“Bunny Suit” by Sematary and Ghost Mountain: I had to add a rap song to this playlist because I never realized till this year that horrorcore is an actual rap style. It’s hard to compare this track to other pieces of media because it is so original. It feels like I’m flying through a dark forest, watching evil spirits play around, it’s ethereal. This song physically impacts me every time I listen to it. “Little Dark Age” is a dark academia dreamland filled with low basses humming throughout and echoing vocals. MGMT does fantastic using electronic beats, similar to 80’s synthwave, which relates heavily to futuristic aesthetics. “Little Dark Age” by MGMT: This song is a great listen for all of the alternative fans out there. If you’re looking for something ominous and enchanting, this is the song for you. The lyrics follow religious tales but add dark twists throughout. “Year Zero” takes this to a new level since the song starts off with chanting that repeats different names for the devil such as Beelzebub and Lucifer. The band even refers to all their shows as “rituals” and it’s all a part of Ghost’s lore. This can be pointed out in this track due to the band Ghost’s “satanic” aesthetic. After all, there’s a reason some people equate metal music with the devil. “Year Zero” by Ghost: It’s expected to add a metal song when making a spooky playlist. For instance, one of the lyrics cites references to famous horror pop-culture icons, “She’s got a date at midnight//With Nosferatu//Oh baby, Lily Munster//Ain’t got nothing on you.” The lyrics mixed with different atmospheric samples makes this track feel supernatural. Not to mention that the lyrics depict many creepy scenes before the listener. The way Steele articulates his words sends a shiver through my body. I love the mix of melodic background vocals with singer Peter Steele’s deep, dark voice leading the chorus. 1 (Little Miss Scare-All)” by Type O Negative: This hard rock song came out in 1993 but it still rocks just as hard today. So check out these songs and artists to feel like you’re in an eerie horror movie. There’s nothing like walking through dense trees with falling, colored leaves while listening to a song that makes your skin crawl. This also means I am a lover of Halloween music that sounds haunting or sinister. Which makes me somewhere in between the ghost hunting in a cemetery type and watching scary movies alone in the dark type of Halloween person. While there’s no one way to celebrate Halloween, I personally am a lover of all things scary and creepy. You have your pumpkin latte sipping autumn girls, your vintage Halloween lovers who will never miss a hayride, and you have your spooky loving haunted house goers. There are a few different Halloween aesthetics that come with the holiday. Video evidence, and more of Steele’s music, below.Written By Kylie Thomas, Co-Features/A&E Editor In addition to fronting Type O Negative, Steele also performed in the group Carnivore, posed for Playgirl magazine and even appeared on the Jerry Springer Show on an episode dedicated to groupies. “I’m smiling recalling a funny story involving Pete, a microphone, an all-girl lipstick-lesbian band and a can of tuna. “RIP Pete Steele – a nice (and very funny) man,” Trent Reznor wrote on his Twitter page. 1.” (“These guys are like a cross between Danzig and Megadeth,” Beavis said at the time.) The 6′ 7″ singer recorded seven albums with Type O Negative, the most recent being 2007’s Dead Again, which entered the Billboard 200 at Number 27, the band’s best debut. The album boasted rock radio hits “Christian Woman,” a cover of Seals & Crofts’ “Summer Breeze” and the Beavis & Butthead-approved “Black No. Type O Negative became one of the most unlikely bands to break into the mainstream in the 1990s with their third album Bloody Kisses, which became the first album released by Roadrunner Records to go platinum. Thank you for your understanding and support.” But today as members of Steele’s circle began to confirm his passing, the Type O Negative message boards opened this morning with the message, “Please play nice and expect statements from the band and family later today. Soon after, Steele all but disappeared as he battled drug problems and a prison stint. News of Steele’s death was initially received with disbelief as Steele pulled a hoax in 2005, posting his picture and the years “1962-2005” on the group’s official website.
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