BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Release Debut Single “Come What May” + Music Video


Beautiful Skeletons release their debut single “Come What May,” alongside its official music video. Dark, atmospheric, and emotionally unrelenting, the track is the first taste of the band’s forthcoming debut album Pulse Line Scar, produced by heavy music legend Ulrich Wild (Pantera, Static-X, Breaking Benjamin, White Zombie) and released via his WURMgroup label.

The song opens with a gut-punch of a line—“Built my dreams on fragile ground”—and never lets go. It’s a meditation on chasing a vision at any cost: the sacrifices, the fear, the refusal to quit. It’s also the real story of this band.

In 2025, Beautiful Skeletons were pushed to the edge. Vocalist Tina Firefly received life-changing news requiring her to relocate from the West Coast to North Carolina—just as the band had secured the opportunity to record with Ulrich Wild, a goal years in the making. The band rallied around Tina and made the decision to self-finance the record entirely, shouldering every personal and financial risk themselves. That tension—between fear and conviction—became “Come What May.”

Drummer Huwy Williams, who recently overcame cancer and kept pushing forward, is living proof of the anthem’s message. “It’s about surrendering control and stepping into the unknown with everything on the line,” the band explains. “If you’re going to do this, you have to commit fully. You can’t move forward while holding onto fear.”

When I first heard Beautiful Skeltons' music I was immediately attracted to the northwestern vibes. With such diverse backgrounds the band has all these great musical influences. Fused by Tinas lyrics, you can hear the raw emotions in every track. We had a great time creating this album, and releasing it through WURMgroup is simply a natural progression for the project. - Ulrich Wild

Directed and produced by Karl Whinnery and filmed at Desert Island Studios, the video was captured in a single relentless day—two music videos shot back-to-back against a hard deadline. Whinnery built the atmosphere with minimal props and maximum mood: dark, raw, immersive. The shoot drew in band members, close friends, and family—including Tina’s daughter—giving it an intimacy that radiates on screen.

Tina Firefly: “It was exhausting, but there was a real sense of momentum and excitement. It felt like everything we’d been building toward was finally in motion.”

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