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'''Let Us Prey''' is the fourth studio album by [[Electric Wizard]]. Released initially in 2002 on [[Rise Above Records]], JVC Victor and [[The Music Cartel]] it served as a more experimental follow-up to 2000's '''Dopethrone''' though a few of the songs were being performed on their 2001 tours by that point such as ''Master of Alchemy'' and ''Mother of Serpents''.
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'''Let Us Prey''' is the fourth studio album by [[Electric Wizard]]. Released initially in 2002 on [[Rise Above Records]], JVC Victor and [[The Music Cartel]] it served as a more experimental follow-up to 2000's '''Dopethrone''' though a few of the songs were being performed on their 2001 tours by that point such as ''Master of Alchemy'' and ''Mother of Serpents''.
   
 
It is also known as being the final studio album to feature Electric Wizard's original lineup as Tim Bagshaw and Mark Greening would both quit the band in 2002 and 2003, respectively. Both of them would later go on to form [[Ramesses]] while Oborn recruited new members and restarted the band as a four-piece.
 
It is also known as being the final studio album to feature Electric Wizard's original lineup as Tim Bagshaw and Mark Greening would both quit the band in 2002 and 2003, respectively. Both of them would later go on to form [[Ramesses]] while Oborn recruited new members and restarted the band as a four-piece.
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Let Us Prey was recorded by the band over the course of six weeks between September and October 2001. Like their previous albums they expressed a tendency to write songs while in the studio, even going to far to stay the night in the studio, sleeping bags and all.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20021207090324/http://www.electricwizard.net/frameset1.html/ Electric Wizard's Archived Homepage]Accessed 17th August 2016</ref> Let Us Prey is the only Electric Wizard studio album to not feature any lyrics, leaving fans to decipher for themselves. The back cover features a quote from the closing pages of the H.P. Lovecraft story "The Outsider".
 
Let Us Prey was recorded by the band over the course of six weeks between September and October 2001. Like their previous albums they expressed a tendency to write songs while in the studio, even going to far to stay the night in the studio, sleeping bags and all.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20021207090324/http://www.electricwizard.net/frameset1.html/ Electric Wizard's Archived Homepage]Accessed 17th August 2016</ref> Let Us Prey is the only Electric Wizard studio album to not feature any lyrics, leaving fans to decipher for themselves. The back cover features a quote from the closing pages of the H.P. Lovecraft story "The Outsider".
   
The album was initially released on Rise Above Records on CD in March 2002 and via The Music Cartel on CD and a single LP in April 2002. The band would tour the United States and Europe in support of the record but by the end of the last tours the band was clearly at odds, even supposedly stating at one show that "This is the last Electric Wizard show ever". Mark Greening would leave in late 2002 and be replaced by Justin Greaves, leading to a tour of Europe in 2003. At the end of that tour, Tim Bagshaw departed as well, leaving the band on hiatus until Rob Al-Issa and Liz Buckingham joined in 2004.
+
The album was initially released on Rise Above Records on CD in March 2002 and via The Music Cartel on CD and a single LP in April 2002. The band would tour the United States and Europe in support of the record but by the end of the last tours the band was clearly at odds, even supposedly stating at one show that "This is the last Electric Wizard show ever". Mark Greening would leave in late 2002 and be replaced by Justin Greaves, leading to a tour of Europe in 2003. At the end of that tour, Tim Bagshaw departed as well, leaving the band on hiatus until Rob Al-Issa and Liz Buckingham joined in 2004.
   
In 2006, Rise Above Records would re-issue Let Us Prey (Along with all of the studio albums up to We Live) with re-mastered sound, a vinyl 2LP edition and the bonus track ''Mother of Serpents'', previously only available on the JVC Victor Japanese edition.
+
In 2006, Rise Above Records would re-issue Let Us Prey (Along with all of the studio albums up to We Live) with re-mastered sound, a vinyl 2LP edition and the bonus track ''Mother of Serpents'', previously only available on the JVC Victor Japanese edition.
   
 
In the July 2009 issue of Kerrang!, Jus Oborn spoke about the album:
 
In the July 2009 issue of Kerrang!, Jus Oborn spoke about the album:
Line 38: Line 38:
 
* '''...A Chosen Few''' - 6:35
 
* '''...A Chosen Few''' - 6:35
 
* '''We, The Undead''' - 4:29
 
* '''We, The Undead''' - 4:29
* '''Master of Alchemy i) House of Whipcord ii) The Black Drug''' - (:23
+
* '''Master of Alchemy i) House of Whipcord ii) The Black Drug''' - 9:23
 
* '''The Outsider''' - 9:19
 
* '''The Outsider''' - 9:19
 
* '''Night of the Shape''' - 4:03
 
* '''Night of the Shape''' - 4:03

Revision as of 23:28, 17 August 2016

Let Us Prey
ELECTRIC-WIZARD-let-us-prey-uk-red-vinyl-LP-1
One of many variations on the album cover, depicting a first-person view of an eagle pecking one's eyes out.
Studio album by Electric Wizard
Released March 25 2002
Recorded September - October, 2001 at Chuckalumba Studios in Dorset, England
Genre Doom Metal, Psychedelic Rock, Experimental
Length 43:51
Producer John Stephens, Doug Shearer
Electric Wizard chronology
Dopethrone (Album)
(2000)
Let Us Prey
(2002)
We Live
(2004)

Let Us Prey is the fourth studio album by Electric Wizard. Released initially in 2002 on Rise Above Records, JVC Victor and The Music Cartel it served as a more experimental follow-up to 2000's Dopethrone though a few of the songs were being performed on their 2001 tours by that point such as Master of Alchemy and Mother of Serpents.

It is also known as being the final studio album to feature Electric Wizard's original lineup as Tim Bagshaw and Mark Greening would both quit the band in 2002 and 2003, respectively. Both of them would later go on to form Ramesses while Oborn recruited new members and restarted the band as a four-piece.

Background and Aftermath

Let Us Prey was recorded by the band over the course of six weeks between September and October 2001. Like their previous albums they expressed a tendency to write songs while in the studio, even going to far to stay the night in the studio, sleeping bags and all.[1] Let Us Prey is the only Electric Wizard studio album to not feature any lyrics, leaving fans to decipher for themselves. The back cover features a quote from the closing pages of the H.P. Lovecraft story "The Outsider".

The album was initially released on Rise Above Records on CD in March 2002 and via The Music Cartel on CD and a single LP in April 2002. The band would tour the United States and Europe in support of the record but by the end of the last tours the band was clearly at odds, even supposedly stating at one show that "This is the last Electric Wizard show ever". Mark Greening would leave in late 2002 and be replaced by Justin Greaves, leading to a tour of Europe in 2003. At the end of that tour, Tim Bagshaw departed as well, leaving the band on hiatus until Rob Al-Issa and Liz Buckingham joined in 2004.

In 2006, Rise Above Records would re-issue Let Us Prey (Along with all of the studio albums up to We Live) with re-mastered sound, a vinyl 2LP edition and the bonus track Mother of Serpents, previously only available on the JVC Victor Japanese edition.

In the July 2009 issue of Kerrang!, Jus Oborn spoke about the album:

“"I think that was our Genesis record. We were all just about the studio, and we wanted to create music using the studio. We were really into the idea of recording then, this pretty technical album. We wanted to be experimental, like trying out some horror movie type stuff, just to see how it works. Each song was like an idea, we didn't write it. We just got an idea, and went with that for how we wanted that to sound.”
 
— Jus Oborn, Kerrang! [2]


Tracklist

All music written by Electric Wizard. All lyrics by Jus Oborn.

  • ...A Chosen Few - 6:35
  • We, The Undead - 4:29
  • Master of Alchemy i) House of Whipcord ii) The Black Drug - 9:23
  • The Outsider - 9:19
  • Night of the Shape - 4:03
  • Priestess of Mars - 10:01
  • Mother of Serpents - 5:56 (Bonus Track on Japanese & Reissued editions)

Personnel

  • Jus Oborn - Guitar, Vocals, Lyrics
  • Mark Greening - Drums, Piano
  • Tim Bagshaw - Bass, Effects
  • Paul Sax - Violin on "Night of the Shape"
  • John Stephens - Engineering, Mixing, Recording
  • Doug Shearer - Mastering
  • Stephen O'Malley - Artwork

External Links

References

  1. Electric Wizard's Archived HomepageAccessed 17th August 2016
  2. Ruskell, Nick. Kerrang! #1269, July 2009. Treasure Chest. An Intimate Portrait Of Life In Rock. Jus Oborn, p.60, accessed 17 August 2016
V·T·E Electric Wizard
Current Members Jus ObornLiz BuckinghamSimon PooleHaz Wheaton
Past and Live-Only Members Tim BagshawMark GreeningRob Al-IssaJustin GreavesShaun RutterTasos DanazoglouGlenn CharmanClayton Burgess
Studio Albums Electric WizardCome My Fanatics...DopethroneLet Us PreyWe LiveWitchcult TodayBlack MassesTime to DieWizard Bloody Wizard
Other Releases Electric Wizard/Our Haunted KingdomChrono.NautSupercovenRadio 1 Session 1/05Electric Wizard / Reverend BizarreThe ProcesseanLegalise Drugs and MurderLive Maryland Deathfest 2012Lucifer's Satanic Daughter
Associated Bands, Artists, Etc. Ramesses11ParanoiasSourvein13Iron MonkeyTeeth of Lions Rule the DivineWith The DeadSerpentine PathDead WitchesHawkwindGreat CovenEight Hands For KaliSabbah NavahthaniFriends of HellSatan's Satyrs • Crippled Black Phoenix • Pre-Electric Wizard 1989-1994