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Truthless Heroes is not a Christian
album and its songs should not be played on Christian radio stations.
The band exhibits stellar musical talent, but fails to provide a
message through their lyrics and website even compatible with Christianity.
The album's website offers myriad evidences that the band's influences
are at odds with Christianity. Though Project 86 is attempting to
make cultural criticisms, the associated website demonstrates their
lack of Christian discernment in pursuing this end.
Questionable influences aside, we must first direct your attention
to the gravest threat posed by continued support for Project 86.
The album's website, www.truthlessheroes.com,
contains this
semi-pornographic page (explicit content). We understand
that this page is intended as criticism of America's objectification
of sex, but the content is so disturbing that it should not be part
of any Christian's method of critique. Even if this page did not
exist, we believe that Project 86's influences and worldview are
not Christian in nature. The remainder of this article is an effort
to establish that claim.
Therefore, in light of statements made
by their front-man, Andrew Schwab, and design decisions on their
website, we believe that Project 86 has acted in an un-Christian
fashion. These offenses must be redressed. Although they formerly
had a contract with Tooth-and-Nail, a record label commonly considered
Christian, we suggest that Christian radio stations to stop promoting
their songs and for customers to carefully consider a purchase of
their music, treating them as any other secular band. If you, as
a Christian, feel called to reject non-Christian music, we believe
you should exclude Project 86 just as you would Nirvana and Nine
Inch Nails. Additionally, Christian radio stations, purportedly
spreading the gospel of Christ through their music, should carefully
guard their airways and stop playing Project 86 songs.
What
Should Christian Music Be?
As we begin on our evaluation of this group we want to make one
point clear: we like rock music and we love Christian Rock. We are
familiar with the type of anti-beat bigotry lampooned in Audio Adrenaline's
"The Houseplant Song," and want to reassure our readers
that this is not the origin of our complaint. Keith was named for
early Christian rocker Keith Green and has followed artists from
Steve Taylor to Stavesacre. Michael is a skanking, head-banging
punk fan as well. We wanted to like the album for we both want the
Christian Rock genre to continue to flourish
It is a terrible shame and yet a horrible
truth that many bands which are musically brilliant are lyrically
depraved. This is true of many of the great secular rock bands,
and perhaps of some Christian rock bands. Project 86 is one of those
musically great bands where you listen and say, "Wow, these
guys have talent." A case in point, after hearing one of their
new tracks on the radio entitled "Hollow Again," Michael
was so impressed that he ordered Truthless Heroes over the
'net - the very same day. We have listened to them many times since
that day, and our opinion remains the same: Project 86 Rocks. They
rock harder than nearly all of their predecessors in the Christian
Rock scene.
Nevertheless, we think that the music
of Project 86 should not be considered Christian music. This is
because their songs, especially on their newest album, do not bear
any true Christian message. We think it is a fair expectation that
a "Christian" band have at least a veiled Christian message
in their music.
Truthless
Heroes: What is the concept?
The two of us have enjoyed Project 86's music since the release
of their second album, Drawing Black Lines. Although geared
for MTV and laden with some catchy choruses in "Me Against
Me" and "One Armed Man (Play On)," this album failed
to allow Project to duplicate the general market success garnered
by P.O.D. Though Truthless Heroes does take Project to that
next level musically, as discerning Christian music fans we also
examined its lyrical content. Andrew Schwab, the frontman, lyricist,
and vocalist for Project, drew special attention to the lyrics of
Truthless Heroes, by touting it as a "concept album."
Schwab called the work a
thirteen-song story about a character,
ignored, [who] channels the self-loathing into pursuing greatness.
The album takes you through his attempts to gratify himself and
fulfill his deepest needs as a person through fame, fortune, lust...
whatever. (interactive CD interview)
Some Christian reviews of the album,
such as the CCM Magazine, have suggested that the redeeming part
of this work is that "Project 86 suggests hope and grace by
revealing their absence in a world that chooses anesthetics over
consciousness, consumerism over the search for truth." If this
were the agenda advanced by Truthless Heroes, the album would
have worthy aspirations, but the criticisms actually offered do
not line up with Christianity, as the CCM reviewer claims.
The primary problem with this interpretation
is that Project 86 never refers to the "hope and grace"
available through the cross. Even beyond the lyrics, their interactive
CD interview, band website, and album website are uniformly silent
on the subject which should be central to the Christian faith. If
we extend the logic of the CCM review it would seem that anyone
who curses the darkness is Christian. Such a view must be doubted,
for this categorization would include anti-Christian bands like
Rage Against the Machine within the scope of Christian music.
After some extensive research it became
increasingly clear that Project 86 has bought into many popular
counter-cultural critiques and have even been influenced by the
secular philosophy of postmodernism. Truthless Heroes is
much more a piece of counter-cultural criticism than Christian musical
effort.
Project
86's Influences and Agenda: A Closer Look
Andrew Schwab has made the job of analyzing his work easier by promoting
some of his influences in the "behind the scenes" video,
which is included on the enhanced CD. Schwab mentions two authors
and several books: Chris Bachelder's Bear v. Shark and Don
Delliano's White Noise, along with "various works by
Huxley and Orwell." Anyone can find out about these books,
as we did, and will discover that White Noise is considered
a postmodern classic (it has a Norton Critical Edition for this
reason) and Bear v. Shark criticizes the entertainment culture
of America. Schwab makes it clear in his CD interview that these
books were of primary influence in his lyrics: "I try to, at
least with literature, draw social commentary that can be applied
to the music that we write." We were suspicious of the concept
album content when we found that these two postmodern books were
Schwab's primary influences, whereas he failed to mention any Christian
influences.
Our suspicions turned to outright disgust
after a visit to the www.truthlessheroes.com
website. The band put up this site in an effort to further the cause
of the album. In fact, the little "advertisements" on
the album tell you to "go to
truthlessheroes.com." Therefore, this content
should be included as part of the message that Project 86 is spreading
to the world.
The site opens with several small icons,
most of which link to a site where you can buy their album. But
two of the links are much more subversive. The above mentioned critique
of the objectification of women is listed under "fashion."
This site is obscene (arguably pornographic) and should not be contained
on any Christian's website. Personally, we both feel scarred by
the fact that we have seen these images, the very images created
by Project 86.
The other link goes to a page of links
entitled "911
DIG DEEP" that is less graphic, yet contains ideas
of comparable evil. After spending some time searching around we
determined that our computer's IP address may now be registered
in the FBI database due to the clearly subversive sites to which
Project 86 has linked. The ideas promoted are anti-government, anti-war,
anti-media, and anti-consumerism in a way very similar to Rage Against
the Machine. We do not think that the government, media, military
and ad culture are always above reproach, but the methods Project
uses in that criticism are errant.
Governmental Conspiracies
In summation, the "911
DIG DEEP" page is highly anti-government, mounting
numerous unfounded attacks on public leaders such as President Bush,
Vice President Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, John Ashcroft, and
others. Anyone who believes a Christian is called to respect government
officials clearly cannot agree with these sites. A harsh criticism
of the Bush administration is the most prominent anti-government
theme to the links We're not talking about measured criticisms of
his policy choices, or reasoned opinions about government practices;
we are talking about disrespectful, conspiracy-laden criticism.
Many pages about the 9/11 tragedy claim that the U.S. Government
knew about the attack ahead of time, and even profited off of it
by selling stock before the event. One page even claims that the
Israelis were behind the terrorism activity.
A Corroborating News Media
The second assertion, made by many of these Project 86-endorsed
links, is that the big media is the tool of the government, covering
up the "real truth." There are numerous links to "guerrilla
news" agencies, who fight the propaganda they claim is delivered
to us by CNN, Fox News, The New York Times, etc. These sites make
outrageous claims about the news media being one vast conspiracy
to indoctrinate the American population. Several sites claimed that
the US government works with the media-in an unknown conspiracyto
deliver news that will indoctrinate the American people to favor
war. Anyone who has watched CNN or read the New York Times should
be able to discount these websites.
The Dangers of Advertising and
"Consumerism"
Also linked from truthlessheroes.com are several anti-business sites
that ring of Marxist ideology. There are good criticisms of the
consumer mentality of America, but these websites are completely
off the deep end when it comes to economics. One link on the site
advocates such activity as "Buy Nothing Day." Another
site advocates the illegal defacement of billboards, because of
the 'destructive presence' of the ads. This is a form of terrorism.
That site claims, "through the Ad and the intent of the Advertiser
we form our ideas and learn the myths that make us into what we
are as a people." While this may be true to a certain extent,
it does not justify lawlessness.
The Un-just War on Terrorism
Many pages charge that the "Military Industrial Complex"
is driving the current war against terrorism, in essence, claiming
that Bush and the US Government are insincere in pursuing the terrorists
of Al-Queda. Several pages criticize our actions in Afghanistan,
claiming that we slaughtered innocents for no reason at all. The
Project 86 links shift the blame for 9/11 to an outlandish conspiracy
about the government seeking war for the personal profit of their
buddies in the bomb-making industry. Though this critique is absurd,
the way that these sites make their arguments goes even further
to damage any link to Christianity. One website produces "randomly
generated military operations names" such as "Operation
Nuclear-Tipped Jesus." We tried the generator many times, and
frequently came up with blatantly insulting operation names that
defamed the name of Christ. Another site included a picture that
was mildly pornographic, involving 60 nude women posing in a field
to spell 'No War' with their bodies.
How
should Christians respond?
Overall, we find the websites linked on www.truthlessheroes.com
to contain objectionable material, both visual and intellectual,
which have not place within a Christian worldview. The fact that
Truthless Heroes argues against the darkness in our culture does
not make this a Christian critique. In the end, Project 86 does
not offer Christian hope, and their criticisms have more in common
with Rage Against the Machine than C.S. Lewis. As thoughtful Christians,
we find it impossible to defend the new Project 86 album as a Christian
work of art.
To defend the Project 86 album as Christian,
one must do more than claim that the criticisms made by the album
are legitimate. The answer offered must have some contact with the
Christian way of salvation, not merely a bunch of postmodern, relativist,
conspiratorial and angst-filled websites.
The Christian music industry and Christian
music listeners need to be more discerning in their selection of
Christian artists. Christian radio stations should examine the content
of the artists they play, for, as this example proves, residence
on a Christian label like Tooth-and-Nail does not ensure a Christian
worldview. We hope that Project 86 returns to their Christian roots,
but until then, we must act in a way consistent with our beliefs.
Feedback? Please e-mail
us with your response to our review
NEW! A new
detailed analysis of Project 86 addressing the concerns
and feeback from this article.
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