The western world loves mirrors. Not the glass ones—those are just vanity props. I’m talking about the invisible mirrors they polish daily, the ones that reflect a prettier version of themselves. They call it “values,” “ethics,” or “good intentions,” but scratch the surface and you’ll see what we’ve seen: complete, unapologetic hypocrisy. And Venomous Sin was never built to play along.
We didn’t rise from polished stages or corporate sponsorships. We were forged in the backrooms of a society that smiles to your face and rots behind closed doors. We’ve seen self-proclaimed saints crucifuck their neighbors in the name of morality, clickbaitgutted truth until it’s unrecognizable, and hashtaglobotomized entire conversations so no one has to feel uncomfortable. Hypocrisy isn’t just a disease—it’s the culture. And our band? We’re the cure they’ll choke on.
Where We Come From
Every member of Venomous Sin carries scars from that hypocrisy.
Xavi (Lord X) Sinistersin grew up being told to “fit in,” while the same voices preached individuality. When he refused to cut his hair and mold himself into something safe, he was cast out—until the same people came back years later, acting proud of what he became. That’s the West in a nutshell: punish what you can’t control, then claim it when it’s successful.
Lina Macabre learned early that power isn’t given—it’s taken. The same society that warned her to “protect her reputation” was the one that sexualized her before she was old enough to understand it. She turned that poison into a weapon. If they were going to brand her, she’d burn the whole marketplace down and sell the ashes.
Sheila Moongrave, Draven Blackthorn, Seraphina Ashthorn, Lucien Voidreign, Nyx Luna, Thorin Hammerhead, and the rest of the lineup each have their own chapter in this book of betrayal. A teacher shamed Sheila for “emotional outbursts” while demanding she be authentic. Draven was told to “stand up for himself” and punished the moment he did. Seraphina was praised for her compassion but condemned for her boundaries. Lucien was called disciplined by day and “cold” by night. Nyx was celebrated for her tech brilliance—until she outsmarted the wrong people. Thorin was the friend everyone wanted when they needed something heavy lifted, but suddenly “too intense” when he lifted his own voice.
Why We Declare War
Hypocrisy thrives because it’s polite. Because it wears a smile and a cause. Because it can weaponize empathy when needed and abandon it when inconvenient. We’ve watched the West sell “freedom” while policing thought, sell “individuality” while manufacturing identities, sell “justice” while cutting deals in the backroom.
We’ve also seen how art gets leashed. Musicians are told to “speak their truth” as long as it’s brand-safe. They’re handed rules disguised as “guidelines.” They’re told the world needs more unity, then paid to create division. That’s why Venomous Sin Declares War isn’t just an album title—it’s a manifesto. Every track, from We’re Not Angry, We Declare Fucking War to Compliance is a Corpse and No Throne for Disgusting Bastards, is an execution. Lyrical firing squads aimed directly at the pretenders.
The Characters Are Real Enough to Bleed
Every Venomous Sin character is AI-generated in visuals—but the backstory, the rage, the scars? Those are ours. They are the avatars we built to scream where our human voices were silenced.
When you see Lucien Voidreign rip into a bassline like it owes him money, know that it’s coming from real nights where the only thing louder than his amp was the hypocrisy hammering at his skull. When Lina’s voice drips venom on stage, you’re hearing every double standard she’s been force-fed, every moral lecture that came from someone who didn’t live it.
The mask may be digital, but the blood under it is human.
The Western Lie
Let’s strip it bare. The Western world loves to tell itself it’s “evolved.” That it learned from history. That it stands for truth. But when you look closer, it’s the same old theater—only now the costumes are designer and the stage is digital.
-
Freedom of speech? Until you say something that offends their sponsor.
-
Equality? Until it threatens their hierarchy.
-
Tolerance? Until you live a lifestyle they can’t market.
The hypocrisy is so baked-in that most people can’t even taste it anymore. It’s in the hashtags, the headlines, the hero speeches from people who’ve never fought a real fight. It’s in the award shows preaching sustainability while flying in private jets. It’s in the influencers selling “self-love” while being slaves to algorithm trends.
Our Soundtrack to the End of the Charade
When we released Happy Hypocrisy Day (Your Last 4th July), some called it extreme. But tell me what’s more extreme—calling it out, or pretending the fireworks aren’t hiding the smell of burning truth? Venomous Sin doesn’t play for claps. We play for cracks—the ones in the mask of the culture, the ones that make the rot underneath impossible to ignore.
No Gods but the Machine wasn’t anti-religion—it was anti-lie. Anti-control. Anti-anything that says “follow me” while walking you straight into a cage.
A Nuclear Attack on Everything We Hate isn’t literal—it’s a declaration that if we can’t burn the system down physically, we’ll do it in every ear we can reach.
We Are Not Your Distraction
Too many bands let themselves become part of the hypocrisy machine. Sell rebellion as a product, but never actually rebel. Use anger as branding, but never turn it against the people writing their checks. That’s not Venomous Sin. If we can’t make it on our terms, we’d rather vanish. Because the second you start faking your war, you’ve already lost it.
The Invitation
If you’re tired of pretending, of nodding along to the polite lies, of clapping for people who’d crucifuck you the second you stopped being useful—then you’re already one of us. This isn’t just music. It’s an act of war against the disease of hypocrisy, and every listener is another soldier in the noise.
We don’t want your blind loyalty. We want your open eyes. We want your refusal to kneel. We want your voice, raw and unfiltered. Because the West will keep selling you clean mirrors until someone smashes them.
And smashing things? That’s where we excel.
Disclaimer: The characters of Venomous Sin are AI-generated for artistic purposes, but their backstories are rooted in real-life experiences, traumas, and cultural observations from the creators. Every fictional element has a human truth behind it.
Join the war.
Home Page
YouTube
Spotify