On October 12, 1978, the body of
Nancy Spungen was discovered in the bathroom of her room at the
Hotel Chelsea in
Manhattan, New York City. Spungen had been living at the hotel with her boyfriend,
Sex Pistols bassist
Sid Vicious. Her body was found with a fatal stab wound in her abdomen, Vicious was arrested and charged with
second degree murder, and after pleading not guilty he was released on bail, awaiting trial. On the evening of February 1, 1979, a small group of Vicious's friends, including Misfits bassist
Jerry Only, gathered to celebrate Vicious having made bail at his new girlfriend Michelle Robinson's
Greenwich Village apartment. Vicious had undergone a detoxification program during his time in jail at
Rikers Island, but at the dinner gathering, Vicious had English photographer Peter "Kodick" Gravelle deliver him
heroin. Vicious died of an overdose at some point during the night, and was discovered by his mother, Anne Beverley, and Robinson the following morning. and invited her to attend a Misfits recording session. "Horror Business", "
Teenagers from Mars", and "Children in Heat" were recorded from January 26 to February 5, 1979, at C.I. Studios in New York, where the band had recorded their proposed debut album
Static Age a year prior. Beverley attended at least one of the sessions. Writer and vocalist
Glenn Danzig insisted that the band record as many tracks as possible during their allotted time in the studio in an effort to save money. The title track, "Horror Business", contains lyrics such as "You don't go in the bathroom with me" and "I'll put a knife right in you". Because of such lyrics, along with the connections between the Misfits and Vicious, the song is commonly said to have been based on the unsolved murder of Spungen. which features a scene involving
a character being stabbed to death in a bathroom. The line "Psycho '78", which also appears in the song, has been interpreted as transposing the year in which the film was released (as well as when the film's narrative takes place) to the year that the song was recorded. The line "driving late at night" may also be a reference to Psycho, in which
Janet Leigh's character spends a long portion of the film's first act driving through the night before ultimately ending up at the Bates Motel. ==Release==