The fog has finally found its voice. Shaun M Jooste has released Part I of the Sacred Valley: Betrayal audio album on SoundCloud, transforming the opening act of his cult-favourite horror novel into a visceral, cinematic sound experience.
This first release features 14 tracks, one per chapter, each crafted as a sonic descent into dread: where atmosphere replaces narration and emotion becomes noise. It’s not an audiobook. It’s a haunted transmission.
A Soundscape Born from Fog, Rust, and Trauma

Part I of the Sacred Valley: Betrayal album is steeped in Silent Hill–inspired ambience, soaked in grunge textures, and laced with industrial horror instrumentals that crawl under the skin. Expect warped synths that feel like sirens echoing through abandoned streets, distorted guitar tones that grind like rusted machinery, and slow-burning drones that pulse like a failing heart.
Each track is designed to feel like its chapter rather than explain it. Some pieces are sparse and suffocating, others erupt in waves of noise and melody, mirroring panic, guilt, rage, and grief. This is horror you don’t just hear—you endure it.
What Sacred Valley: Betrayal Is Really About

At its core, Sacred Valley: Betrayal is a psychological horror story about guilt, sin, and the lies we tell ourselves to survive. The novel follows characters drawn into the cursed town of Sacred Valley, a place that manifests inner trauma as external monsters. Nothing there is random. Everything is personal.
The album reflects this theme by treating each chapter as an emotional wound. The music doesn’t follow a neat arc: it fractures, loops, and decays, much like the minds of those trapped in the town. Familiar motifs return in corrupted forms, just as memories do when twisted by shame and regret.
Track 14: Tortured Gods: The One You Must Hear

If you listen to one track only, make it Track 14: Tortured Gods.
This is the album’s emotional and thematic core. Unlike the other tracks, Tortured Gods features lyrics written by Shaun M Jooste, performed by a female vocalist whose voice moves from fragile restraint to raw, aching power. The song feels like a confession whispered in the dark: part lament, part accusation, part prayer that will never be answered.
Musically, it blends haunting melodies with crushing undertones, giving voice to the idea that even gods can suffer, break, and bleed. It’s the sound of belief collapsing under the weight of truth.
Produced by Celenic Music Studio

The album is produced by Celenic Music Studio, a creative division of Celenic Earth Publications dedicated to expanding stories beyond the page. This release marks an important step in turning Sacred Valley into a multi-sensory horror experience, bridging literature, music, and atmosphere.
This is only Part I. The descent has just begun.
Enter the Fog
Sacred Valley: Betrayal (Part I) is not background music. It’s meant for headphones, late nights, and listeners who enjoy sitting with discomfort. If you’re drawn to psychological horror, industrial soundscapes, and music that tells a story without spelling it out: this album is waiting.
And when you reach Track 14, don’t skip it. Some songs aren’t meant to entertain. They’re meant to judge.