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    Ministry is an American metal band of the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s fronted by Al Jourgensen.


        Ministry (band)
                Early Years
                The Land of Rape and Honey
                The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste
                Side Projects
                Psalm 69
                Filth Pig
                Dark Side of the Spoon
                Since 2000
            Discography
                Studio albums
                Compilations/Remix Albums
                Live albums
                Certifications
                Singles
                Charting
                Box sets
                Videos
                Tribute albums
                Current
                Former
            Side projects and crossovers
    NameMinistry
    ImgMinistry_(band).jpg
    Backgroundgroup_or_band
    OriginChicago, Illinois, United States

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    Early Years
    Al Jourgensen began Ministry in Chicago, Illinois in 1981. His first band prior to Ministry was Special Affect with Groovie Mann (of My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult). The original line-up of Ministry consisted mainly of Jourgensen (vocals and keyboards) and Stephen George (drums), and Ministry's original sound was essentially New Wave synth-pop that was more melodic than the aggressive music for which Jourgensen would become known. In the incarnation of Jourgensen/George, Ministry created four 12" singles on Wax Trax! Records through 1984 (anthologized on Twelve Inch Singles). Their first LP, With Sympathy, was issued on Arista Records in 1983, and sold slowly. The music in With Sympathy, and the various singles that Arista issued in association with it, was melodic pop; critic Dean Carlson describes the album as "Human League's surly little brother."* Jourgensen has always expressed disappointment with Ministry's music during those early years, reportedly referring to With Sympathy as an "abortion of an album." According to him, after signing the record contract, all artistic control of Ministry was "handed" over to other writers and producers. Some of his preferred recordings from that era were collected into the CD Early Trax (Rykodisc Records, 2004).

    By the mid-1980s, Jourgensen parted ways with George and the record-company, continuing the direction and sound of Ministry of pre-Arista period. Signing to Sire, Jourgensen performed mostly solo for Ministry's next LP, Twitch (1986), which sold well, but was still considered to be "underground". The music was danceable electronic music, but wasn't pop music, and the sound was harsher and more aggressive than what Ministry had recorded before. This album was quintessential in asserting industrial music's importance in new-wave dance clubs. This album would also prove to be a pivotal move in the course of Ministry. Much of the new sound was created with the use of digital sampling and the input of producer Adrian Sherwood.

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    The Land of Rape and Honey
    After Twitch, Jourgensen made the most significant change in Ministry's history when he became re-enchanted with the instrument he had taken up years earlier: the electric guitar. This new sound in Ministry's music was almost certainly influenced by Chicago's Big Black, who were active from 1982 to 1988 and were perhaps the first rock group to exploit the potent combination of live drum machines and loud, slashing guitars. Jourgensen also brought bass guitarist Paul Barker of the Seattle band the Blackouts into the Ministry camp; Barker would remain Jourgensen's bandmate through what are generally considered Ministry's golden years. With the addition of The Blackouts drummer William Rieflin, Ministry recorded The Land of Rape and Honey (1988). The LP continued their success in the underground music scene and is now considered a classic and one of the most important albums in the subgenre of industrial metal. The Land of Rape and Honey is arguably the best example of Ministry's sound, making use of synthesizers, keyboards, EBM sequences, tapes, jackhammering drum machines, obscure samples, dialogue excerpted from movies, unconventional electronic processing, and, in parts, heavy distorted electric guitar and bass. The album was supported by a tour in 1988, the music videos for Stigmata (remix) (issued as a single) and the title song of the album. Stigmata was also used in a key scene in Richard Stanley's 1990 film Hardware, although the band shown apparently performing the song was actually Gwar.

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    The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste
    The follow-up, The Mind Is a Terrible Thing to Taste was just as acclaimed, if not more, than The Land of Rape and Honey. Both albums included similar tight, thick soundscapes, but The Mind Is a Terrible Thing to Taste was slightly harder with Jourgensen's heavy metal-influenced guitar more emphasized. The Mind Is a Terrible Thing to Taste was supported by a tour through 1990 and by the singles Burning Inside (for which a video was made) and So What (a composition inspired by the movie The Violent Years).

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    Side Projects
    Throughout the late 1980s Jourgensen and Barker expanded their ideas beyond Ministry into a seemingly endless parade of side projects and collaborations. Many of these bore Ministry's signature sound and the duo's "Hypo Luxa/Hermes Pan" production imprint. (These side-projects were also responsible for the delayed release of Ministry's next album.) Foremost of these was Ministry's alter ego, the Revolting Cocks. "RevCo," as it was fondly referred to, was essentially the same band plus Belgian vocalist Luc Van Acker & Richard 23 of Front 242. Jourgensen and Barker also formed Lard with Dead Kennedys frontman Jello Biafra, Acid Horse with Cabaret Voltaire, 1000 Homo DJs with Nine Inch Nails' Trent Reznor, PTP with Chris Connelly and Pailhead with Ian MacKaye of Minor Threat and Fugazi. Barker released his own material as Lead Into Gold and Jourgensen produced and played electric guitar on Skinny Puppy's Rabies LP. Ministry would also inspire the industrial supergroups of the 1990s such as Pigface and KMFDM. The rarest recordings from these projects were later collected on the CD Side Trax (Rykodisc Records, 2004).

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    Psalm 69
    Ministry broke into the mainstream in 1991 with "Jesus Built My Hotrod" (co-authored by Gibby Haynes of the Butthole Surfers and Michael Balch). The music video was a hit on MTV, and the band scored second billing on the Lollapalooza tour. As the single would have indicated, the sound of the following LP, Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed and the Way to Suck Eggs (1992), was the heaviest and harshest Ministry had put to record at that point, the focal point of the sound being Jourgensen's and new members Mike Scaccia's and Louis Svitek's electric guitars. ΚΕΦΑΛΗΞΘ, which is printed on the record, is the Greek word for "head" followed by 69 in Greek numerals. The title was borrowed from Aleister Crowley's work: The Book of Lies (Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed and the Way to Suck Eggs). Psalm 69 became Ministry's biggest hit, including in addition to "Jesus Built My Hotrod" the singles "N.W.O." (a protest of the Persian Gulf War and attack directed at then-Pres. George H.W. Bush) and "Just One Fix" (a collaboration with poet/novelist William S. Burroughs).

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    Filth Pig

    In spite of their growing success, Ministry was nearly derailed by a series of arrests and drug problems. The band didn't issue their next album, Filth Pig, until 1996. For Filth Pig, Ministry stripped all synthesizers and most samples from their style and made the music almost entirely with ultra-noisey guitars and real drums. The songs were played mostly at slower tempos than the very fast ones that were used for the compositions on their previous three LPs. Filth Pig was supported with the singles/videos Reload, The Fall, Lay Lady Lay (an unusual and unexpected cover of Bob Dylan's old country-tinged hit) and Brick Windows and with a tour in 1996 (the live performances were later anthologized on the Sphinctour album and DVD in 2002), but was unenthusiastically received and was thought by some to be a lazy effort. Jourgensen would later consider Filth Pig one of Ministry's best records, even though the sessions were remembered as a time marred by his habitual use of heroin (including one event resulting in an arrest of possession of heroin). He commented in RIP Magazine saying that record companies are "enablers," because they won't pay him in crack, they make him go buy it on the street. The album has been considered by Jourgensen to be his response to fan expectations of where Ministry's sound was heading.

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    Dark Side of the Spoon
    The members of Ministry experienced greater devastation when former guitarist William Tucker committed suicide in 1999 by cutting his own throat. Ministry then recorded their final studio album for Warner Brothers, entitled Dark Side of the Spoon (1999), which they dedicated to Tucker. For Dark Side of the Spoon, Ministry tried to diversify their sound by adding some melodic and synthetic touches, similar to the Jourgensen/George sound, to their usual electro-metal sound, but the album wasn't well received. To this day, it is the one album Jourgensen barely remembers recording due to his overwhelming drug addictions. "It felt like I was operating on Dealer Standard Time," he later confided. However, the single "Bad Blood" appeared on the soundtrack album of The Matrix and was nominated for a 2000 Grammy award. The band would record another song, What About Us? for the Steven Spielberg film AI: Artificial Intelligence and make a cameo appearance in the film. Al later stated that the band's appearance in the movie saved the band from breaking up.

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    Since 2000
    Parting with their longtime record imprint, Warner Brothers issued the collection Greatest Fits in 2001. During 2000-2002, record-company (Warner) disputes resulted in the planned albums Live Psalm 69, Sphinctour and ClittourUS on Ipecac Recordings from being cancelled (although its contents had been compiled), resulting instead in Sphinctour appearing on Sanctuary Records.

    Around 2001, Jourgensen almost lost an arm when he was bitten by a venomous spider. Accord to Jourgensen, the realization that he could've lost his livelihood caused him to kick his heroin addiction and focus on music once again. Jourgensen and Barker focused on developing songs for a new record during 2001 and 2002, with the band issuing Animositisomina on Sanctuary Records in 2003. The sound was strongly heavy metal laden with voice effects, and matched the ferocity (if not upped the ante, with the song "Animosity") of Psalm 69 (though it featured an almost-pop cover of Magazine's "The Light Pours out of Me").

    Barker left the Ministry camp in 2003 due to dissatisfaction with the direction of his life. He stated that the trigger was his father dying while the band was wrapping up a summer tour in Europe, and also stated in early 2004 that his family life was his main focus at that particular time. Jourgensen then freely continued Ministry with Scaccia and a roundtable of fellow musicians.

    For Ministry's next album, Jourgensen remade "N.W.O." as "No 'W'," turning the composition into an attack on US President George W. Bush; an alternate version of the track was placed on the multi-performer compilation Rock Against Bush, Vol. 1. The follow-up LP, Houses of the Molé (2004), contained the most explicitly political lyrics Jourgensen had yet to author, with songs in Ministry's classic punky electro-metallic sound played messier, more crudely and more freely than ever before. For Ministry's Evil Doer Tour in 2004, Jourgensen teamed up with PunkVoter and Music For America (MFA) to encourage more youth to register to vote in the upcoming national election. The use of the word molé in the title is quite significant; molé is a fine Mexican sauce made from chocolate. Jourgensen chose the word because the delicacy is nearly black and resembles oil, a mainstay of the economy in Texas, George W. Bush's home state. The title was also said to inspired by their surroundings in El Paso, Texas, where they recorded the album.

    The band's 2006 album Rio Grande Blood continued in much the same vein, featuring many Bush samples and accusing the George W. Bush administration of complicity in the 9/11 attacks on "Lieslieslies."

    In May 2006, Jourgensen told Billboard.com that the next Ministry album - The Last Sucker - would be the band's swansong:

    "...it's also about this corrupt administration. That seems to be my muse; everyone seems to think I write real shitty music when a Democrat's in office. So we'll do that one, and then me and George Bush go riding off hand-in-hand, into the sunset." *

    Continuing the frequent lineup changes, Ministry's current MasturbaTOUR featuring Paul Raven from Killing Joke, Tommy Victor from Prong, and drummer Joey Jordison of Slipknot.

    In 2004, Jourgensen started his own label, "13th Planet Records." Jourgensen stated that he was planning to reissue the entire Ministry discography on his new record label.
    See also: Revolting Cocks

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    Discography


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    Studio albums


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    Compilations/Remix Albums

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    Live albums

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    Certifications


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    Singles
      "I'm Falling" / "Cold Life" (1981)
      "Work for Love" (1982)
      "I Wanted to Tell Her" (1983)
      "Revenge (You Did It Again)" (1983)
      "The Nature of Love" (1985)
      "Halloween" (remix) / "Nature of Outtakes" (1985)
      "Over the Shoulder" (1985)
      "Burning Inside" (1989)
      "So What" (1989)
      "Jesus Built My Hotrod" (1991)
      "Just One Fix" (1992)
      "Lay Lady Lay" (1996)
      "Reload" (1996)
      "Filth Pig" (1996)
      "Brick Windows" (1996)
      "Bad Blood" (1999)
      "Supermaniac Soul" (1999)
      "Animosity" (2003)
      "No W" (2004)
      "The Great Satan Remix" (2006)
      "Lieslieslies" (2006)

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    Charting



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    Box sets
      Just Another Fix (1995)
      3 for One Box (2000)

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    Videos
      Jesus Built My Hotrod (1991)
      Tapes of Wrath (2000)
      What About Us? - Promo (2001)

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    Tribute albums
      Devilswork: Tribute to Ministry (Metal)

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    Current

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    Former
      Stephen George (drums, 1981-1985; tours from 1981-1984)
      Lamont Welton (bass; 1981)
      Marty Sorenson (bass; 1981-1982)
      John Davis (keyboards; 1981-1983)
      Robert Roberts (keyboards; live, 1981-1983)
      Brad Hallen (bass, 1982-1986; live, 1984)
      Mark Pothier (keyboards; live, 1983)
      Patty Jourgensen (keyboards, voices; 1983-1986)
      Doug Chamberlin (keyboards, backing vocals: Oct. 1983-Oct. 1984)
      Paul Barker (bass, keyboards, programming, voices; 1986-Aug. 2003)
      Roland Barker (keyboards, saxophone; tours of 1986 and 1992-1993)
      Terry Roberts (guitar; tour in 1990)
      William Tucker (guitar; tour in 1990)
      Michael Balch (keyboards, programming; 1991-1993)
      Duane Buford (keyboards, programming; 1996-2004, tours of 1994-2004)
      Rey Washam (drums/percussion, programming; 1995-1999, 2003-2004)
      Adam Grossman (guitar; 2003)
      Tia Sprocket (drums; live from Feb. 2003-Apr. 2003)
      Mark Baker (drums; 2003-)
      Kol Marshall (keyboards; 2003-Mar. 2004)
      Max Brody (drums/percussion, programming, saxophone; 2001-2004)
      Darrell James (keyboards; tours in 2003 and 2004)
      Eddy Garcia (bass; Sep. 2004-Dec. 2004)
      Bryan Kehoe (guitar; May 2004-Sep. 2004)
      Rick Valles (guitar; Sep. 2004-Dec. 2004)

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    Side projects and crossovers
     
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