Dopethrone
Dopethrone is the third studio album by the English doom metal band Electric Wizard, released on 25 September 2000 by Rise Above Records.[1] The album was recorded in 2000 at Chuckalumba Studios under chaotic circumstances, including drug use and legal troubles among the band members, with much of the material pre-written but some tracks improvised during the sessions.[1][2] It features the classic lineup of Jus Oborn on guitar and vocals, Tim Bagshaw on bass, and Mark Greening on drums, delivering a raw, fuzz-drenched sound characterized by monolithic riffs, slow tempos, and dense walls of distortion that blend influences from Black Sabbath, stoner rock, and sludge metal.[3][1] Thematically, Dopethrone explores bleak, nihilistic subjects such as urban decay, occultism, Satanism, drug abuse, and societal alienation, reflecting the band's experiences with unemployment, crime, and heavy marijuana use, all wrapped in a hostile and fatalistic atmosphere.[3][1] Running over 71 minutes, it includes standout tracks like "Funeralopolis" and the title song, known for their crushing heaviness and psychedelic undertones.[2][4] Widely regarded as a landmark in the doom and stoner metal genres, Dopethrone has been praised for its innovative production—eschewing modern polish for a barbaric, vintage tone—and its enduring influence on subsequent bands in the underground heavy music scene, earning high critical acclaim including a 4.5/5 star rating from AllMusic.[1][2] Despite its success, the album's intensity contributed to internal tensions that eventually led to lineup changes in 2003, marking it as a high-water mark in Electric Wizard's career.[1][5]Background
Band context
Electric Wizard was formed in 1993 in Dorset, England, by guitarist and vocalist Jus Oborn (formerly of Thy Grief Eternal), bassist Tim Bagshaw, and drummer Mark Greening, initially releasing a split single with Our Haunted Kingdom (later known as Orange Goblin).[6] The band's self-titled debut album followed in 1995 via Rise Above Records, establishing their raw doom metal foundation with influences from Black Sabbath and a nascent stoner rock edge.[7] Their second album, Come My Fanatics..., arrived in 1997, refining this sound into a denser, more psychedelic doom style that garnered underground acclaim and solidified their position in the burgeoning stoner/doom metal scene.[8] An EP titled Supercoven was released in 1998 on Bad Acid Records, further bridging their early work toward heavier territories.[9] The core trio of Oborn, Bagshaw, and Greening remained stable through these releases, providing continuity amid the band's evolving heaviness, while Rise Above Records—founded and run by former Napalm Death vocalist Lee Dorrian—pushed for a follow-up to Come My Fanatics... after its relative success, creating pressure to deliver a breakthrough amid a three-year gap.[6] Dorrian's label expectations intensified as Electric Wizard transitioned from cult favorites to potential leaders in the stoner/doom genre, with Oborn later recalling the urgency to meet demands after quitting full-time jobs to focus on music.[10] In the late 1990s Dorset scene, the band grappled with severe personal hardships that shaped the album's dark ethos, including rampant drug and alcohol use, physical injuries such as broken bones, burst eardrums, and severed fingers, and legal troubles involving arrests for incidents like car arson, whisky robberies, and an attempted theft of a church crucifix.[10] These financial strains and internal conflicts, including studio tensions, underscored the precarious existence of the group in rural UK, fueling a nihilistic drive toward Dopethrone as a pivotal statement.[6]Songwriting process
The songwriting for Dopethrone was characterized by limited pre-studio preparation, with only three tracks—"Dopethrone," "Funeralopolis," and "We Hate You"—fully composed before the band entered the studio, while the remaining songs were largely improvised or significantly extended during the sessions.[11] This approach stemmed from the band's informal creative habits, where ideas often emerged spontaneously rather than through structured planning. Jus Oborn, the band's guitarist, vocalist, and primary songwriter, took the lead in developing the core riffs and song structures, drawing from ongoing jam sessions that reflected the group's chaotic, unstructured lifestyle marked by heavy substance use and interpersonal tensions.[11][12] Substance use, particularly cannabis and hallucinogens, played a significant role in shaping the creative flow, as Oborn described how these influenced vivid visualizations that informed the music's direction, fostering an uninhibited environment for riff experimentation.[12] This drug-fueled process contributed to the album's epic-length compositions, with most tracks exceeding eight minutes on average—such as the 10-minute-plus epics "Funeralopolis" and "Weird Tales"—allowing for extended, hypnotic riff developments that built immersive atmospheres.[13] The band's personal struggles, including financial pressures and lineup frictions, briefly surfaced in these jams but were channeled into the music without derailing the momentum.[11] Oborn deliberately steered the songwriting toward greater heaviness and duration to distinguish Dopethrone from the band's earlier, shorter punk-influenced works like their 1995 self-titled debut, aiming explicitly to create "the heaviest band in the world... ever" through denser, more oppressive structures.[12] This shift emphasized slow, crushing riffs over the faster, more concise punk elements of prior releases, solidifying Electric Wizard's evolution into pure doom territory.[13]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording of Dopethrone took place at Chuckalumba Studios in Dorset, England, during May and June 2000.[14][15] The sessions spanned a few months, conducted in intermittent bursts of a few days followed by brief breaks, allowing the band to maintain momentum without continuous pressure.[6] This approach reflected the group's creative flux, as Electric Wizard entered the studio with only three songs fully composed—"Dopethrone," "Funeralopolis," and "We Hate You"—while the remaining tracks, such as "Weird Tales," were developed and arranged improvisationally on site.[6] The studio environment was intensely immersive and heavily influenced by substance use, which bandleader Jus Oborn described as integral to the process: "Did we do drugs in the studio? Of course. What could be better than three or four bongs before you start recording?"[11] Sessions often involved minimal takes, capturing raw energy amid an atmosphere of weed, acid, vodka, and speed, fostering a chaotic yet focused dynamic.[16] Internal band tensions simmered throughout, stemming from creative disagreements—such as bassist Tim Bagshaw and drummer Mark Greening's interest in Nirvana-inspired elements and rap, which clashed with Oborn's vision—leading to heated arguments and even threats of violence during tracking.[6] Despite this, the band self-produced the core elements, with Oborn taking a leading role in shaping the sonic direction. There were no strict time or budget limitations imposed, enabling this extended, organic workflow.[6]Technical aspects and challenges
The production utilized a modest analog setup at Chuckalumba Studios, suited to the band's vision of raw, unpolished doom metal.[6] Engineer Rolf Startin oversaw the technical elements, while frontman Jus Oborn played a central role in shaping the sound through extensive experimentation with amplifier miking techniques, such as distant microphone placements inspired by Pink Floyd, to achieve the album's massive, layered guitar tones.[6][17] This hands-on approach created dense, fuzzy walls of distortion without reliance on extensive digital processing or overdubs, maintaining an authentic, live-like feel.[6] Mixing occurred shortly after the primary sessions, with Oborn collaborating closely, though debates over the final sound exacerbated frictions among band members.[11] The process was fraught with challenges from the band's personal circumstances and internal dynamics. Electric Wizard members grappled with alcohol and drug use, which Oborn later described as "absolutely essential" to the creative environment.[6] These substance-related issues, combined with broader strains such as financial difficulties from quitting jobs, interpersonal tensions over musical direction, and legal troubles faced by all three members, created a volatile studio dynamic that tested the group's cohesion.[6][1] Health setbacks further complicated sessions, including physical injuries like broken bones, burst eardrums, and severed fingers among the lineup, which hindered consistent performance and contributed to an overall sense of urgency despite the extended timeline.[10] Oborn has characterized the album's creation as a "difficult process" exacerbated by these drug issues and personal problems, ultimately requiring the band to salvage the project under pressure to meet release expectations.[6] The resulting sound embraced a deliberate lo-fi aesthetic, prioritizing bass-heavy, sludgy doom riffs with minimal polish to evoke a sense of overwhelming menace and surreal heaviness, as Oborn emphasized the need for "a lot of intricacy and subtlety" in the layered mix despite the raw execution.[11] This unrefined approach, born from the constraints and improvisational jamming sessions, yielded a monumental, putrid tone that has since defined the album's enduring impact in the genre.[10]Musical style
Genre characteristics
Dopethrone is a landmark album in the doom metal and stoner rock genres, defined by its deliberately slow tempos, typically around 60 beats per minute or below in perceived feel, which contribute to an overwhelming sense of weight and inevitability. The use of down-tuned guitars, often in C# standard or drop B tunings, produces a thick, low-end dominated sound that amplifies the genre's emphasis on heaviness and groove. Songs feature extended lengths, with the title track reaching 20:48 including its hidden segment, allowing for expansive development of riffs and atmospheres typical of these styles.[18] Central to the album's sonic identity are its crushing riffs, monolithic bass lines, and hypnotic repetition, which create a dense, sludge-like texture that immerses listeners in a ritualistic haze. Tracks such as "Funeralopolis" exemplify this sludge-like density through layered, grinding instrumentation that builds from bluesy openings to apocalyptic climaxes, blending raw aggression with sustained, droning motifs. The bass, in particular, serves as a foundational pillar, its earthquake-heavy presence reinforcing the riffs' repetitive cycles and evoking a sense of inexorable momentum. This approach prioritizes atmospheric immersion over technical virtuosity, hallmarks of doom metal's plodding ethos and stoner rock's psychedelic undertones.[19][11] Structurally, Dopethrone comprises eight tracks totaling 71:08, eschewing concise compositions in favor of prolonged explorations that foster a trance-like, ceremonial experience. With no filler or abrupt shifts, the album maintains a cohesive flow, where even interludes like "The Hills Have Eyes" (0:47) integrate seamlessly into the overarching density. This format heightens the genres' immersive qualities, turning the listening process into an endurance ritual akin to a sonic descent.[19] While rooted in stoner rock's riff-driven accessibility, Dopethrone departs from genre norms by intensifying its heaviness and psychedelic infusion, merging Black Sabbath-inspired plodding with a disorienting, acid-soaked haze that elevates the sludge-doom hybrid. The result is a sound more abrasive and otherworldly than the desert-rock grooves of contemporaries, prioritizing occult-tinged psychedelia over straightforward fuzz worship. The raw production edges further amplify this distinction, lending an unpolished grit to the monolithic assault.[11][19]Influences and innovations
Electric Wizard's Dopethrone drew extensively from Black Sabbath's foundational heaviness, particularly the riff structures and blues-infused doom evident in albums like Master of Reality, which informed the band's slow, crushing tempos and guitar tones. The album blended stoner rock elements from 1970s prototypes such as Sleep and Candlemass to craft a raw, unrelenting sound.[11] In terms of innovations, Dopethrone pushed the boundaries of doom metal by pioneering extended song forms, with tracks like "Weird Tales" exceeding 15 minutes through improvised builds and atmospheric layering that heightened the genre's epic scope. The band integrated drone elements and thick fuzz distortion to create a psychedelic immersion, using live tracking and overdubs to produce a dense, swirling sonic haze that enveloped listeners in a hypnotic ritual.[20][19] Central to the album's creation was the band's explicit intent to produce "the heaviest album ever," emphasizing maximum volume, duration, and underground metal extremity to redefine heaviness beyond mainstream trends. This approach evolved directly from their prior release Come My Fanatics... (1997), amplifying its occult and drug-infused themes through intensified sonic chaos and narrative-driven compositions.[11][20]Themes and artwork
Lyrical content
The lyrics of Dopethrone, penned entirely by Jus Oborn, revolve around primary themes of drug addiction, occult horror, and apocalyptic visions, often blending surreal escapism with supernatural dread.[11] In the title track "Dopethrone," Oborn portrays drugs—particularly cannabis—as a corrupting, throne-like entity elevated to cosmic power, with lines like "Green throne raised to the black sun" evoking a demonic seat of altered consciousness that warps reality and invites doom.[6] This motif extends to broader narratives of substance-fueled descent, where hallucinogens serve as gateways to otherworldly torment, reflecting Oborn's own experiences during the writing process.[11] Literary influences permeate the album's textual content, drawing heavily from H.P. Lovecraft's cosmic horror and Robert E. Howard's barbaric fantasy to infuse lyrics with dread and savagery. Oborn has cited Lovecraft's tales, particularly those published in Weird Tales, as a key source for the album's occult elements, such as eldritch entities and inevitable madness; the track "Weird Tales" directly nods to this pulp magazine while channeling Lovecraftian motifs of incomprehensible terror from beyond.[11] Similarly, Howard's sword-and-sorcery epics inspire the barbaric, primal imagery of ritualistic violence and ancient evils, as seen in tracks like "Satanic Rites of Drugula," which merges vampiric occultism with drug-induced barbarity. Oborn described extrapolating from these authors while under the influence: "I really got so many ideas from his stories. I’d sit there, out of my brain, reading his stuff, and extrapolating on what he’d written."[6] Oborn's vocal delivery—characterized by deep, growled utterances often buried low in the mix—enhances the lyrics' poetic and surreal quality, creating an immersive haze of fragmented imagery that mirrors themes of supernatural escapism.[11] This style underscores a narrative arc of progressive madness across the album, from the ritualistic highs of addiction to cataclysmic downfall. For instance, "Funeralopolis" serves as a stark metaphor for urban decay and societal apocalypse, depicting a "funeral planet" of "human zombies" trapped in a lifeless tomb, symbolizing the hollowed-out remnants of modern existence amid occult ruin.[6] Overall, the lyrics construct a cohesive vision of humanity's entanglement with forbidden substances and eldritch forces, culminating in visions of total annihilation.[11]Cover art and packaging
The cover art for Dopethrone was conceived by the band's frontman Jus Oborn and digitally rendered by Tom Bagshaw, the brother of bassist Tim Bagshaw, with overall artwork and design handled by Hugh Gilmour.[20][4] This black-and-white illustration depicts Satan seated on a throne, inhaling from a demonic bong amid a hellish landscape of jagged black towers and occult symbols, evoking a psychedelic, drug-warped infernal realm that aligns with the album's stoner doom aesthetic and motifs of addiction as a cosmic throne.[20][21] The original 2000 release featured a gatefold sleeve for the vinyl edition, providing space for expanded inner artwork and credits, while the CD came in a standard jewel case with an 8-page booklet containing lyrics and production notes.[22] Later reissues, such as the 2004 Rise Above edition and subsequent vinyl pressings, retained the core design but introduced variations like colored vinyl (e.g., purple silk or crystal clear) and occasional bonus tracks, while maintaining the gatefold format for double-LP versions to accommodate the album's extended runtime.[23][24] In 2025, marking the album's 25th anniversary, retrospective articles highlighted the enduring impact of its artwork and themes.[20][1] These packaging elements extend the lyrical themes of addiction and horror, presenting the visuals as a metaphorical throne of narcotic descent intertwined with eldritch dread.[20]Release and promotion
Initial commercial release
Dopethrone was first released in the United Kingdom on 25 September 2000 through Rise Above Records, a label instrumental in fostering the UK heavy metal revival during the late 1990s and early 2000s by championing doom and stoner metal acts.[25][1] The album arrived amid a growing interest in retro-inspired heavy sounds, with Rise Above providing a platform for bands like Electric Wizard to reach dedicated underground audiences.[3] In the United States, the album was made available via mail-order through The Music Cartel on 20 November 2000, before entering retail distribution in January 2001.[26][27] Initial formats included compact disc, while a limited vinyl pressing followed in 2004, with 1,000 copies on white vinyl that sold out rapidly among collectors.[4] Commercially, Dopethrone garnered underground success within metal circles, particularly through word-of-mouth in stoner and doom communities, establishing it as a cult favorite without achieving mainstream chart placement.[1][20] Its reception highlighted the niche but fervent demand for Electric Wizard's sound, solidifying the band's reputation in specialized scenes.[28]Reissues and anniversaries
In 2004, Rise Above Records released a reissue of Dopethrone on both CD and limited-edition 2xLP vinyl formats, featuring expanded gatefold artwork and the bonus track "Mind Transferal," a 14:56-minute psychedelic outro that extends the album's atmospheric close.[1][29][30] The album saw continued availability through various international pressings throughout the 2010s, primarily via Rise Above Records, including limited-edition vinyl variants in colors such as green (2010, 800 copies), purple (2015), and white marbled (2015), alongside U.S. editions like a 2016 blue translucent with black swirl pressing; these editions helped sustain demand in collector markets without major alterations to the core content.[4][31][32] A 2024 repress by Rise Above Records marked a limited-edition 2xLP on cloudy grey vinyl (3,000 copies), emphasizing the album's enduring cult appeal amid renewed interest in doom metal classics, though no specific release date beyond the year's scope was detailed in announcements.[4][33][34] Marking the album's 25th anniversary in 2025—originally released on September 25, 2000—prompted retrospective coverage, including a detailed review in The Sleeping Shaman on September 25 that reaffirmed its foundational role in stoner and doom metal, and an essay in The Quietus on September 17 exploring its lasting cultural weight.[1][20] Fan-driven celebrations included a tribute jam of the album by the band Orme at The Six Six Bar in Cambridge on September 25. As of November 2025, no official band-endorsed reissue or remaster had been announced for the anniversary.[35]Reception and legacy
Contemporary reviews
Upon its 2000 release, Dopethrone garnered widespread critical acclaim for its unrelenting heaviness and atmospheric depth within the stoner doom metal landscape. AllMusic reviewer Eduardo Rivadavia awarded the album 4.5/5 stars, lauding it as a "monolithic" achievement that pushed stoner doom to unprecedented extremes and solidified Electric Wizard's role in defining the sludge subgenre.[2] Exclaim! critic Sean Palmerston praised it in a January 2001 review, emphasizing its "heavy groove that only the best bands can match" and declaring it "the most over-the-top, loudest doom album ever made," while noting how tracks like "Funeralopolis" signaled a new benchmark for fuzz-laden stoner music.[36] In a more mixed review, Kerrang! described it as "an aural landslide" for its sludgy intensity but critiqued some psychedelic repetition as occasionally dense. A 2020 Kerrang! retrospective ranked it 18th among the best albums of 2000, where it stood out amid American-dominated stoner peers like Fu Manchu's King of the Road.[37] While the reception was predominantly enthusiastic, a few UK outlets critiqued its 71-minute runtime and repetitive riff structures as occasionally dense and inaccessible, potentially overwhelming casual listeners. The overall consensus, however, crowned Dopethrone a pinnacle of stoner metal, often favorably contrasted with enduring influences like Sleep's Holy Mountain.Long-term impact and accolades
Dopethrone has garnered significant accolades over the years, solidifying its status as a cornerstone of stoner and doom metal. In 2009, Terrorizer magazine named it the Album of the Decade for the 2000s, recognizing its pivotal role in the genre's evolution. Similarly, Decibel magazine ranked it second on their list of the Top 20 Stoner Rock Albums of All Time in their September 2007 issue (No. 35). It has also frequently appeared in prominent doom metal rankings, such as fourth place on Loudwire's Top 25 Doom Metal Albums of All Time in 2022. The album's influence extends deeply into modern stoner and doom metal, shaping the sound of subsequent bands and establishing Electric Wizard as enduring leaders in the genre. It inspired acts like YOB, contributing to the post-2000 doom metal landscape through its heavy, psychedelic approach, as noted in analyses of the genre's trailblazers. Bands such as Windhand have echoed its atmospheric depth and riff-driven intensity, further propagating Dopethrone's sonic blueprint in contemporary stoner doom. In a 2024 interview, Electric Wizard frontman Jus Oborn reflected on the album's creation and lasting resonance, emphasizing its raw, unfiltered energy as a key factor in its ongoing appeal. Marking its 25th anniversary in 2025, retrospectives in outlets like The Sleeping Shaman and The Quietus reaffirmed its pillar status, highlighting how it reinvented doom metal with an unmistakable English aggression and cultural edge. Beyond music, Dopethrone has achieved broader cultural reach, featuring in documentaries such as the track "Vinum Sabbathi" in The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virginia (2008), which underscores its thematic ties to outsider narratives. It has been sampled in underground hip-hop, notably by rapper Trae tha Truth on his 2009 track "I'm Fresh," bridging metal and rap subcultures despite initial band reservations. As a symbol of the 2000s weed metal revival, the album encapsulated the era's fusion of marijuana culture, horror aesthetics, and extreme heaviness, influencing the genre's thematic and sonic revival.Track listing and credits
Track listing
All tracks are written by Jus Oborn, Tim Bagshaw and Mark Greening.[4] The original 2000 release contains the following track listing:| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Vinum Sabbathi" | 3:06 |
| 2. | "Funeralopolis" | 8:43 |
| 3. | "Weird Tales" i. "Electric Frost" ii. "Golgotha" iii. "Altar of Melektaus" | 15:05 |
| 4. | "Barbarian" | 6:29 |
| 5. | "I, The Witchfinder" | 11:04 |
| 6. | "The Hills Have Eyes" | 0:47 |
| 7. | "Dopethrone" | 20:48 |
| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 6. | "The Hills Have Eyes" | 0:46 |
| 7. | "We Hate You" | 5:08 |
| 8. | "Dopethrone" | 10:36 |
| 9. | "Mind Transferral" (bonus track) | 14:54 |