The Horrors' Tom Furse on his compilation of exotica and obscurities
- Text by Alex Taylor
- Photography by Antonio Curcetti

Tom Furse is sitting in a room where water is dripping through the ceiling. He’s in transition until he moves into a new place and the leaky-ceilinged room is his home for now. The image of The Horrors’ keys and synth player relaxing in those four damp walls is about as far away from the sound of his newly curated album, Tom Furse Digs, as a mental picture can get.
The album is a celebration of Furse’s love of exotica, jazz and surf music from the late ‘50s and ‘60s. The genre most thoroughly explored, exotica, first came about in 1957 from the Martin Denny album of the same name. Musicians like Denny, Les Baxter and Arthur Lyman were being played in living rooms across suburban America as families were taken sonically to places they could never afford to go. When Furse was curating the album, he did the same thing. By visualising himself in a different place and time, he’s crafted a cohesive set of songs that you should have to wear a really tacky hawaiian shirt and a shit straw hat to listen to.
“When I was pulling out songs for the album, I had this imaginary film in my head,” Furse explains. “I imagined I was looking down this road with a beach on the right and just some really wholesome kids playing. It’s a little like Endless Summer meets the The Trip and, when I think about it like that, the album’s meant to soundtrack that mental image.”
Beaches and wholesome kids aside, the album wouldn’t have come into being had the Southern Library of Recorded Music not reached out to Furse. They hoped that he’d be keen on flicking through their archives, searching for the best tracks to fit the mood. He was all too willing. The SLRM are a small label that provide soundtracks and backing music for any purpose, this is why the visualisation is so important to him. “I think it’s really core,” he says. “Even having a vague visual concept. It’s something that I’ve always done and it’s much easier to create a sound to pictures. You need to try and paint pictures of people.”
Pulling super fun records out of a small office in Fulham, west London, and listening to them one by one in the hopes of creating something wasn’t a quick job, though. The album took five years to put together. It wasn’t a constant effort from him, the project was something he was always happy to work on as well as his other commitments, too. “When I started researching for the album, there was nothing.” This might be because a lot of the tracks are about as obscure as it gets: it’s the kind of stuff that you couldn’t hope to find if you were actually looking for it. “I noticed some of the most significant records were missing,” Furse says, the crate digger in him showing its face. “There are just certain ones you can’t find. I picked up a lot of the ones I have now for next to nothing in the States but getting the rights took time. Some of the people on the album are dead.”
Now the album is finished, it’ll be released late August both online and on 12” vinyl. If this takes off, expect Tom Furse to keep making music as sunny as this long after the credits roll.
Tom Furse Digs by Tom Furse and Universal Publishing Production Music is out now on Lo Recordings.
You might like

We took techno legend Chris Liberator to a virtual rave, here’s what went down
Stay acid forever — With VR experience In Pursuit of Repetitive Beats currently running at London's Barbican Centre, Simon Doherty brought the acid punk figurehead along to see what he thought, and reflect on the health of the rave scene today.
Written by: Simon Doherty

Bob Vylan top UK Hip Hop and R&B album chart one week after Glastonbury
The people said ‘Nah’ — Despite heavy criticism from politicians and media for leading chants of “death to the IDF”, as well as being dropped by their agent, the punk duo’s 2024 LP 'Humble As The Sun' has seen its purchases and streams spike.
Written by: Molly Baker

Kneecap now have 1.5 million monthly Spotify listeners
Not the story — The number has tripled from 500,000 in January, and comes after months of criticism from media and politicians as the Irish rap trio have expressed support for Palestine.
Written by: Molly Baker

In photos: The people of Glastonbury’s queer heart The NYC Downlow
Elation and family — Once a year, a meatpacking warehouse nightclub springs up in Glastonbury’s South East corner and becomes a site of pilgrimage for the festival’s LGBTQ+ scene. We met the people who make The NYC Downlow so special.
Written by: Isaac Muk

How pop music introduced queer culture to the mainstream
The Secret Public — Between the ’50s to the ’70s, pop music was populated with scene pushers from the margins. A new book by Jon Savage explores the powerful influence of LGBTQ+ folk.
Written by: Miss Rosen

Coming of age in New York’s ’70s punk heyday
I Feel Famous — Through photographs, club flyers and handwritten diary entries, Angela Jaeger’s new monograph revisits the birth of the city’s underground scene, while capturing its DIY, anti-establishment spirit.
Written by: Miss Rosen