Abstract
Drone metal is an extremely slow and extended subgenre of metal, developing since the 1990s at the margins of metal and experimental music scenes. Influences include minimalist composers, Indian ragas and contemporary artists alongside Black Sabbath. This echoed earlier metal musicians’ appeals to the elevated cultural status of baroque musicians in response to stereotypes of metal culture as stupid and unskilled, which often revealed class snobbery about metal’s perceived audiences. This chapter examines drone metal as a metal avant-garde, analysing how it has been received outside metal culture, and how coverage of this marginal subgenre might affect perceptions of metal music overall. Taking jazz and experimental music magazine The Wire as a case study, the chapter describes that magazine’s reproduction of stereotypes about metal until the 2000s, when it began to cover drone metal. Thereafter the magazine became more positive about metal in general, even describing it as always having been experimental. This revisionism is particularly evident in The Wire’s repeated use of an alchemical metaphor to describe drone metal as turning ‘base metal’ into avant-garde gold.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | The Cambridge Companion to Metal Music |
Editors | Jan Herbst |
Place of Publication | Cambridge |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Chapter | 18 |
Pages | 251-264 |
Number of pages | 14 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9781108991162 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781108993982 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Sep 2023 |
Externally published | Yes |