Once Upon A Time, Final Dust is a cinematic journey through the American frontier. Dust, gold, betrayal, and redemption unfold across 24 instrumental tracks where spaghetti western meets electronic storytelling. Every canyon hides a story, every ride carries a price, and every sunset asks the same question: was it worth the dust?
The sun sets low over a land that remembers everything and forgives nothing. A lone figure stands at the edge of what was, watching dust settle where life once moved. End Of Life opens the story not with a beginning, but with the weight of an ending, a quiet reckoning before the wind carries it all away.
The decision is made before the first step. Leaving behind what is known, riding toward what is not, with nothing but instinct and the open road ahead. On My Way is the sound of departure, the moment when standing still becomes impossible and forward is the only direction left.
The name alone carries a promise, a town spoken of in whispers, where fortunes are made and debts are settled in lead. The ride is long, the heat is heavy, and hope flickers like a mirage. On The Way To El Paradiso is the journey toward a dream that may not survive the arrival.
Some towns leave marks deeper than scars. El Passo was one of them, a place of dust and decisions, where friendships were tested and loyalties broken. Memories from El Passo carries the weight of what happened there, the faces, the fires, and the silence that followed.
The frontier does not negotiate. Out here, kindness is a luxury and hesitation is a death sentence. Every encounter is a test, every silence a warning. No Love, No Mercy is the unwritten law of a world where survival demands that feelings stay buried beneath the dust.
Everyone knows Funny Joe. He laughs too loud, talks too much, and always seems to be in the wrong place at the right time. But behind the grin lies a sharpness no one expects. Funny Joe is the story of a man who hides his edge behind humor, and his survival behind a smile.
This is the heart of the story, the moment when legend and reality merge into one final chapter. The dust has seen it all, the rises and the falls, the gold and the blood. Once Upon a Time, Final Dust is the epic telling of a world that lived fast, burned bright, and left its story etched in the wind.
Gold changes everything, loyalties, plans, and men. What starts as a simple deal turns into a chase where trust is the first casualty and greed rewrites every promise. For a Handful of Gold is about the price people pay when the shine of metal blinds them to everything else.
The road stretches endlessly under a burning sky, each mile heavier than the last. El Passo waits, but the journey tests patience, endurance, and nerve. The Trip to El Passo is the long ride where the landscape becomes a character and silence becomes a companion.
The trail narrows as rock walls rise on every side, closing in with each step. Somewhere ahead, the camp waits, hidden between stone and sky. The Way to the Canyon Camp is the passage through danger, where the land itself decides who gets through and who doesn't.
Standing at the edge, the world drops away into layers of time, color, and silence. Nothing man-made comes close to this scale, this indifference, this beauty. Grand Canyon is the moment of awe where the vastness of nature dwarfs every ambition and every conflict that came before.
What looked easy on paper becomes a nightmare on the ground. Plans unravel, allies hesitate, and the mission grows darker with every complication. Not A Simple Task is about facing the gap between intention and reality, where every step forward demands twice the courage.
The doors swing open and the world changes. Inside, smoke, cards, whiskey, and eyes that measure every stranger before the first word is spoken. The Saloon is the heart of every frontier town, the place where deals are struck, scores are settled, and trouble always finds a seat.
The signs were there, too quiet, too easy, too still. By the time the realization hits, the walls have already closed in. The Trap is the moment when instinct screams too late and the only way out is straight through the danger.
Every scar tells a story, every missing part a lesson learned the hard way. Four fingers are enough to pull a trigger, enough to hold a glass, and more than enough to remind everyone what happens when you cross the wrong man. Four Fingers is a portrait of resilience carved in flesh.
Billy lost pieces of himself along the way, but never his nerve. One leg slows the walk, nine fingers slow the draw, but nothing slows the will. Billy: One Leg, Nine Fingers is the ballad of a man who refused to quit, no matter how much the frontier took from him.
The sun leads the way, pulling everything toward the horizon. The West is not a place, it is a direction, a belief, a hunger for what lies beyond the next ridge. Ridding to the West is the eternal ride toward something greater, something unknown, something that keeps calling.
Hooves thunder, dust rises, and the convoy appears on the ridge. The plan is set, the men are in position, and the moment of no return arrives with the crack of a gunshot. Raid on the Gold Convoy is pure adrenaline, a high-stakes heist where fortune and death ride side by side.
Miles blur together under an endless sky. The body aches, the horse slows, but stopping is not an option. The Long Ride is about endurance pushed past its limit, where the journey becomes a test of will and the horizon never seems to get any closer.
Legends are built on stories, but stories always end. The bravest, the fastest, the most righteous, none are spared by time or lead. Even Heroes Die is the raw truth of the frontier, that courage does not promise survival, and glory is often written by those who are left standing.
The campfire burns alone, the stars offer no comfort, and the night stretches out like a sentence with no end. The frontier rewards toughness, not tenderness. No Love For The Lonely is the quiet ache of a drifter who traded connection for freedom and wonders if the price was too high.
Survival is not just about breathing, it is about holding on to the reason you started. After the dust settles and the wounds heal, love remains the only thing worth fighting for. Live To Love Another Day is about choosing life, choosing hope, and finding the strength to start again.
The final stretch begins where the desert ends and the coast calls. California is more than a destination, it is a promise of reinvention, where the past cannot follow. West to California is the last ride toward a new beginning, where the frontier gives way to the ocean and everything starts fresh.
The open land fades behind as buildings rise ahead. The sounds change, the pace quickens, and a new world demands new rules. From the Canyon to The City closes the journey where wild meets civilization, where the rider becomes a stranger, and the story finds its final chapter.