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Dopes to Infinity
1995 studio album by Monster Magnet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Dopes to Infinity is the third album by American rock band Monster Magnet, released on March 21, 1995. The album includes the song "Negasonic Teenage Warhead", the band's first hit single.
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Overview
The song "Negasonic Teenage Warhead" became the band's first hit single, after having appeared the previous year in different form in the American movie S.F.W.. Other tracks, such as the title track and "Dead Christmas" however, received little or no airplay, resulting in sales of the album being only slightly better than their previous album, Superjudge. The album did reach #51 on the UK Charts and #30 in the German Charts.[3]
A music video was made for the song "Negasonic Teenage Warhead," directed by Gore Verbinski.
In 2011, Monster Magnet revisited the album when they embarked on "Dopes To Infinity 2011: The European Tour", performing the album live in its entirety at several European locations.
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Reception
In 2005, Dopes to Infinity was ranked number 406 in Rock Hard magazine's book of The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time.[9]
Track listing
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All tracks are written by Dave Wyndorf, except where noted.
Australian Tour edition bonus disc
Vinyl double-LP
Personnel
- Dave Wyndorf – vocals, bass, guitar, percussion, theremin, organ, bells, mellotron, producer
- Ed Mundell – bass, guitar, background vocals
- Joe Calandra – guitar, bass, background vocals
- Jon Kleiman – percussion, drums, bass, background vocals
Chart positions
Weekly charts
Singles
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Miscellanea
![]() | This section contains a list of miscellaneous information. (May 2023) |
- Track 5 was inspired by the character Ego the Living Planet from the Marvel Comics universe.
- During the early days of MTV2 (1998), in between music videos, a conversation in the woods of two stoner types was shown whereby one of the two mentions that Dopes to Infinity was one of the best albums of all time.
- A shorter version of the track "Look to Your Orb for the Warning" was featured on The Matrix soundtrack.
- The main guitar riff to the song Dopes To Infinity was lifted from the 1971 song "Woman Tamer" by the proto-heavy metal band Sir Lord Baltimore.
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References
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