The passing of Perry Bamonte at the age of 65 is a reminder of how the story of The Cure is built not just around eras or albums, but around people whose contributions thread quietly yet decisively through the band’s history.
When I plotted The Cure’s studio albums and musicians, Perry Bamonte’s line ran deep and long.

It begins behind the scenes in 1984, when he joined the band’s road crew, and then moves forward into full membership in 1990, following the departure of Roger O’Donnell. From that point on, his presence becomes inseparable from the band’s creative output across more than a decade.
On my map, Bamonte connects directly to albums that define The Cure’s emotional and musical range. Wish, Wild Mood Swings, Bloodflowers, Acoustic Hits, and The Cure are not isolated stations. They are linked by the continuity of musicianship he provided on guitar, six-string bass, and keyboards.
His contribution sits behind songs that have become cultural touchstones, including Friday I’m in Love, High, and A Letter to Elise.
This is precisely the kind of story my design work is designed to reveal. Rather than reducing a band to a simple discography, they show how individual musicians move through time, how they intersect with albums, tours, and creative phases, and how their influence accumulates.
Bamonte performed more than 400 shows between 1990 and 2005, before leaving when the band reformed as a trio. That line pauses, but it does not end.
In 2022, his return to The Cure extends that same line forward again. Over another 90 shows, culminating in the Show of a Lost World concert in London in November 2024, his role becomes part of the band’s modern chapter.
On my music map, this return matters. It shows longevity, trust, and creative reunion rather than a closed chapter.

Bamonte’s wider musical life also branches beyond The Cure. His work with Love Amongst Ruin, alongside Steve Hewitt and Donald Ross Skinner, forms another line entirely, while his parallel career as an illustrator and his writing for Fly Culture reflect a creative sensibility that extended well beyond the stage.
When Lol Tolhurst described him as quiet, intuitive, constant, and hugely creative, it echoed what careful mapping makes visible.
Perry Bamonte was not a footnote or a temporary addition. He was a vital connector in The Cure’s story, shaping how albums, performances, and eras flow into one another.
My music map prints exist to preserve exactly this kind of contribution by quiet artists like Bamonte, the musicians who hold bands together across time, whose influence is best understood when you can see the whole story at once.

