Phone Tag

"There's all kinds of experimental shit
we could be doing ... but it doesn't
get me hard. We like rock music."
— Paul Barker


 

Hog Butcher for the World

On Ministry's animal farm,
all the little piggies go 'Splat!'

Story by David Holthouse

"Stormy, husky, brawling/Fierce as a dog with tongue lapping for action/Building, breaking, rebuilding." The words poet Carl Sandburg used to describe Chicago eighty years ago apply today to Ministry frontman Al Jourgensen, the godfather of that city's industrial scene and something of a maniac.

Paul Barker How the dreadlocked ubermensch's chief collaborator Paul Barker has maintained his sanity and kept all his limbs through 15 years of playing straight-man to Jourgensen's on and off-stage shenanigans is anybody's guess.

A few years ago, the vocalist nickanamed "Buck Satan" ignited so many fireworks on their tour bus that the cabin filled with smoke, blinding the driver and forcing the vehicle into a ditch. And on the '92 Lollapalooza tour, Jourgensen was in rare form, swilling Bushmill's whiskey before staggering on stage, bellowing and hauling several animal carcasses behind him. All the time, bassist/programmer Barker was in the background, staying out of range and keeping the show together.

Of course, if there were nothing more than a series of sociopathic outbursts to recommend Ministry, the only people keeping tabs on the band would be the police. For almost 15 years, though, Jourgensen and Barker, along with a shifting group of collaborators, have produced some of the most raucous politically-tinged music of the last two decades.

Coming off the line with Jourgensen's 1983 Euro-synth outing With Sympathy — a recording its creator now scorns as an "abortion" — Ministry quickly shifted gears, cranked up the volume and moved away from the Human League vibe that served as the band's initial muse. While some of the band's work is gratuitous racket ("Psalm 69" off the 1992 album of the same name is a prime example), Ministry also has produced sublime social commentary shot through with guitar as volatile and prickly as a porcupine on fire.

With side-projects like Lard, Pailhead and the Revolting Cocks, Jourgensen and Barker have explored variants of the industrial sound while railing against religious fundamentalism, media manipulation and corporate criminals. They've also sold a lot of records: Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed and the Way to Suck Eggs went platinum. Filth Pig, Ministry's latest and best recording, should do the same. The instruments crash and wail on the new release, rubbing up against each other in a frenzy before settling uneasily into powerful grooves over which Jourgensen and Barker trade distorted vocals. "You got something to say, you better jump in my face," says Jourgensen on "Reload." He's not kidding; the singer sounds ready to scratch his message into your forehead.

Scary Al was evidently too busy blowing spiders off his wall with a shotgun (reportedly one of his all-time fave leisure activies) to join Barker for the following interview from a Ministry tour stop in Atlanta.


Tweak: Filth Pig is about as feral as any Ministry record, but it seems full of actual songs, as opposed to the noise that dominates Psalm 69.


I heard there was a lot of trouble in the studio on this record. Any comment?


Getting a little too easy to churn it out?


Do you ever get into the studio and say "I wish we could try something else, because industrial music isn't letting me express all that I want"?


Maybe you could talk to Sting.


Filth Pig seems packaged as a political statement; the cover shows a young Republican decked out in red white and blue, and you have a bunch of skewed American flags on the insert. What political axe does Ministry have to grind?


William Burroughs said something about how a paranoid individual is someone who's in possession of all the facts and knows what's really going on.


American society might simply be this machine spiraling out of control with nobody actually running the show.


Presumably the Filth Pigs will play a part in this extinction. Can you elaborate on this concept? Is a pig just a dehumanized corporate lackey, or what?


Since you're on your way to Arizona, you may be interested in the current furor over a flag exhibit at the Phoenix Art Museum. Old Glory is draped in a variety of ignominious scenarios, including inside a toilet. A lot of conservatives are livid. Any thoughts on the persistence of this debate regarding artistic freedom?


Who will you be voting for in the fall Presidential election?


Speaking of presidents, in "N.W.O." (a song on Psalm 69 ), you manipulated a loop of George Bush giving a speech on the "New World Order" he took partial credit for orchestrating. What's your take on the idea?


So is Al Jourgensen nuts or what?


Yeah, but there's a picture of Al sipping a cup of puke in Jim Rose's book Freak Like Me... So is Al nuts or what?



Phone Tag


© 1996 Tweak