Friday, April 3, 2020

Stoner Metal

Of all the metal subgenres that Black Sabbath created, stoner metal often pales in comparison to its predecessors heavy metal and doom metal. But in 1971, with the release of Sabbath's masterpiece Master of Reality, one song shaped an entire genre: "Sweet Leaf." The fuzzy, blues-injected riffage, the plodding, midtempo feel, and of course the subject of recreational marijuana usage all led down a singular path: the path to stoner metal.

So what constitutes as stoner metal? Is it just metal music that centers itself around pot? Not exactly, it has a very distinct sound and style to it, just as much as any other subgenre I've covered here before. It takes the slow doom metal blueprint and lines it with influences from blues rock, psychedelic rock, and eventually (naturally) stoner rock, an offshoot of hard rock mentioned in my very first post. Stoner metal aims to bring the blues back into the metal formula. The genre is very closely linked to sludge metal, sometimes to the point of the genre terms being used interchangeably, but stoner metal has a much more carefree, less aggressive air to it that sets it apart fairly distinctly.

Though "Sweet Leaf" was released all the way back in 1971, stoner metal as a whole didn't begin to take form until the early 1990s. Early stoner rock bands like Monster Magnet and Fu Manchu didn't precede the metal counterpart by much, and often would blur the lines between rock and metal from song to song. The early '90s saw the arrival of bands that would remain hugely prevalent forces throughout the genre's entire existence, solidifying themselves as forerunners and trailblazers, such as Sleep, Corrosion of Conformity, Down, Melvins, Kyuss, Earth, Blood Farmers, Motorpsycho, and Clutch. Also prevalent were traditional doom metal bands that took more and more psychedelic influence such as Trouble, Saint Vitus, and Cathedral. The later '90s brought more bands to the fray such as Spiritual Beggars, Acrimony, Orange Goblin, Electric Wizard, Spirit Caravan, Goatsnake, the Atomic Bitchwax, and Sons of Otis.

Recommended '90s stoner metal listening:
1. Sleep - Holy Mountain (1992)
2. Kyuss - Welcome to Sky Valley (1994)
3. Melvins - Stoner Witch (1994)
4. Down - NOLA (1995)
5. Electric Wizard - Come My Fanatics... (1997)

In the 2000s, stoner metal continued strong with both already-established bands just as much as newcomers. Stoner juggernauts like Sleep and Electric Wizard both released their magnum opuses (Dopesmoker and Dopethone, respectively) in the first few years of the decade. The 2000s saw the sludge-stoner crossover take full effect, with the arrival of bands like High on Fire, Kylesa, Ufomammut, Big Business, and Boris (being a particularly interesting crossover of drone metal and noise rock as well). Other bands still such as Solace, Om, YOB, The Hidden Hand, Church of Misery, and The Sword continued the style teetering on the edge of one thing or another, whether between stoner and doom metal, or between stoner rock and metal.

Recommended '00s stoner metal listening:
1. Electric Wizard - Dopethrone (2000)
2. Sleep - Dopesmoker (2003)
3. Boris - Pink (2005)
4. High on Fire - Death is This Communion (2007)
5. Kylesa - Static Tensions (2009)

The 2010s saw a continuation of the 2000s, where bands both new and old would continue strong doing the tried and tested stoner metal formula. High on Fire holds the reigns in many ways, leading the charge of the new wave of stoner bands. Sleep makes a phenomenal comeback after 15 years of silence with 2018's The Sciences. A new wave of progressive metal-tinged stoner bands arrive, such as Mastodon and Baroness, who have both moved away from their previous sludge metal sounds. New bands like Elder, Stoned Jesus, Mutoid Man, Alunah, Spaceslug, Khemmis, and Turbowolf all release respectable additions to the genre's repertoire, alongside other reigning giants from decades prior like The Sword, Church of Misery, Electric Wizard, Kylesa, and Solace. Even notorious independent garage rock/psychedelic rock band King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard tried their hand at the stoner metal sound (incredibly, if I may add) with their 2019 record Infest the Rats' Nest.

Recommended '10s stoner metal listening:
1. The Sword - Warp Riders (2010)
2. Elder - Dead Roots Stirring (2011)
3. High on Fire - De vermis mysteriis (2012)
4. Sleep - The Sciences (2018)
5. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard - Infest the Rats' Nest (2019)

It's genres like this that aim to show how far a simple idea can go. Of course the binding thread between these bands is a mutual love for marijuana and doom metal, but such a simple yet specific concept should have, for all intents and purposes, fallen flat on its face within five years of surfacing. But thanks to the creativity, ingenuity, and passion that bands continue to breathe into the genre's style, stoner metal prevails as strongly as ever.

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