Ministry

Bio

After enduring a year like 2020, no one could have possibly expected Al Jourgensen to  stay silent on the maelstrom of the past 12 months. As the mastermind behind pioneering  industrial outfit Ministry, Jourgensen has spent the last four decades using music as a  megaphone to rally listeners to the fight for equal rights, restoring American liberties,  exposing exploitation and putting crooked politicians in their rightful place—set to a  background of aggressive riffs, searing vocals and manipulated sounds to drive it home.  

As Jourgensen watched the chaos that befell the world during the height of a global  pandemic and the tensions rising from one of the most important elections in American  history, he seized on the opportunity to write, spending quarantine holed up in his self built home studio—Scheisse Dog Studio— along with engineer Michael Rozon and  girlfriend Liz Walton to create Ministry’s latest masterpiece, Moral Hygiene (out  October 1 on Nuclear Blast Records). Anchored by last year’s leadoff track “Alert  Level”—which asks listeners to internalize the question “How concerned are you?”—the  10 songs on this upcoming 15th studio album cover the breadth of the current dilemmas  facing humanity, while ruminating on the sizable impact of COVID-19, the inevitable  effects of climate change, consequences of misinformed conspiracies and the stakes in the fight for racial equality. And most importantly doing so with the lens of what we as a  society are going to do about it all. 

“The one good thing about taking a year off from any social activity is that you really get  to sit back and get an overview of things as opposed to being caught up in the moment,”  says Jourgensen, “and what became inevitably clear is that the times are changing and  this past year has been a wake up call—and that’s a very good thing. Because society as  we have known it the past few decades has needed to change,” he continues. “Ever since  Reagan and the girth of Wall Street, we have become too close to the belief that greed is  good. Society has really taken a dark turn and now we are bearing the fruit of that that  misdirection driven by the idea that it’s all about me and not other people and to take care  of yourself and fuck everything else. We now more than ever need moral hygiene. It’s  what we have to return to in order to function as the human species on this planet.” 

Moral Hygiene comes on the heels of Ministry’s acclaimed 2018 album AmeriKKKant (hailed by Loudwire as Jourgensen’s own “state of the union” address) that was written as  a reaction to Donald J. Trump being elected president—though Jourgensen says this new  album is more informational and reflective in tone. “With AmeriKKKant I was in shock  that Trump won. I didn’t know what to do, but I knew I had to do something. Because I  believe if you are a musician or an artist you should be expressing what’s going on  around you through your art. It’s going to happen whether you do it consciously or  unconsciously. Moral Hygiene however has progressed even further into a cautionary  tale of what will happen if we don’t act. There’s less rage, but there’s more reflection and  I bring in some guests to help cement that narrative.”

In addition to recruiting long-time cohort Jello Biafra (Jourgensen’s partner in the side  project Lard) for the quirky earworm “Sabotage Is Sex,” other guest appearances  include guitarist Billy Morrison (Billy Idol/Royal Machines) on a rendition of The  Stooges hit “Search & Destroy.” 

There’s also the riotous track “Good Trouble,” inspired by the message of activism and  social justice in John Lewis’ posthumously published essay, released by New York  Times after the Congressman’s passing last July. 

“I remember watching the coverage of his death and the next day seeing this entire letter  from him come out and thinking not only is John Lewis a Civil Rights icon but he was so  astute to think of how that legacy could fit into the progress of the future,”  says Jourgensen. “That letter was so heartfelt and his words were so much aligned with  my own ideals I just immediately knew I wanted to dedicate a song to him. That track  really is the moral backbone of this album.” 

Another standout track is “Believe Me,” featuring a throwback vocal style from Jourgensen that harkens back to his singing on Twitch and cult classic “(Every Day Is)  Halloween.” The song came out of a jam session with Morrison, Cesar Soto and  sampling from Liz Walton, and reminded Jourgensen of his formative days at Chicago  Trax Studios where communal ideas were constantly informing early Ministry records.  “’Believe Me’ had such an old school vibe I wanted to bring back old school vocals.  …It’s funny how things come back to you,” says Jourgensen, also reflecting on Ministry turning 40 in 2021.  

Though there have been other side projects over the years including Revolting Cocks and Surgical Meth Machine, Ministry remains Jourgensen’s lifetime passion project,  and was first established in Chicago in 1981 through a relationship with legendary Wax  Trax! Records. In its earliest days, Ministry was identifiable by a synth-pop style in line  with the new sounds and technology that were being developed in the ‘80s, no moreso  than on the infamous LP With Sympathy released by Arista Records in 1983. Yet as time  progressed, so did Ministry, quickly developing a harsher and more stylized sound that  found the band and Jourgensen heralded as the godfathers of industrial music amidst the  release of seminal albums Twitch (1986), The Land of Rape and Honey (1988), and The  Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste (1989) that became cultural cornerstones. With  Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed and The Way to Suck Eggs (1992), Ministry hit an all  time high in the mainstream and received its first of six lifetime Grammy nominations.  Eight more albums would follow before an indefinite break in 2013, only to be unearthed  again in 2018 with AmeriKKKant

With the release of Moral Hygiene, Jourgensen is more positive than before. “This may  sound crazy but I’m more hopeful about 2021 than I have been in two decades at least,”  he says. “Because I do see things changing; people are starting to see through all the  bullshit and want to get back to actual decorum in society. We could just treat each other  nicely and be treated nicely in return. I never thought Ministry would be in the position of preaching traditional values, but this is the rebellion now.”

Related Shows