Disintegration album cover
Disintegration · 1989
Formed 1976 — Crawley, England

The
Cure

Post-punk architects turned gothic-pop icons. From the stark minimalism of their earliest records to the lush, aching soundscapes of their prime, The Cure built an entire mood out of guitar reverb and Robert Smith’s unmistakable voice.

Explore the Catalogue →
30M+
Records Sold
14
Studio Albums
2019
Rock Hall Inducted
30-Second Previews

Listen to the Catalogue

Boys Don’t Cry
1979
30-second preview
A Forest
1980 · Seventeen Seconds
30-second preview
Close to Me
1985 · The Head on the Door
30-second preview
Just Like Heaven
1987 · Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me
30-second preview
Lovesong
1989 · Disintegration
30-second preview
Friday I’m in Love
1992 · Wish
30-second preview
The Catalogue

Four Decades of Reinvention

Boys Don't Cry album art
1979

Boys Don’t Cry

A stripped-down, nervy debut collection that announced the band’s minimalist post-punk sound to the world.

Seventeen Seconds album art
1980

Seventeen Seconds

The turn toward atmosphere and dread — the first entry in what fans call the “dark trilogy.”

The Head on the Door album art
1985

The Head on the Door

A pop breakthrough that balanced gothic textures with genuine hooks, widening the band’s audience.

Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me album art
1987

Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me

A sprawling double album swinging between euphoria and despair — the sound of a band at its most expansive.

Disintegration album art
1989

Disintegration

Widely considered their masterpiece — a lush, mournful, career-defining statement of mood and scale.

Wish album art
1992

Wish

Their biggest commercial success, debuting at #1 in the UK and cementing their mainstream crossover.

Biography

From Crawley
to the World

Formed in 1976 in Crawley, England, The Cure emerged from the post-punk scene as one of its most idiosyncratic voices. Fronted by singer-guitarist Robert Smith — the band’s constant member and defining creative force — the group moved fluidly between stark minimalism, gothic atmosphere, and unabashed pop melody, often within the same album.

Their mid-1980s run of albums transformed them from cult favorites into one of the biggest alternative acts in the world, while never abandoning the melancholic, textured sound that made them influential to entire generations of goth, shoegaze, and indie musicians.

Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2019, The Cure remain active performers and recording artists, with a live show built as much on mood and volume as on their now-classic catalogue.

2019
Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
1976
Founded in Crawley, West Sussex, England
14
Studio albums released across five decades
Legacy

Why the World Still
Listens

The Sound

Chorus-drenched guitars, driving basslines, and cavernous reverb became a blueprint for gothic and alternative rock alike.

The Image

Smeared lipstick, teased hair, and a defiantly unglamorous aesthetic made The Cure instantly recognizable worldwide.

Genre-Bending

Moving from stark post-punk to shimmering pop within a single catalogue proved genre boundaries were optional.

Enduring Influence

From shoegaze to modern indie rock, The Cure’s fingerprints are audible across generations of guitar music.

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