Drafts built in isolation
Tracks started as raw sessions, depressed hooks, clipped vocals, and heavy low-end ideas recorded late when everything else finally shut up.
Built under HTG, written in the dark, aimed at people who live in the static. Heavy mood, bleak energy, sharp delivery, and tracks that sound like insomnia put through a terminal.
This is a one-page feed, not some overexplained artist essay. The sound comes from isolation, late-night sessions, and turning personal weight into a harder edge. Same old human hobby: pain, but merch-ready.
Stretty Music sits in the lane between dark rap, emo pull, and industrial pressure. The tracks are written to feel cold, close, and unstable without losing hooks.
Released under the self-created label HTG, the project is built to move from rough drafts and local noise into a sharper public catalog, with visuals, drops, and live sets all growing from the same world.
Tracks started as raw sessions, depressed hooks, clipped vocals, and heavy low-end ideas recorded late when everything else finally shut up.
HTG became the release frame. Same sound, tighter rollout. Covers, drops, pages, and future live assets now sit under one controlled identity.
Streaming links, visual assets, and promo-ready release blocks give the project a place to land instead of disappearing into folders like every other unfinished obsession.
The next phase is simple: drop harder releases, move visuals with them, launch merch, and push the project toward touring and better reach.
These are animated stats placeholders you can swap for real figures once the project goes live across platforms.
Streaming cards for the active release. Replace the placeholder links with the real platform URLs once the tracks are distributed.
Primary stream link for playlist reach, repeat listeners, and algorithmic pickup once the release starts moving.
For the listeners who still like paying for clean interfaces and pretending that means they have better taste.
Use this slot for visualisers, lyric drops, official uploads, and anything that benefits from search and replay.
Useful for alternate cuts, demos, rough versions, or the kind of uploads that should feel slightly dangerous.
Artwork, mood tags, and CTA blocks ready to swap with the real release data. Because keeping the site blank while “working on it” is apparently a lifestyle for many people.
A cold lead single built on distortion, close vocal pressure, and a hook that sits somewhere between numb and wired.
Short-run EP material for nights that slide sideways. Melodic fragments, low-end drag, and a cleaner rollout under HTG.
Visual-first release card for promo reels, short edits, and platform snippets tied back to the main single page.
Teaser cards for the next set of drops, visuals, and releases. Replace dates and copy when you lock the actual rollout.
Upcoming single with a sharper industrial edge and a heavier visual package built for teaser campaigns.
Multi-track release aimed at deepening the catalog with more narrative sequencing and stronger replay flow.
Dark visual piece lined up for the next track cycle, built to feed shorts, reels, and full video placement.
Placeholder merch cards styled for dark apparel drops. Swap images, sizes, stock, and checkout URLs whenever the store goes live.
Oversized black hoodie with front HTG mark, back signal print, and a cleaner cut for colder fits.
Front print tee with rough-type back listing and muted green hit details across the sleeves.
Sticker and patch pack for bags, cases, and laptops people pretend are part of their personality.
Tour cards are set up like a standalone tour page, but inside the one-page build. Keep or remove dates as needed.
Dark room set with support acts under HTG banner. Best used as the next live proof point after releases gain traction.
Placeholder city routing card for a tighter venue with visual loops and room-level energy instead of bloated staging.
Future routing block for the next push once the catalog, visuals, and merch all lock in together.
Click any image for the lightbox. All images are placeholders right now, which is still better than leaving the gallery empty and calling it “minimal.”
The form validates on the front end and shows a success state. Hook it to Formspree, Netlify Forms, EmailJS, or your own backend when you want live submissions.