Eden's Viper
The Vampire King
Eden’s Viper — Bio
Eden’s Viper was not born from comfort, nor from the illusion of a normal life. This project was forged in fracture, isolation, and the search for meaning in places most people never dare to look.
At the age of eight, everything changed. My father—who had already opened the door to the occult just four years prior—walked out of my life. What he left behind was not just absence, but a void filled with questions, confusion, and a strange inheritance: knowledge of forces beyond the visible world, introduced far too early and without guidance.
What followed was a childhood shaped by isolation and abuse. Multiple stepfathers passed through my life, and with them came instability, fear, and experiences no child should have to endure. I grew up disconnected—from others, from safety, from any sense of belonging. The world felt hostile, distant, and unreal.
Then, at seventeen, something shifted.
I picked up a bass guitar.
It wasn’t just an instrument—it was a weapon. Something ancient, something powerful. Like Excalibur pulled from stone, it gave me a way to shape reality instead of being crushed by it. For the first time, I had control. I had a voice. I had a means to transmute pain into something tangible, something alive.
In the late 1990s, I began producing music using Fruity Loops—long before it became what it is today. Those early experiments were raw, unpolished, and deeply personal. I wasn’t trying to fit into a scene. I was trying to survive, to understand, to create something that reflected the inner world I had been forced to inhabit.
Over time, that sound evolved.
What emerged is what I now call Ghost Punk.
A genre born from collision and intention—blending elements of shoegaze, goth rock, darkwave, coldwave, ethereal wave, and minimal wave into something that feels both haunting and cathartic. Ghost Punk is not just a style; it is a philosophy. It is the sound of memory, trauma, and identity echoing through distortion, atmosphere, and emotion.
Eden’s Viper exists for those who have been abandoned, misunderstood, or pushed into the margins. For those who have lived in the dark long enough to see what others cannot.
This is not just music.
This is transformation.