From the vast, expansive Gobi Desert that stretches over Northern China and Southern Mongolia, this slithering, burrowing monster is so poisonous that simply touching it will kill you. Additionally, its venom is sufficiently corrosive to eat through metal. The beast will attack its prey with its fangs or by spraying its caustic venom at the intended victim. They live underground and only actively surface in the hot summer months when they prey on humans and camels and lay their eggs in the intestines of their victims. Known as Olgoi-Khorkhoi by local peoples, these beasts were first referred to as the Mongolian Death Worm by the American Palaeontologist Roy Chapman Andrews in his 1926 book, On the Trail of Ancient Man.
supported by 10 fans who also own “Mongolian Death Worm”
As has (rightfully) already been said elsewhere, this band and album are "absolute fire."
Despite the doom-gloom cover art, this type of rock music is a positive force. Especially without vocals, which for me is a bonus. Dale Lloyd
Big, clanging psych-rock from this Arizona outfit fuses monk-like vocals with slow-winding guitars for songs that feel like strange hymns. Bandcamp New & Notable May 2, 2016