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Description

Drone metal (often called drone doom) is an extreme, minimalist offshoot of doom metal that centers on sustained tones, monumental volume, and glacial tempos. Rather than relying on riffs or conventional grooves, it foregrounds long, vibrating chords, amplifier feedback, and the physical presence of sound itself.

Its textures are typically cavernous and monochromatic, with guitars tuned very low, notes held for extended durations, and percussion either sparse or entirely absent. Vocals—if present—range from ritualistic chants to guttural growls or distant murmurs, often treated as another layer of texture rather than a narrative lead.

The result is immersive and meditative, yet crushing: a music of weight, space, and resonance that emphasizes timbre and decay over melody and rhythm.

History
Origins (early–mid 1990s)

Drone metal crystallized in the United States in the early 1990s, largely through Earth’s radically stripped-down approach to doom metal on releases like "Earth 2: Special Low Frequency Version" (1993). Drawing on the slow weight of doom, the amplifier worship of sludge, and the sustained-tone practices of drone and minimalist composition, Earth established a blueprint centered on prolonged, low-frequency guitars and near-static form.

Expansion and Codification (late 1990s–2000s)

By the late 1990s, Sunn O))) transformed the style into a monumental live and recorded ritual, emphasizing extreme volume, open tunings, monolithic drones, and theatrical presentation. The Southern Lord label became a hub for the sound. Parallel developments in Japan (Boris, Corrupted) and Europe deepened the palette, adding noise, dark ambient, and experimental elements.

Acts like Khanate pushed toward harrowing, dissonant minimalism with tortured vocals and negative space, while Nadja folded in shoegaze-like haze and melodic ambience. The period also saw collaborations across avant-garde, classical, and noise scenes, normalizing the genre in experimental music contexts.

Consolidation and Cross-Pollination (2010s–present)

In the 2010s, drone metal’s aesthetics informed post-metal, atmospheric sludge, and doom-adjacent hybrids (often called drone doom). Artists refined studio craft—mic placement, room capture, and layering of feedback—while performances emphasized immersion, sometimes in non-traditional venues (galleries, chapels). The genre remains a niche but influential wellspring for heavy music seeking maximum impact with minimal motion.

How to make a track in this genre
Sound and Tuning
•   Tune guitars very low (C standard, B standard, or lower) and use thick strings to maintain tension and sustain. •   Favor long, sustained tones and open strings. Embrace feedback as a musical element; let amplifiers breathe.
Harmony and Form
•   Use minimal harmonic movement: pedal tones, single-chord or two-chord frameworks, and drones that evolve via timbre, dynamics, and overtones rather than chord changes. •   Structure pieces as large arcs (10–30+ minutes), focusing on growth in density, texture, and resonance instead of verse–chorus repetition.
Rhythm and Percussion
•   Keep tempos glacial or omit drums entirely. If drums are used, employ sparse, tectonic hits (floor toms, gongs) to mark long time spans. •   Prioritize sustain and decay over groove; silences and negative space are part of the rhythm.
Tone Shaping and Space
•   Stack high-watt tube amps, cabs, fuzz and distortion (e.g., octave fuzz), and long reverbs. Mic the room as much as the cabinets to capture air and bloom. •   Layer multiple guitar tracks at low volumes to build mass without losing clarity; ride volume swells and feedback nodes.
Vocals and Texture
•   Treat vocals as texture: chants, throat-like drones, whispers, or distant roars. Use heavy reverb and delay to embed them in the soundfield. •   Introduce auxiliary textures (bowed guitar, oscillators, harmonium, modular drones) sparingly to shift color without breaking stasis.
Composition Approach
•   Start from a fundamental pitch and explore its overtone ladder through volume, distortion, and mic placement. Compose via rehearsal-room iteration: record long takes, then edit for contour. •   Aim for immersive dynamics: extremely soft to earthquakingly loud, allowing rooms and resonances to become co-composers.
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