Cannabuzz: Weed Reads
What to Read Before—and After—You Get High
Cannabuzz: Just Don't Call It a Bud and Breakfast
A Look at the Cannabis-Friendly North Fork 53 Homestead
Read the 2016 Oregon Cannabis Guide!
Your Annual Mini-Magazine About All Things Weed Has Arrived
That Show About the Weed Guy
Web Series High Maintenance Makes a Successful Transition to HBO
Cannabuzz: How to Make âSo Damn Strongâ Canna Cookies
You’re Welcome
Weed Begins at 40
How I Got Back into the Pot Game
Ask a Pot Lawyer: How to Get Your Weed Worker Permit
It’s Not Hard, But You’ll Need to Study Up—and Pony Up
Ask a Pot Lawyer: CBD Pet Treats Are a Thing?
Yep, They Are.
Ask a Pot Lawyer: Are We Headed Toward "Big Canna"?
Are Giant Marijuana Companies on the Way?
Itâs Like a Humidor for Your Weed
We Tried Out the Cannador Storage System
My Roommate, the Weed Chemist
A Conversation with Green Leaf Lab About Canna Science
The Future of Oregon's Weed Industry
Our Cannabis Programs Are the Best in the Country
Roll Away the Stone: Great Stoner Albums You Need to Hear
More Than 100 Albums to Pack Your Bowl To
The Stoner Games
Perfect Summer Games to Play Under the Influence of Weed
How to be High in Public
(Don't Actually Do Any of These Things)
MUSIC AND MARIJUANA go together like milk and honey. So why is it that so many stoners have wretched taste in music? It could be argued that everything sounds better when youâre high, and that may very well be trueâhow else can one explain the longstanding success of bands like Sublime, 311, and Phish?
Weed can turn people into pretty forgiving listeners, but it shouldnât make shitty music okay. In fact, it should make our standards higher, as pot can, for whatever reason, allow us to connect with unbridled creativity on a deeper level if we let it. (As far as remembering that connection once the recordâs over? Thatâs a different story.) So throw away garbage like Kottonmouth Kings, and for godâs sake, get rid of those warbly Grateful Dead bootlegs. Thereâs a wealth of great, wild music to get baked to out there, and it goes far beyond played-out options like The Dark Side of the Moon and Bob Marleyâs Legend.
The Pretty Things, S.F. Sorrow (1968)
It took decades, but the 1960sâ greatest psychedelic masterpiece finally seems to have gotten its due. This is the album that made Sgt. Pepperâs resemble hash-addled hackwork, preceded Tommyâs idea of the album-length rock opera by several months, and sounded trippier than anything on The Piper at the Gates of Dawn. But you still wonât hear these songs on classic-rock radio, and despite its eventual recognition as one of the finest albums ever recorded, many stoners still have yet to roll up a doobie on its (admittedly pretty hideous) album jacket.
Marrying the Rolling Stonesâ schoolboy nastiness with lysergic hallucination, S.F. Sorrow is a Bildungsroman that follows the title character through love, war, death, and disillusionment, so one can see why it didnât win over many flower children during the sun-dappled aftermath of the Summer of Love. (Although it seemed to anticipate the grim happenings of 1969 with disturbing accuracy.) And while songs like âDeathâ and âLoneliest Personâ end Sides 1 and 2, respectively, on bleak notes, there are also pop melodies, hard-rock bombast, Indian raga, and spine-tingling weirdness. If Sgt. Pepperâs definitively marked the end of the Beat boom, S.F. Sorrow opened the gates into a Wonka-world of sounds yet unheard by human ears. The current digital-age versions of the album include four bonus tracks of the splendid singles the Pretty Things released around this time; theyâre just as essential as what went on the LP.
Wolf People, Steeple (2010)
Wolf People is, quite simply, the best heavy band to come out of Britain since Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath. The quartetâs proper debut album, Steeple, followed some home recordings and CD-Rs (now collected on Tidings), and itâs a Stonehenge-sized collection of monolithic riffs, tangled guitar interplay, and minor-key British-ancestral balladryâalbeit transposed to massive volumes. It doesnât take much imagination to picture oneâs self atop the mysteriously manmade Silbury Hill when listening the albumâs opening track (âSilbury Sandsâ) or imagine armies of ghostly knights straight out of The Mabinogion colliding in ferocious but eerily silent assault in âOne by One from Dorney Reach.â Their combo-pack of Wicker Man Brit-folk and Deep Purple bombast makes them a potheadâs dream band, particularly if youâve worn out those grooves of Led Zeppelin III. Better yet, Wolf People never fall into the stoner-rock trap of locking into a mindless riff and repeating ad nauseam.
Wolf Peopleâs follow-up album, Fain, offered a slightly streamlined version of their sound (although with plenty of fancy fretwork from Joe Hollick and Jack Sharp, two of the finest guitarists currently performing), and the 2013 EP When the Fire Is Dead in the Grate offered their sweetest, subtlest moment yet in the lonely âBecome the Ground.â The band made their Portland-area debut in 2015 summer at the Pickathon festival, and their third album, the splendidly heavy Ruins, comes out this November on Jagjaguwar.
Lula CĂŽrtes and ZĂ© Ramalho, PaĂȘbirĂș (1975)
This Brazilian psychedelic treasure is both gorgeous and unspeakably weird. A double album in which each of the four sides represents a different elementâterra, ar, fogo, and ĂĄguaâPaĂȘbirĂș ebbs and flows through interconnected movements, with fragments of folk melodies, guitars that buzz like bees, unearthly chanting, birdsong, amateur sound effects (either CĂŽrtes or Ramalho makes fake wind blowy noises throughout âHarpa dos Aresâ), and intensely primeval percussion. If that makes it sound like a drug-addled nightmare, thereâs a real inventiveness and musical method to CĂŽrtes and Ramalhoâs madness, and PaĂȘbirĂș is mysteriously intoxicating, each of its tracks dangling like overripe, forbidden fruits.
The mythology surrounding the albumâs initial release adds another layer of intrigue: Almost all of the 1,000 original records were lost in either a flood or a fire, depending on which account you readâas if Mother Earth deemed humankind not yet ready for its beauty and reclaimed the album for herself. Naturally, this makes surviving copies among the most collectible albums on the planet, but you can just grab one of the recent reissues, or track it down on Spotify or YouTube.
O.C., Word...Life (1994); Cru, Da Dirty 30 (1997)
â90s hiphop is littered with perhaps hundreds of stoner classics, but for every milky Dr. Dre bong rip, there are bad seeds like Cypress Hillâbound to make you stupid and impotent. And yet the era was so rich that some of the best recordings remain relatively underground to this day. Bushwick emcee O.C. is still going strong, but his wonderful solo debut album, Word...Life, is his finest hour; itâs jazzy and loose, like a warm summer breeze easing through the neighborhood. Relatively slept-on at the time, the albumâs been rehabilitated with the appearance of âTimeâs Upâ in 8 Mileârightly so, as itâs got one of the best grooves ever laid to waxâand a deluxe reissue with remixes and bonus tracks.
The Bronxâs Cru didnât last long, and their jam-packed debut Da Dirty 30âtheir only albumâremains sorely neglected, one of the few instances in which the over-utilized template of beats, rhymes, and skits works like a charm. âJust Another Caseâ and the excellent âBubblinââ are the hits you probably know (the former features a guest appearance from Slick Rick), but the album plays brilliantly as a whole, and despite some unfortunate period misogyny, it contains a youthful humor and generosity thatâs hard to deny.
Genesis, The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway (1974)
Either youâve heard this albumâand you already know how insane it isâor you havenât, and youâre likely thinking, âGenesis?!? Those old bald dudes who did that shitty song about how they couldnât dance?â Fair ânuff. But in the early â70s, Genesis were the artiest of English art-rock bands, and lead singer Peter Gabriel (at this point, Phil Collins was just the drummer, and a really fucking great one) donned bizarre masks and costumes for the groupâs lengthy, multi-part suites about aliens, Armageddon, and murderous vegetable uprisings. The band was on the brink of internal collapse when they decided to make their magnum opus, a long, confusing double concept album about a New York City graffiti artist who gets absorbed into a slow-moving âwall of deathâ that creeps through Times Square. Once heâs on the other side, he has a series of bizarre adventures in the vein of Pilgrimâs Progress and Alice in Wonderland, except with a lot more Freudian sexual imagery. (At one point our hero is emasculated out of medical necessity, and wears his newly detached member in a tube around his neckâa plot point that gave King Missile their entire career.)
The long explicatory story on the albumâs inner gatefold doesnât really make sense of Gabrielâs foundry of dreamlike ideas, but the music is breathtakingâstrange, ethereal, occasionally heavy, then precise and delicate. Tony Banksâ mellotron and primitive synthesizers yawl and hum all over the place, and the rest of the band decimates their prog-rock peers with whip-tight jamming on songs like âIn the Cageâ and âRiding the Scree.â But thereâs also room for shiver-inducing moments like the whisper-quiet instrumental âSilent Sorrow in Empty Boatsâ and the amniotic, sodium-lamp warmth of âThe Carpet Crawlers.â Avoid the current edition of the album, a 2008 digitally compressed remix that robs the music of its dynamics and subtlety; instead, find an old copy on Discogs or in the used bins.
David Bowie, Hunky Dory (1971)
This isnât a particularly obscure album, or even all that stoney, but Bowieâs one-album-long incarnation as an Elton John-ish singer/songwriter concludes with perhaps the greatest stoner song of all time: the magnificently oddball âThe Bewlay Brothers,â which completely obliterates the 35 minutes of toe-tapping cheer that preceded it. With a phalanx of needle-sharp acoustic guitars and very little else, Bowie quickly invokes a stream-of-consciousness scroll of nervous ideas and images, with lines like âI was stone and he was wax/so he could scream and still relaxâ and âHeâs chameleon, comedian, Corinthian, and caricatureâ making way for the songâs rising, red-eyed chorus, an oblique howl thatâs unbearably tense. Yet all hell doesnât break loose until the madcap coda, where Bowie, overdubbing his voice a dozen times at varying tape speeds, allows the walls of lunacy and fear to descend.
Bowie adored his older brother, Terry, who had well-documented mental health troubles, and heâs the ghost in the machine here, a shadowy figure that lurks at the songâs outer edges. Bowie himself never claimed to know what any of âThe Bewlay Brothersâ meant, but in one fell swoop, he out-Rimbaud-ed Bob Dylan and made the most gripping, paranoid stoner song of all time.
100 (More) Great Weed-Friendly Albums
We put out the call to trusted writers, friends, and stoners, asking for their very favorite records to get high to. Turns out, the people we know really like getting stoned while listening to music. Hereâs an exhaustive rundown of their 100 favorite albums to put on while lighting upâit should be plenty to fuel your next yearâs worth of pot playlists.
Air, The Virgin Suicides (2000, France)
Amon DĂŒĂŒl II, Yeti (1970, Germany)
Ashra, Blackouts (1977, Germany)
Beastie Boys, Check Your Head (1992, USA)
Chris Bell, I Am the Cosmos (1992, USA)
The Black Angels, Passover (2006, USA)
Blue Cheer, Outsideinside (1968, USA)
Boredoms, Super ĂŠ (1998, Japan)
Boris, Pink (2005, Japan)
The Boyoyo Boys, Back in Town (1987, South Africa)
The Byrds, The Notorious Byrd Brothers (1968, USA)
Can, Tago Mago (1971, Germany)
Cat Power, Moon Pix (1998, USA)
Los Chiriguanos, Guarini Songs and Dances (1960, Paraguay)
Cocteau Twins, Heaven or Las Vegas (1990, UK)
Bootsy Collins, Ahh... The Name Is Bootsy, Baby! (1977, USA)
John Coltrane, Live at Birdland (1964, USA)
Cornershop, Womanâs Gotta Have It (1995, UK)
The Creation, We Are Paintermen (1967, UK/Germany)
Miles Davis, In a Silent Way (1969, USA)
The Devilâs Blood, The Thousandfold Epicentre (2011, Netherlands)
Digable Planets, Reachinâ (A New Refutation of Time and Space) (1993, USA)
J Dilla, Donuts (2006, USA)
DJ Kid Slizzard, For the Weed Smokers (2011, USA)
Nick Drake, Bryter Layter (1970, UK)
The Dukes of Stratosphear, 25 OâClock (1985, UK)
Dungen, Ta Det Lungt (2004, Sweden)
Brian Eno, Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks (1983, UK/Canada)
Fairport Convention, Liege & Lief (1969, UK)
The Feelies, Crazy Rhythms (1980, USA)
The Flaming Lips, In a Priest Driven Ambulance (1990, USA)
Fripp & Eno, No Pussyfooting (1973, UK)
Funkadelic, Maggot Brain (1971, USA)
Ghost, In Stormy Nights (2007, Japan)
Gilberto Gil, Gilberto Gil (1968, Brazil)
Dizzy Gillespie, An Electrifying Evening with the Dizzy Gillespie Quintet (1961, USA)
Goat, Commune (2014, Sweden)
Googoosh, Googoosh (2011, Iran)
Alain Goraguer, La PlanĂšte Sauvage (1973, France)
Handsome Boy Modeling School, So... Howâs Your Girl? (1999, USA)
Shin Joon Hyun, Beautiful Rivers and Mountains (2011, South Korea)
Jex Thoth, Blood Moon Rise (2013, USA)
The Kinks, Face to Face (1966, UK)
Fela Kuti, Gentleman (1973, Nigeria)
Cate Le Bon, Cyrk (2012, UK)
Madvillain, Madvillainy (2004, USA)
The Masterâs Apprentices, Choice Cuts (1971, Australia)
Mercury Rev, Yerself Is Steam (1991, USA)
Charles Mingus, The Clown (1957, USA)
Morgen, Morgen (1969, France)
Morphine, Cure for Pain (1993, USA)
Van Morrison, Astral Weeks (1968, USA/Northern Ireland)
Mott the Hoople, Mott (1973, UK)
The Move, Shazam (1970, UK)
Junior Murvin, Police and Thieves (1977, Jamaica)
Os Mutantes, Os Mutantes (1968, Brazil)
My Bloody Valentine, Loveless (1991, UK)
Willie Nelson, Red Headed Stranger (1975, USA)
Neu!, Neu! (1972, Germany)
90 Day Men, To Everybody (2002, USA)
Nudity, The Nightfeeders (2008, USA)
Angel Olsen, Burn Your Fire for No Witness (2014, USA)
Shuggie Otis, Inspiration Information (1974, USA)
Outkast, Aquemini (1998, USA)
The Pharcyde, Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde (1992, USA)
PRhyme, PRhyme (2014, USA)
Primal Scream, Screamadelica (1991, UK)
N. Ravikiran, Taj Mahal, V.M. Bhatt, Mumtaz Mahal (1995, India/US)
Rush, 2112 (1976, Canada)
Ty Segall and White Fence, Hair (2012, USA)
Sleep, Holy Mountain (1992, USA)
Sly and the Family Stone, Thereâs a Riot Goinâ On (1971, USA)
Small Faces, Ogdenâs Nut Gone Flake (1968, UK)
Sonic Youth, Daydream Nation (1988, USA)
The Soundtrack of Our Lives, Behind The Music (2001, Sweden)
Spiritualized, Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space (1997, UK)
Pops Staples, Donât Lose This (2015, USA)
The Rain Parade, Emergency Third Rail Power Trip (1983, USA)
Stereolab, Dots and Loops (1997, UK)
The Stone Roses, The Stone Roses (1989, UK)
George Strait, Icon/Best of George Strait (2011, USA)
Super Furry Animals, Rings Around the World (2001, UK)
Tame Impala, Lonerism (2012, Australia)
The Teardrop Explodes, Kilimanjaro (1980, UK)
Temples, Sun Structures (2014, UK)
Thin Lizzy, Jailbreak (1976, Ireland)
Toots and the Maytals, Funky Kingston (1975, Jamaica)
Tomorrow, Tomorrow (1968, UK)
Peter Tosh, Equal Rights (1977, Jamaica)
Various Artists, Cult Cargo: Belize City Boil Up (2005, Belize)
Caetano Veloso, Caetano Veloso (1969, Brazil)
Kurt Vile, Smoke Ring for My Halo (2011, USA)
Wand, Golem (2015, USA)
We All Together, We All Together (1972, Peru)
The Who, The Who Sell Out (1967, UK)
Chelsea Wolfe, Pain Is Beauty (2013, USA)
Wu-Tang Clan, 36 Chambers: Enter the Wu-Tang (1993, USA)
Yes, Relayer (1975, UK)
Neil Young, Tonightâs the Night (1975, USA/Canada)
Yuck, Yuck (2011, UK)