
Pram could have made the perfect soundtrack to the dark, surrealistic movie “The City of Lost Children.” Full of vivid colors and nightmarish Suessian apparitions, the movie is the visual equivalent to Pram’s music. Formed in Birmingham, England in 1990, they gradually distinguished themselves from former Too Pure labelmates Stereolab and Laika by using children’s toys to create homemade instruments to supplement their electronic-laced cinematic pop. Add Rosie Cuckston’s eerie voice and a homemade theramin, glockenspiels, glass hammers and triangles, you have a sound that is simultaneously old-fashioned and futuristic, like a plutonium-powered cyborg made of discarded limbs and heads of toy dolls. The stuff bad, bad childhood dreams are made of. Except they change things around with the jazzy “The Cockwork Lighthouse” and “Sleepy Sweet,” which could be an honest-to-goodness lullaby, batteries not included.
April 2, 2026
Fester’s Lucky 13: 1986
February 27, 2026
Fester’s Lucky 13: 1976

