Electric Jesus (Music from and Inspired by the Motion Picture)

Description

Electric Jesus (Music from and Inspired by the Motion Picture) is a multi-artist project, Kickstarter-funded and released on Joyful Noise Recordings in February 2021. (Physical release 6/07/21). Featuring music composed by Daniel Smith of Danielson fame for the American motion picture Electric Jesus, a movie written, directed, and produced by Chris White with Emily Reach White co-producing. The soundtrack includes covers of “Love Comes Down”, a song written by Glenn Kaiser of Resurrection Band fame – originally released on the band’s 1985-album Between Heaven ‘N Hell, and “Makes Me Wanna Sing”, a song written by Michael Sweet of Stryper fame – originally released on the band’s 1985-album Soldiers Under Command.

Electric Jesus is a feature-length rock-and-roll movie set in the world of American Evangelical youth culture, circa 1986. It tells the story of a fictional teenage Christian metal band called 316. It’s the music of 316 that forms the centerpiece of this 21 track release. All of 316’s songs are expertly voiced by actor Wyatt Lenhart, who is also the onscreen frontman of 316. The instrumentation for 316 is provided by guitarist John Montgomery, bassist John Mark Painter of Fleming & John and Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil fame, and drummer Patrick Berkery.

https://www.facebook.com/ejesusfilm

During the mid-1980s heavy metal music was under attack on multiple fronts. Tipper Gore’s Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC) was fighting metal in the halls of congress, while Christian evangelists like Bob Larson waged war on the music from the pulpit. Their messaging was effective, convincing some parents that metal music would turn their children into sex-crazed, suicidal satanists. Metal records were forbidden in households across the United States, creating space for the rise of a new market within the music industry. It was in the midst of this culture war that Christian metal emerged in American popular culture.

The Los Angeles-based band Stryper became the face of Christian metal when their 1986 album To Hell with the Devil went platinum, earning the band Grammy nominations, and regular rotation on MTV. Stryper’s unprecedented success inspired a generation of young Christian metalheads.

Electric Jesus tells the story of one of those groups, a fictional teenage Christian metal band called 316. Set in 1986, the film offers an affectionate look at ’80s Christian youth culture as it documents 316’s journey from playing bible camp talent shows and church lock-ins, to performing at Christian music festivals and hardcore metal nightclubs.

Any decent fictional rock biopic requires a convincing soundtrack, and Electric Jesus’ director Chris White found the perfect collaborator in Daniel Smith. Smith is a prolific figure in indie rock, having worked under the Danielson moniker (and its variations – Danielson Famile, Brother Danielson) over the past two decades. Smith is known for his highly unique vocal style, which is characterized by the frequent use of a screeching falsetto. Serendipitously, this sound overlaps perfectly with the screaming falsetto vocals of hair metal.

Smith also brings a nuanced sensitivity to the film’s source material. His father is a prominent Christian music songwriter, and Smith’s own work carries a deeply spiritual perspective. But Smith is quick to draw a line between the mystic spirituality that informs his songwriting, and the Christian music industry. “My personal journey is a spiritual one, a mystical one, where I’m chasing after something I believe exists in the unseen world. But I’ve always said we’re not a Christian band. A lot of times it’s at the heart of my creative process, but it’s certainly not anything I’m selling,” Smith shared.

Regardless of these distinctions, Smith’s experience brings a credible authenticity to the project. While the lyrics were handled by director Chris White, Smith composed, or co-composed all of 316’s original music — and the results are spot-on.

While composing for Electric Jesus, Smith immersed himself in the hair metal music of his youth, binge-listening to a steady rotation of bands like Ratt, Twisted Sister, and Mötley Crüe. Electric Jesus captures the hair metal sound in all its melodramatic excess, from the overwrought power ballads, to the histrionic guitar pyrotechnics.

In addition to the music of 316, the Electric Jesus soundtrack features new material from Smith’s Danielson projects — featuring four new proper Danielson songs (including the fantastic sunshine pop of Danielson’s Beach Boys-influenced «You Can Fly»), plus a track from Steve Taylor & the Danielson Foil, and instrumental score by Smith’s “Familyre Friends”. The soundtrack also contains music Smith composed for 316’s black metal rivals Satan’s Clutch, and Bloody Mass.

But it’s the music of 316 that forms the centerpiece of this 21 track release. All of 316’s songs are expertly voiced by actor Wyatt Lenhart, who is also the onscreen frontman of 316. The instrumentation for 316 is provided by guitarist John Montgomery, bassist John Mark Painter, and drummer Patrick Berkery. The chemistry of this ensemble is best experienced on the album’s lead single, 316’s hilariously bombastic «Commando For Christ» — one of the most brilliant send-ups of metal music since This Is Spinal Tap. The song’s ridiculous chorus will likely be stuck in your head for the next few days. “Let’s all go commando for christ!”

Depending on your prior relationship to Christian hair metal, this music might provoke nostalgia, curiosity, or laughter. The magic of what Smith and his crew have done here is to create a set of music that speaks to all of these responses. They clearly understand the inherent absurdities of hair metal, while also conveying a sincere affinity for the style.

Christian metal has certainly faced its share of derision over the years, providing an easy target for mockery. But Electric Jesus has created an opportunity to take a second look at the genre, and the culture that produced it. Regardless of your opinion on this once controversial genre of Christian music, there’s no question that this music wielded a significant influence during its prime, offering many future headbangers their first taste of metal. The Electric Jesus soundtrack celebrates this odd subculture of American music in all its holy glory, and ridiculousness.

– Kyle Long

Christian albums are sometimes inspiring, sometimes comforting, sometimes challenging. But how many are fun? Or even funny? “Electric Jesus,” an indie film set in the mid-1980s, affectionately follows the fortunes and misfortunes of “316,” a young Christian rock band which sets the lofty-for-them goal of being the opening act at a concert for Stryper, the Christian glam metal band which saw the most real-life crossover success. The makers of the film and soundtrack show ample familiarity with the 80s Christian rock scene, when bands like Barren Cross, Whitecross, and Bloodgood brought roaring guitars and towering hair to clubs and church basements alike. Lyrics were simple but sincere, amps were overdriven, and many heads were banged.

The soundtrack album gathers songs from the film and similar material from the likes of Daniel Smith, Steve Taylor, and John Mark Painter, who know that scene inside and out. It’s a big album in all senses – 21 tracks, 67 minutes of retro-80. It wouldn’t work unless the songs hit that balance between spoof and “I would actually listen to this song.” Five tracks are credited to the band 316; other songs represent allied and rival bands in a variety of styles. We get the crossover power ballad «Girl (I Love Jesus Too)». We get the early-70s Adult Contemporary sound of «You Can Fly». Daniel Smith grew up in that scene and knows it well, and his impersonation is dead-on. We get the hilarious «We Just», with synths pads like Berlin’s «Take My Breath Away» accompanying lyrics comprising the two words most commonly repeated in the group prayers of nervous youth group members. We get «Ecstatic Delight» from Steve Taylor and the Danielson Foil, worth the admission price all by itself, and three tracks from Danielson. Five instrumental tracks are credited to Smith’s “Familyre Friends.” Plus a surprising new country-rock song from the ever-wonderful, ever-elusive Fleming and John. For bonus goodness, the album includes straight-up covers of Stryper’s «Makes Me Wanna Sing» and Rez Band’s «Love Comes Down». So fasten your seatbelt for a visit to a time when big hair and big gospel proclamations walked hand in gloved hand. [Robert Berman, Worship Musician Magazine, March 2021]

> Apple Music (https://music.apple.com/us/album/electric-jesus-music-from-and-inspired-by-the/1541753747)

Album tracklist:

01. 316 – Commando For Christ – 4:15
02. Danielson – You Can Fly – 3:39
03. Familyre Friends – Vacation Bible Bop – 2:40
04. Bloody Mass – Love – 2:36
05. Danielson – Passing Through the Wall of Flame – 2:54
06. 316 – Barabbas – 3:59
07. Danielson – Heavenly Metal – 3:43
08. Familyre Friends – Do the Barabbas! – 1:45
09. Soul Exhumation – Beat You Off – 3:15
10. Familyre Friends – Arcade Reigns – 0:31
11. 316 – Love Comes Down – 3:09
12. 316 – Girl (I Love Jesus Too) – 4:20
13. 316 & Sarah Wember – This World Is Not My Home – 2:51
14. Familyre Friends – Have You Ever Had a Girlfriend? – 2:49
15. Satan’s Clutch – All Hail Hell – 4:00
16. Joy Explosion – We Just – 2:20
17. Steve Taylor & the Danielson Foil & Danielson – Ecstatic Delight – 4:19
18. Danielson – Come And Save Me – 3:29
19. 316 – Makes Me Wanna Sing – 3:04
20. Familyre Friends – We All Went Commando – 3:05
21. Fleming & John – Don’t Toss Us Away – 3:53

Note: Released June 2021 on Limited Edition 12-inch vinyl double LP housed in a Gatefold Sleeve, limited to 316 copies pressed on Clear vinyl with Pink, Brown, & Violet splatter (includes signed promo photo). Also issued on black vinyl.


Various Artists - Electric Jesus (Music from and Inspired by the Motion Picture) (Joyful Noise Recordings 2021) Limited Edition 2LP on on Clear Vinyl with Pink, Brown, and Violet Splatter


316 promo image, from the 2021 Electric Jesus Motion Picture



ELECTRIC JESUS Original Motion Picture Soundtrack PROMO






Electric Jesus movie poster


Electric Jesus (2021) | Official Trailer.

STARRING Brian Baumgartner, Judd Nelson, Andrew Eakle, Shannon Hutchinson, Wyatt Lenhart, Shawn Parsons. Directed by Chris White.




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