Проклятый старый дом
Король и Шут
The sound lurches forward on a rickety, almost gleefully off-kilter punk chassis — guitars that buzz and scratch like something gnawing through rotted wood, drums that pound with theatrical urgency rather than precision. Король и Шут built their entire world at the intersection of Russian folk darkness and street punk energy, and this track is one of the purest expressions of that alchemy. The vocals are performative in the best sense — half narrator, half actor, delivering the story of a cursed old house with the relish of someone telling ghost stories around a fire at midnight. There's no horror-movie subtlety here; the dread is presented with a smirk, the menace dressed in carnival clothes. The song belongs to a very specific late-Soviet and post-Soviet tradition of "страшилки" — children's horror folklore — translated into adult punk form. Lyrically it operates like a ballad, each verse deepening the trap the protagonist finds himself in, the accumulating doom almost comedic in how inevitable it feels. You reach for this song when nostalgia and mischief collide — driving on a gray autumn afternoon, wanting something that feels both familiar and slightly feral, music that treats darkness as entertainment rather than therapy.
fast
1990s
rough, theatrical, feral
Russian folk punk, post-Soviet страшилки tradition
Punk, Folk Rock. Folk Punk. mischievous, dark humor. Dread accumulates verse by verse with a theatrical smirk, building toward comedic inevitability rather than genuine horror.. energy 7. fast. danceability 5. valence 5. vocals: theatrical male narrator, performative, ghost-story relish. production: buzzing scratchy guitars, pounding drums, raw punk energy. texture: rough, theatrical, feral. acousticness 2. era: 1990s. Russian folk punk, post-Soviet страшилки tradition. Gray autumn afternoon drive when you want something that feels both nostalgic and slightly dangerous.