BETRAYED AND FORGOTTEN
Cure Star’s SHOCKING Death Exposes Band’s DARK Secret
Published
ANOTHER ICON FALLS in the shadow of Christmas, and fans are demanding answers. Perry Bamonte, the UNSUNG architect of The Cure’s iconic sound, is dead at 65—and the band’s sterile, corporate announcement has ignited a FIRESTORM of suspicion.
Died after a “short illness”? SOURCES CLOSE TO THE FAMILY whisper of a RAPID decline the public NEVER saw coming, raising terrifying questions about the TOLL of life on the road and the PRICE of rock & roll obscurity. Why was this genius, who shaped classics like “Friday I’m in Love,” so often relegated to the background?
The band’s post calls him “quiet” and “constant.” CRITICS call it a DAMNING epitaph for a man they USED and DISCARDED. Remember: Bamonte was the loyal roadie who climbed the ranks, only to be COLDHEARTEDLY FIRED by Robert Smith in 2005. Was his triumphant 2022 return tour a final act of pity, or a desperate attempt to clear a guilty conscience?
This is the GRIM PATTERN of The Cure: essential contributors like Bamonte and Roger O’Donnell are EXPENDABLE, their legacies sanitized after death. They get a Hall of Fame ring and a hollow “RIP,” while the machine grinds on.
His death during the holidays is a HORRIFIC irony for a band built on melancholy. As fans mourn, they’re left with one disturbing thought: In the world of The Cure, you can be immortalized in music and STILL die a ghost.
For 21 years, Bamonte’s genius fueled their anthems. His reward? A polite dismissal and a muted farewell. The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame couldn’t save him. His own bandmates couldn’t save him. What does that say about the LIES behind the music we love?
He was 65. Another legend extinguished, leaving us to wonder how many more will be consumed by the very darkness they helped soundtrack for a generation.
The real horror isn’t that he’s gone—it’s that the world was trained to never truly see him until it was too late.




