macabre, Hammer Horror-tinged menace beneath the record's raw, Stooges-influenced punk sound. By 1979's Machine Gun Etiquette, that theatrical darkness had deepened further, with songs like These Hands casting Vanian as a sinister, almost circus-like figure, laying the groundwork for the band's full turn towards gothic imagery and sound on Phantasmagoria.
- The Damned blended punk with dark, theatrical menace from their 1977 debut onward.
- Frontman Dave Vanian's gothic persona developed steadily through the late 1970s.
- This evolution culminated in 1985's goth landmark album, Phantasmagoria.