Dope discography

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Dope discography
Studio albums6
Compilation albums1
Singles20

The American rock band Dope has released six studio albums, one compilation album and 20 singles. The band released its first two studio albums on record label Epic Records, the next two on Artemis Records and their most recent album on Koch Records. The band's songs have appeared on movies, TV shows and video games. A song from their first album, Felons and Revolutionaries appeared in the movie The Fast and the Furious. They also recorded WWE chairman Vince McMahon's theme song, "No Chance in Hell". Five songs from American Apathy feature in the video game MTX Mototrax. Their song "Nothing for Me Here", from their album No Regrets, is featured in the video game Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock.

Albums[]

Studio albums[]

Year Album details Peak chart positions Sales
US
[1]
US
Heat.

[2]
US
Ind.

[3]
US Hard Rock
[4]
US Rock
[5]
1999 Felons and Revolutionaries
  • Released: September 14, 1999
  • Label: Epic
  • Formats: CD, DI
25
  • US: 236,000+[6]
2001 Life
  • Released: November 6, 2001
  • Label: Epic
  • Formats: CD, DI
180 6
2003 Group Therapy
  • Released: October 21, 2003
  • Label: Artemis
  • Formats: CD, DI
16 17
2005 American Apathy
  • Released: July 26, 2005
  • Label: Artemis
  • Formats: CD, DI
128 1 14
  • US: 100,000+[8]
2009 No Regrets
  • Released: March 10, 2009
  • Label: Koch
  • Formats: CD, DI
88 7 11
2016 Blood Money Part 1 27 2 3 3
N/A Blood Money Part 2
  • Released: TBA
  • Label: eOne Music
  • Formats: CD, DI
To be released
"—" denotes a release that did not chart.

Compilation albums[]

Year Album details
2002 Felons for Life
  • Released: October 2002
  • Label: Eat Me/Sue Me
  • Format: CD

Live albums[]

Year Album details
2016 Live from Moscow Russia[12]
  • Released: 2016
  • Label: self-released
  • Format: CD

Singles[]

Year Song Peak chart positions Album
US Active Rock
[13]
US
Main.

[14]
1999 "Debonaire" 38 Felons and Revolutionaries
"Sick"
"Pig Society"
2000 "Everything Sucks"
"You Spin Me Round (Like a Record)" 30 37
2001 "Now or Never" 23 28 Life
2002 "Slipping Away" 31 29
2003 "I Am" Group Therapy
"Rebel Yell" Non-album single (later re-recorded as a bonus track on No Regrets)
2005 "Always" 37 38 American Apathy
2006 "People Are People"
2009 "Addiction" 34 33 No Regrets
2014 "Selfish" Blood Money Part 1
2016 "Blood Money"
"Hold On"
"1999"
2017 "Thieves" (Ministry cover) Blood Money Part 2
"—" denotes a release that did not chart.

Other appearances[]

As with many industrial metal music stars, Edsel Dope has been involved with the supergroup Pigface. The following are some remixes of the Dope track "Bitch" that have featured on Pigface releases.

  • Easy Listening... – (January 2003)
"Bitch (Mattress mix)"
  • Head – (August 2003)
"Bitch (Defrag's Extraordinary Skipping Glitch mix)" and "Bitch (Passive/Aggressive remix)"
  • Dubhead – (May 2004)
"Bitch (Bitch & Scratch)"
  • Clubhead Nonstopmegamix #1 – (June 2004)
"Bitch (Where's My Bitch edit)"
  • Pigface Presents Crackhead: The DJ? Acucrack Remix Album – (August 2004)
"Bitch (Own Your Own Edsel)"
  • ''8 Bit Head: Complete Remix of Easy Listening + Other Stuff – (October 2004)
"Bitch (Defrag's Extraordinary Skipping Glitch mix)" and "Bitch Dance"

They also appeared on WWF Forceable Entry[15] with the song "No Chance".

Music videos[]

Song Year Album
"Everything Sucks" 1999 Felons and Revolutionaries
"Debonaire (Live)"
"Sick (Live)"
"Now Or Never" 2001 Life
"Falling Away" 2003 Group Therapy
"Bitch"
"I Am"
"Motivation"
"Sing"
"Now Is The Time"
"Paranoia"
"Bring It On"
"Another Day Goes By"
"Today Is The Day"
"Burn"
"Easier"
"Survive" 2005 American Apathy
"6-6-Sick" 2009 No Regrets
"Addiction"
"Selfish" 2014 Blood Money Part 1
"Blood Money" 2016
"Hold On"
"Theives" 2017 Blood Money Part 2

References[]

  1. ^ "Dope Chart History: Billboard 200". Billboard. Eldridge Industries. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
  2. ^ "Dope Chart History: Heatseekers Albums". Billboard. Eldridge Industries. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
  3. ^ "Dope Chart History: Independent Albums". Billboard. Eldridge Industries. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
  4. ^ "Dope Chart History: Hard Rock Albums". Billboard. Eldridge Industries. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
  5. ^ "Dope Chart History: Top Rock Albums". Billboard. Eldridge Industries. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
  6. ^ a b "Billboard Bits: Carl Wilson, Mike Gordon, Dope". September 10, 2003.
  7. ^ "DOPE discography (top albums) and reviews".
  8. ^ "DOPE Release 'Drug Music' Video Teaser; Blood Money Album Due In March".
  9. ^ "Dope's Edsel Dope: "The Industry Has A Tendency To Want To Discount You"".
  10. ^ "Dope (4) - Blood Money Part 1". Discogs. Retrieved 2019-11-21.
  11. ^ "Metal By Numbers 11/16: The charts are the opposite of order".
  12. ^ "DOPE - Live from Moscow Russia" (in Dutch).
  13. ^ "Dope Chart History: Active Rock". Billboard. Eldridge Industries. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
  14. ^ "Dope Chart History: Mainstream Rock Airplay". Billboard. Eldridge Industries. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
  15. ^ "Logosempire". Logos.fotopic.net. Retrieved 2010-11-16.[permanent dead link]
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