Heavy music has always existed on the fringes — outside the mainstream, beyond trends and commercial rules. It doesn’t need industry approval or chart success. Those who create it aren’t driven by marketing strategies — they play what they feel.
We’re not part of the music market. We’re part of the scene. Alive, imperfect, but real.
Music is not a product — and certainly not a set of metrics. Its value isn’t defined by likes, streams, or shares. If the art is honest, it will find its way to those who need it. Sometimes it takes years. We strive for authenticity, not reach.
Music should remain accessible. We’re against turning art into a luxury, elite product. Everyone deserves the chance to hear good music — no matter their income or country. That’s why we support free distribution, DIY releases, Bandcamp, and any other form where music can live without barriers.
Our scene is built on support, not competition. Here, people help each other, share, collaborate, and release each other’s music. We’re not afraid to work together — there’s nothing to prove. Success isn’t about signing a contract — it’s when your music connects with someone.
Listeners aren’t customers. They’re part of this. Club gigs, crowdfunding, real conversations — all of this breaks down the walls between musician and audience. The fewer the middlemen, the more alive the scene becomes. Real art spreads naturally, from person to person — not through marketing funnels.
Stoner, doom, sludge, and everything around it — this is a space of freedom. You can write a ten-minute instrumental with no chorus, sing about depression, or scream about politics. There’s no need to “fit the format” or “write a hit”. No one will tell you how it should be done.
Express yourself. Create. Share. Support.
