Jesus Built My Hotrod

"Jesus Built My Hotrod"
Single by Ministry
from the album Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed and the Way to Suck Eggs
Released November 7, 1991
Format CD single
Recorded 1991
Genre Industrial metal, speed metal, alternative metal[1]
Length 15:12
Label Sire
Warner Bros.
Writer(s) Al Jourgensen
Paul Barker
M Balch
Gibby Haynes
Bill Rieflin
Producer(s) Hypo Luxa
Hermes Pan
Ministry singles chronology
"So What"
(1990)
"Jesus Built My Hotrod"
(1991)
"N.W.O."
(1992)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]

"Jesus Built My Hotrod" is a 1991 single by Ministry. The track features a driving beat and speed metal guitar work which backs Butthole Surfers' singer Gibby Haynes' gonzo vocal stylings. It is notable for its polyrhythmic structure with the guitar riff in 5/4 and the drums in 4/4. According to Al Jourgensen's autobiography the single sold over 1.5 million copies worldwide.[3]

Composition

The song "Jesus Built My Hotrod" features guest vocals by Gibby Haynes from the Butthole Surfers.[4] Jourgensen explained the process of collaborating with Haynes during the recording process:

Gibby came down completely drunk off his ass to the studio we're at in Chicago. He couldn't even sit on a stool, let alone sing. I mean, he was wasted. He fell off the stool about ten times during the recording of that vocal. He made no sense and it was just gibberish. So I spent two weeks editing tape of what he did.[5]

Some of the vocal samples are from movies, including Brad Dourif in Wise Blood, and Dennis Hopper in Blue Velvet.

Release and reception

The song was released November 7, 1991, a little more than half a year before it appeared on Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed and the Way to Suck Eggs. MuchMusic and MTV championed the accompanying video (which featured, among others, various footage of vintage NASCAR and drag racing events) and it enjoyed repetitive plays on both stations. The photo that adorns the cover of the single depicts a 1970 Chrysler 440 Six Pack V8 engine (equipped with 3 2-barrel carburetors). At one point in the video, a 1970 Plymouth GTX, equipped with the 440 Six Barrel, is shown driving down the street, as the "Air Grabber" hood scoop opens.

The song reached number 19 on the U.S. Modern Rock Tracks chart,[6] was number eight on ARIA's alternative singles for 1992 and was number 3 in John Peel's Festive Fifty for 1992.[7]

Appearances in other media

The song is available for download in the Rock Band series of games.

A lyric from the song ("Ding a ding dang my dang a long ling long") was used (without spaces) as a cheat code in the video game Sleepwalker.

The song was featured in the 2014 Ubisoft video game, Watch Dogs, both as a song available in game, and as a backdrop for a set piece during the game's storyline; one reviewer called it a "fantastic moment".[8]

Track listing

No. TitleCredit Length
1. "Jesus Built My Hotrod" (Redline/Whiteline Version)Jourgensen, Rieflin, Balch, Haynes 8:15
2. "Jesus Built My Hotrod" (Short, Pusillanimous, So-They-Can-Fit-More-Commercials-On-The-Radio Edit)  3:45
3. "TV Song"  Barker, Rieflin, Scaccia, Connelly 3:12

Personnel

Ministry

Additional personnel

References

  1. Ramirez, AJ (August 3, 2011). "The 10 Best Alternative Metal Singles of the 1990s". PopMatters. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
  2. John Book. "Ministry — Jesus Built My Hotrod". Allmusic.
  3. Al Jourgensen, Jon Wiederhorn (2013). Ministry: The Lost Gospels According to Al Jourgensen. Da Capo Press. While we were “working,” Sire pressed “Jesus Built My Hotrod” into a maxi-single, and the radio department started pimping the song to all the college and commercial radio stations across the country. The thing went supernova. They sold 1.5 million copies of the single alone—to everyone’s surprise.
  4. Mark Rowland (August 18, 2004). "Gibby Haynes : Interview". Pennyblackmusic. Pennyblackmusic. Retrieved June 16, 2013.
  5. Dan MacIntosh (2012-02-18). "Al Jourgensen of Ministry". Songfacts. Retrieved 2016-09-08.
  6. "Ministry charts - Alternative Songs". Billboard. Retrieved November 11, 2013.
  7. http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/johnpeel/festive50s/1990s/1992/
  8. http://www.gamerassaultweekly.com/2014/06/watch-dogs-review/

External links

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