Phantom Culture - KingShifter, Song No.10 (Rock Hard)
KingShifter plays hard-ass-rock m*therf**ker! End of story. They don't play games or follow trends. The music speaks for itself.
To summarize, KingShifter is all about the riff and the booze...it's all rock n' roll!
Sprout (Gregory Allen Manuel) - Vocals
Kink (Kevin Kinkelaar) - Guitar
Derek Ludewick - Bass
David Steinbach - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
KingShifter - Song No.10
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - KingShifter, Song No.11 (Rock Hard)
KingShifter plays hard-ass-rock m*therf**ker! End of story. They don't play games or follow trends. The music speaks for itself.
To summarize, KingShifter is all about the riff and the booze...it's all rock n' roll!
Sprout (Gregory Allen Manuel) - Vocals
Kink (Kevin Kinkelaar) - Guitar
Derek Ludewick - Bass
David Steinbach - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
KingShifter - Song No.11
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - The Fever Trend, Song No.01 (Indie Rock)
The Fever Trend is a indie rock, power trio. Their music is an explosive mix of eccentric guitar tones, punchy bass lines, powerful vocals, and subtle rhythmical intricacies.
On the top layer resides rhythmically driven guitar work of Carlos Malache. The middle is filled with the smooth but punchy bass stylings of Davis McClendon, while the base structure of this trendy treat houses intricate drum grooves by Jayke Wedel.
Carlos Malache - Guitar/Vocals
Davis McClendon - Bass/Vocals
Jayke Wedel - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
The Fever Trend - Song No.01
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - The Fever Trend, Song No.02 (Indie Rock)
The Fever Trend is a indie rock, power trio. Their music is an explosive mix of punchy bass lines, eccentric guitar tones, powerful vocals, and subtle rhythmical intricacies.
On the top layer resides rhythmically driven guitar work of Carlos Malache. The middle is filled with the smooth but punchy bass stylings of Davis McClendon, while the base structure of this trendy treat houses intricate drum grooves by Jayke Wedel.
Carlos Malache - Guitar/Vocals
Davis McClendon - Bass/Vocals
Jayke Wedel - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
The Fever Trend - Song No.02
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - The Fever Trend, Song No.03 (Indie Rock)
The Fever Trend is a indie rock, power trio. Their music is an explosive mix of punchy bass lines, eccentric guitar tones, powerful vocals, and subtle rhythmical intricacies.
On the top layer resides rhythmically driven guitar work of Carlos Malache. The middle is filled with the smooth but punchy bass stylings of Davis McClendon, while the base structure of this trendy treat houses intricate drum grooves by Jayke Wedel.
Carlos Malache - Guitar/Vocals
Davis McClendon - Bass/Vocals
Jayke Wedel - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
The Fever Trend - Song No.03
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - The Fever Trend, Song No.04 (Indie Rock)
The Fever Trend is an Indie rock, power trio. Their music is an explosive mix of eccentric guitar tones, punchy bass lines, powerful vocals, and subtle rhythmical intricacies.
On the top layer resides rhythmically driven guitar work of Carlos Malache. The middle is filled with the smooth but punchy bass stylings of Davis McClendon, while the base structure of this trendy treat houses intricate drum grooves by Jayke Wedel.
Carlos Malache - Guitar/Vocals
Davis McClendon - Bass/Vocals
Jayke Wedel - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
The Fever Trend - Song No.04
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - The Fever Trend, Song No.05 (Indie Rock)
The Fever Trend is an Indie rock, power trio. Their music is an explosive mix of eccentric guitar tones, punchy bass lines, powerful vocals, and subtle rhythmical intricacies.
On the top layer resides rhythmically driven guitar work of Carlos Malache. The middle is filled with the smooth but punchy bass stylings of Davis McClendon, while the base structure of this trendy treat houses intricate drum grooves by Jayke Wedel.
Carlos Malache - Guitar/Vocals
Davis McClendon - Bass/Vocals
Jayke Wedel - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
The Fever Trend - Song No.05
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - The Fever Trend, Song No.06 (Indie Rock)
The Fever Trend is an Indie rock, power trio. Their music is an explosive mix of eccentric guitar tones, punchy bass lines, powerful vocals, and subtle rhythmical intricacies.
On the top layer resides rhythmically driven guitar work of Carlos Malache. The middle is filled with the smooth but punchy bass stylings of Davis McClendon, while the base structure of this trendy treat houses intricate drum grooves by Jayke Wedel.
Carlos Malache - Guitar/Vocals
Davis McClendon - Bass/Vocals
Jayke Wedel - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
The Fever Trend - Song No.06
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Open Streets Musicians, One song (Indie Rock)
Open Streets is when they close them to cars, and open them up for all kinds of good stuff.
The Phantom caught these phantom musicians at the corner of Douglas and Groove.
If anyone can give us I.D.s, credit will be given them.
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Unknown musicians - Song, the only one
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Pretty Ugly, Song No.01 (Power Rock)
Don't let the band's name fool you, what they do is truly beautiful.
Pretty - as a pin-up; classic - as tie-dye; ain't any ugly about it.
Dance like a tornado, as the drummer with eight arms thunders away.
Vinnie Mourning - Guitar/Vocals
Jimmy Lawless - Bass/Vocals
T-Roy Tayrien - Drums/Vocals
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Pretty Ugly - Song No.01
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Pretty Ugly, Song No.02 (Power Rock)
Don't let the band's name fool you, what they do is truly beautiful.
Pretty - as a pin-up; classic - as tie-dye; ain't any ugly about it.
Dance like a tornado, as the drummer with eight arms thunders away.
Vinnie Mourning - Guitar/Vocals
Jimmy Lawless - Bass/Vocals
T-Roy Tayrien - Drums/Vocals
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Pretty Ugly - Song No.02
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Pretty Ugly, Song No.03 (Power Rock)
Don't let the band's name fool you, what they do is truly beautiful.
Pretty - as a pin-up; classic - as tie-dye; ain't any ugly about it.
Dance like a tornado, as the drummer with eight arms thunders away.
Vinnie Mourning - Guitar/Vocals
Jimmy Lawless - Bass/Vocals
T-Roy Tayrien - Drums/Vocals
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Pretty Ugly - Song No.03
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Pretty Ugly, Song No.04 (Power Rock)
Don't let the band's name fool you, what they do is truly beautiful.
Pretty - as a pin-up; classic - as tie-dye; ain't any ugly about it.
Dance like a tornado, as the drummer with eight arms thunders away.
T-Roy Tayrien - Drums/Vocals
Vinnie Mourning - Guitar/Vocals
Jimmy Lawless - Bass/Vocals
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Pretty Ugly - Song No.04
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Pretty Ugly, Song No.05 (Power Rock)
Don't let the band's name fool you, what they do is truly beautiful.
Pretty - as a pin-up; classic - as tie-dye; ain't any ugly about it.
Dance like a tornado, as the drummer with eight arms thunders away.
Vinnie Mourning - Guitar/Vocals
Jimmy Lawless - Bass/Vocals
T-Roy Tayrien - Drums/Vocals
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Pretty Ugly - Song No.05
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Pretty Ugly, Song No.06 (Pub Rock)
Don't let the band's name fool you, what they do is truly beautiful.
Pretty - as a pin-up; classic - as tie-dye; ain't any ugly about it.
Dance like a tornado, as the drummer with eight arms thunders away.
Vinnie Mourning - Guitar/Vocals
Jimmy Lawless - Bass/Vocals
T-Roy Tayrien - Drums/Vocals
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Pretty Ugly - Song No.06
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Pretty Ugly, Song No.07 (Pub Rock)
Don't let the band's name fool you, what they do is truly beautiful.
Pretty - as a pin-up; classic - as tie-dye; ain't any ugly about it.
Dance like a tornado, as the drummer with eight arms thunders away.
Vinnie Mourning - Guitar/Vocals
Jimmy Lawless - Bass/Vocals
T-Roy Tayrien - Drums/Vocals
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Pretty Ugly - Song No.07
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Pretty Ugly, Song No.08 (Pub Rock)
Don't let the band's name fool you, what they do is truly beautiful.
Pretty - as a pin-up; classic - as tie-dye; ain't any ugly about it.
Dance like a tornado, as the drummer with eight arms thunders away.
Vinnie Mourning - Guitar/Vocals
Jimmy Lawless - Bass/Vocals
T-Roy Tayrien - Drums/Vocals
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Pretty Ugly - Song No.08
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Berry Harris, Song No.01 (The Blues)
Mega-Blues:
Berry Harris - Guitar/Vocals
Michael Peltzer - Guitar
Leo Henderson - Bass
Dustin Lentz - Keyboards
Jeff Corbett - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Berry T. Harris (Wichita, Kansas), passed away on April 6, 2020, at the age of 90. Born November 27, 1929, musician Berry Harris has played the blues for over 70 years, in just about every club in Wichita.
"I didn't need very much because I would always live with not very much. So not having much didn't bother me because that's the way I was raised. Didn't have much. You know, we were what you may call poor folk, poor folks. But, I didn't know that...Everything was all right in my life, you know.
"I have lived a good life. I've been a well-blessed man. I've been well treated in the people of this town. I never knew -- I never thought that nobody ever know me. It's strange how things come into your life that you don't know gonna come there. Well, I ain't got rich...I haven't got rich, but I've lived pretty decent.
"I'm just an average guy. You know what I mean? But I play. I like to play. I play keyboards. I play keyboard, harmonica, and guitar. I'm also a comedian... I been a very fortunate man. God has blessed me. I ain't never been in jail in my life.
"I don't know nothing about segregation, to tell you the truth. I don't. Because where I was raised at, there was none. Everybody was poor folks. White people and black people, were all poor. We were all eating out of the same bucket. You understand what I'm saying to you? They didn't have nothing. We didn't have nothing.
"People, people have treated me very nice in this town. Black people, white people, any kind of people. I don't do nothing to nobody. I don't bother nobody. I don't fight. I don't go to jail. I don't do none of that, none of that. I've lived a pretty good life and I'm thankful for what life has brought to me.
"My mother raised me to be a man...She knew when I was telling the truth and when I was lying, and I usually got a good ass-whipping when I was lying. So it shaped me. It shaped me to treat everybody right. I treat everybody right.
"I'm a Christian-thinking man. I read the Bible. I believe in what it teaches. What else can I say? I'll treat you the way I want you to treat me. And that's the way my life has always been. And that's the way it'll be until I die. I'm thankful for God that he woke me up every morning of my life." Berry said.
"I never made no records, none of that stuff."
In a story by noted videojournalist, Larry Hatteberg (Hatteberg's People), "Wichitan, Berry Harris has playing the Blues for over 70 years. He's one of the oldtime Blues players, and he's been on the circuit for years, played everywhere...Berry has spent his life trying to make a few bucks with his music, raising his family, and simply playing the Blues, "Hatteberg said.
"It's a part of my life. Like therapy, you know. I don't know how to express myself in words. It comes out in what I play," Berry revealed.
"The crowd is what motivates me because it surely can't be money because I'm not playing for money. I'm not making money, you know what I'm saying, I'm make change, but I'm not making any money."
“I ain’t been perfect, but I’ve been good.”
Phantom Culture realease:
Berry Harris - Song No.01
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Berry Harris, Song No.02 (The Blues)
Mega-Blues:
Berry Harris - Guitar/Vocals
Michael Peltzer - Guitar
Leo Henderson - Bass
Dustin Lentz - Keyboards
Jeff Corbett - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Berry T. Harris (Wichita, Kansas), passed away on April 6, 2020, at the age of 90. Born November 27, 1929, musician Berry Harris has played the blues for over 70 years, in just about every club in Wichita.
"I didn't need very much because I would always live with not very much. So not having much didn't bother me because that's the way I was raised. Didn't have much. You know, we were what you may call poor folk, poor folks. But, I didn't know that...Everything was all right in my life, you know.
"I have lived a good life. I've been a well-blessed man. I've been well treated in the people of this town. I never knew -- I never thought that nobody ever know me. It's strange how things come into your life that you don't know gonna come there. Well, I ain't got rich...I haven't got rich, but I've lived pretty decent.
"I'm just an average guy. You know what I mean? But I play. I like to play. I play keyboards. I play keyboard, harmonica, and guitar. I'm also a comedian... I been a very fortunate man. God has blessed me. I ain't never been in jail in my life.
"I don't know nothing about segregation, to tell you the truth. I don't. Because where I was raised at, there was none. Everybody was poor folks. White people and black people, were all poor. We were all eating out of the same bucket. You understand what I'm saying to you? They didn't have nothing. We didn't have nothing.
"People, people have treated me very nice in this town. Black people, white people, any kind of people. I don't do nothing to nobody. I don't bother nobody. I don't fight. I don't go to jail. I don't do none of that, none of that. I've lived a pretty good life and I'm thankful for what life has brought to me.
"My mother raised me to be a man...She knew when I was telling the truth and when I was lying, and I usually got a good ass-whipping when I was lying. So it shaped me. It shaped me to treat everybody right. I treat everybody right.
"I'm a Christian-thinking man. I read the Bible. I believe in what it teaches. What else can I say? I'll treat you the way I want you to treat me. And that's the way my life has always been. And that's the way it'll be until I die. I'm thankful for God that he woke me up every morning of my life." Berry said.
"I never made no records, none of that stuff."
In a story by noted videojournalist, Larry Hatteberg (Hatteberg's People), "Wichitan, Berry Harris has playing the Blues for over 70 years. He's one of the oldtime Blues players, and he's been on the circuit for years, played everywhere...Berry has spent his life trying to make a few bucks with his music, raising his family, and simply playing the Blues, "Hatteberg said.
"It's a part of my life. Like therapy, you know. I don't know how to express myself in words. It comes out in what I play," Berry revealed.
"The crowd is what motivates me because it surely can't be money because I'm not playing for money. I'm not making money, you know what I'm saying, I'm make change, but I'm not making any money."
“I ain’t been perfect, but I’ve been good.”
Phantom Culture realease:
Berry Harris - Song No.02
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Berry Harris, Song No.03 (The Blues)
Mega-Blues:
Berry Harris - Guitar/Vocals
Lee Williams - Guest Vocals
Michael Peltzer - Guitar
Leo Henderson - Bass
Dustin Lentz - Keyboards
Jeff Corbett - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Berry T. Harris (Wichita, Kansas), passed away on April 6, 2020, at the age of 90. Born November 27, 1929, musician Berry Harris has played the blues for over 70 years, in just about every club in Wichita.
"I didn't need very much because I would always live with not very much. So not having much didn't bother me because that's the way I was raised. Didn't have much. You know, we were what you may call poor folk, poor folks. But, I didn't know that...Everything was all right in my life, you know.
"I have lived a good life. I've been a well-blessed man. I've been well treated in the people of this town. I never knew -- I never thought that nobody ever know me. It's strange how things come into your life that you don't know gonna come there. Well, I ain't got rich...I haven't got rich, but I've lived pretty decent.
"I'm just an average guy. You know what I mean? But I play. I like to play. I play keyboards. I play keyboard, harmonica, and guitar. I'm also a comedian... I been a very fortunate man. God has blessed me. I ain't never been in jail in my life.
"I don't know nothing about segregation, to tell you the truth. I don't. Because where I was raised at, there was none. Everybody was poor folks. White people and black people, were all poor. We were all eating out of the same bucket. You understand what I'm saying to you? They didn't have nothing. We didn't have nothing.
"People, people have treated me very nice in this town. Black people, white people, any kind of people. I don't do nothing to nobody. I don't bother nobody. I don't fight. I don't go to jail. I don't do none of that, none of that. I've lived a pretty good life and I'm thankful for what life has brought to me.
"My mother raised me to be a man...She knew when I was telling the truth and when I was lying, and I usually got a good ass-whipping when I was lying. So it shaped me. It shaped me to treat everybody right. I treat everybody right.
"I'm a Christian-thinking man. I read the Bible. I believe in what it teaches. What else can I say? I'll treat you the way I want you to treat me. And that's the way my life has always been. And that's the way it'll be until I die. I'm thankful for God that he woke me up every morning of my life." Berry said.
"I never made no records, none of that stuff."
In a story by noted videojournalist, Larry Hatteberg (Hatteberg's People), "Wichitan, Berry Harris has playing the Blues for over 70 years. He's one of the oldtime Blues players, and he's been on the circuit for years, played everywhere...Berry has spent his life trying to make a few bucks with his music, raising his family, and simply playing the Blues, "Hatteberg said.
"It's a part of my life. Like therapy, you know. I don't know how to express myself in words. It comes out in what I play," Berry revealed.
"The crowd is what motivates me because it surely can't be money because I'm not playing for money. I'm not making money, you know what I'm saying, I'm make change, but I'm not making any money."
“I ain’t been perfect, but I’ve been good.”
Phantom Culture realease:
Berry Harris - Song No.03
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Berry Harris, Song No.04 (The Blues)
Mega-Blues:
Berry Harris - Guitar/Vocals
Michael Peltzer - Guitar
Leo Henderson - Bass
Dustin Lentz - Keyboards
Jeff Corbett - Drums
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Berry T. Harris (Wichita, Kansas), passed away on April 6, 2020, at the age of 90. Born November 27, 1929, musician Berry Harris has played the blues for over 70 years, in just about every club in Wichita.
"I didn't need very much because I would always live with not very much. So not having much didn't bother me because that's the way I was raised. Didn't have much. You know, we were what you may call poor folk, poor folks. But, I didn't know that...Everything was all right in my life, you know.
"I have lived a good life. I've been a well-blessed man. I've been well treated in the people of this town. I never knew -- I never thought that nobody ever know me. It's strange how things come into your life that you don't know gonna come there. Well, I ain't got rich...I haven't got rich, but I've lived pretty decent.
"I'm just an average guy. You know what I mean? But I play. I like to play. I play keyboards. I play keyboard, harmonica, and guitar. I'm also a comedian... I been a very fortunate man. God has blessed me. I ain't never been in jail in my life.
"I don't know nothing about segregation, to tell you the truth. I don't. Because where I was raised at, there was none. Everybody was poor folks. White people and black people, were all poor. We were all eating out of the same bucket. You understand what I'm saying to you? They didn't have nothing. We didn't have nothing.
"People, people have treated me very nice in this town. Black people, white people, any kind of people. I don't do nothing to nobody. I don't bother nobody. I don't fight. I don't go to jail. I don't do none of that, none of that. I've lived a pretty good life and I'm thankful for what life has brought to me.
"My mother raised me to be a man...She knew when I was telling the truth and when I was lying, and I usually got a good ass-whipping when I was lying. So it shaped me. It shaped me to treat everybody right. I treat everybody right.
"I'm a Christian-thinking man. I read the Bible. I believe in what it teaches. What else can I say? I'll treat you the way I want you to treat me. And that's the way my life has always been. And that's the way it'll be until I die. I'm thankful for God that he woke me up every morning of my life." Berry said.
"I never made no records, none of that stuff."
In a story by noted videojournalist, Larry Hatteberg (Hatteberg's People), "Wichitan, Berry Harris has playing the Blues for over 70 years. He's one of the oldtime Blues players, and he's been on the circuit for years, played everywhere...Berry has spent his life trying to make a few bucks with his music, raising his family, and simply playing the Blues, "Hatteberg said.
"It's a part of my life. Like therapy, you know. I don't know how to express myself in words. It comes out in what I play," Berry revealed.
"The crowd is what motivates me because it surely can't be money because I'm not playing for money. I'm not making money, you know what I'm saying, I'm make change, but I'm not making any money."
“I ain’t been perfect, but I’ve been good.”
Phantom Culture realease:
Berry Harris - Song No.04
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Domestic Drone, Song No.01 (Psych Pop)
Efforts to address the alarming amount of space junk by employing drone dragons to incinerate floating garbage will be an option to be considered by experts.
Domestic Drone: cosmic adventurers battling glass rain storms in a super heated lava swamps while dodging dying dragons...
Dark shoegazing psych pop.
Mason Glen Monigold - Guitar
Matthew Clagg - Drums
Daniel Rogers - Bass
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Domestic Drone - Song No.01
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Domestic Drone, Song No.02 (Psych Pop)
Efforts to address the alarming amount of space junk by employing drone dragons to incinerate floating garbage will be an option to be considered by experts.
Domestic Drone: cosmic adventurers battling glass rain storms in a super heated lava swamps while dodging dying dragons...
Dark shoegazing psych pop.
Mason Glen Monigold - Guitar
Matthew Clagg - Drums
Daniel Rogers - Bass
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Domestic Drone - Song No.02
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Domestic Drone, Song No.03 (Psych Pop)
Efforts to address the alarming amount of space junk by employing drone dragons to incinerate floating garbage will be an option to be considered by experts.
Domestic Drone: cosmic adventurers battling glass rain storms in a super heated lava swamps while dodging dying dragons...
Dark shoegazing psych pop.
Mason Glen Monigold - Guitar
Matthew Clagg - Drums
Daniel Rogers - Bass
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Domestic Drone - Song No.03
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.
Phantom Culture - Domestic Drone, Song No.04 (Psych Pop)
Efforts to address the alarming amount of space junk by employing drone dragons to incinerate floating garbage will be an option to be considered by experts.
Domestic Drone: cosmic adventurers battling glass rain storms in a super heated lava swamps while dodging dying dragons...
Dark shoegazing psych pop.
Mason Glen Monigold - Guitar
Matthew Clagg - Drums
Daniel Rogers - Bass
[Remember: even if you were there then, you weren't this there.]
Phantom Culture realease:
Domestic Drone - Song No.04
The International Phantom Gallery of Culture
©2012 to present, and beyond - All rights reserved by respective parties.