Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed & The Way to Suck Eggs

Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed & The Way to Suck Eggs

by Ministry
Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed & The Way to Suck Eggs

Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed & The Way to Suck Eggs

by Ministry

CD

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Overview

Easily one of the most anticipated albums from that year, especially after Nine Inch Nails had helped bring industrial metal to the mainstream with the success of the overtly Ministry-worshipping Pretty Hate Machine, Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed & the Way to Suck Eggs represented the high point of Alain Jourgensen and Paul Barker's incarnation as loud-as-hell electro-thrashers. The pump had been primed the previous year with the fierce "Jesus Built My Hot Rod," featuring Gibby Haynes from Butthole Surfers on vocals ranting over a galloping molten explosion of beats and feedback. Presented in a slightly edited version here, it's still the high point of the album, while a reworked version of its B-side, "TV Song" (here called "TV II" and with Jourgensen on vocals instead of Chris Connelly), also makes for some good noise. Throughout, however, Ministry as a unit shows their facility for straightforward, brutal noise crossed with clinical, on-the-money arrangements, whether it's the collage of crowd-riot samples bubbling throughout "N.W.O." or the chantings of Christian praise on the title track. As a role model for any number of nu-metallers down the road, Psalm 69 is often terribly underrated, but where Ministry succeeds while so many failed easily has to do with sheer vitriol only slightly tempered by the overwhelming hugeness of the songs. Consider the massive impact of the drums on "Just One Fix" as they lead into tightly wound, downward-spiral riffing or the hyper-speed clatter of "Hero" and "Corrosion." Jourgensen's rasped lyrical visions of a corrupt America, drug addiction, mindless patriotism, and religious hypocrisy aren't per se revelatory, but anyone who lived through the Bush years -- either father or son -- might find plenty to sympathize with. Secret highlight: "Scarecrow," which takes the massive slow pound of Led Zeppelin's "When the Levee Breaks" and takes it to a strung-out, harrowing new location. ~ Ned Raggett

Product Details

Release Date: 07/13/1992
Label: Sire / Warner Bros.
UPC: 0075992672726
Rank: 5657

Tracks

  1. N.W.O.
  2. Just One Fix
  3. TV II
  4. Hero
  5. Jesus Built My Hotrod
  6. Scare Crow
  7. Psalm 69
  8. Corrosion
  9. Grace

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Ministry   Primary Artist
Gibby Haynes   Guest Artist,Vocals
Bill Rieflin   Drums
Michael Balch   Keyboards
Paul Barker   Bass,Vocals
Louis Svitek   Guitar
Al Jourgensen   Guitar,Vocals,Keyboards,Vox Organ
Mike Scaccia   Guitar
M. Bolch   Keyboards

Technical Credits

P. Manno   Engineer
H. Pan   Producer
J.C. Newell   Engineer
Hypo Luxa   Producer
Bill Rieflin   Composer
Howie Beno   Programming
Ministry   Composer
Michael Balch   Composer
Hermes Pan   Producer
Paul Barker   Composer,Programming
Chris Connelly   Composer
Al Jourgensen   Composer,Producer
Gibby Haynes   Composer
Paul Manno   Engineer
Paul Elledge   Design,Artwork
Jeff Newell   Engineer
M. Bolch   Programming
Tom Baker   Mastering
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