Welcome to the Lost Souls Saloon doesn’t ask for your attention politely. FangSlinger’s debut album arrives fully loaded — vampire outlaws, cursed riffs and a fractured Old West that feels like it was dragged out of a fever dream and plugged straight into a Marshall stack. Undead Redneck Rock ‘N’ Roll, they call it, and honestly, what else would you call it?
The concept is gloriously committed — three outlaw vampires, bound by a curse, roaming a fractured Old West in search of souls. It’s cinematic, theatrical and a little unhinged, which is precisely the point. But what separates FangSlinger from bands who lean too heavily on concept at the expense of songs is that the music holds up entirely on its own terms. The swagger of Guns N’ Roses, the southern grit of Black Stone Cherry, filtered through a gothic darkness that gives them an identity well beyond their influences. Big riffs, blues-soaked grooves, dual vocal interplay, and a ten-track arc that moves between anthemic hard rock and darker, more atmospheric territory without losing momentum.
The tracklist tells its own story — from opener The Lost Souls Saloon through Blood Curse, Wanted Undead, Bloodsucker Blues and We Are The Night, it plays like a soundtrack to a film that very much needs to exist. He Rides a Pale Horse and Children of Sorrow bring the cinematic weight, while As the Crow Flies and Bare Your Teeth keep the energy raw and immediate. It’s a record built from a run of singles that have steadily grown their audience across the UK, and hearing them together as an album makes the scope of what they’ve built clear.
Their live reputation has been earning them a following too — shows and festival appearances across the UK where the intensity, theatricality and genuine connection with their growing community of Lost Souls have established them as a band worth catching before the rooms get bigger. And on the evidence of this debut, the rooms will get bigger.
Stream Welcome to the Lost Souls Saloon here.

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