Steve Taylor | |
---|---|
Born | Roland Stephen Taylor December 9, 1957 Brawley, California, U.S. |
Nationality | American |
Education | Biola University University of Colorado Boulder |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1980–present |
Spouse | Debbie L. Taylor (m. 1985) |
Children | 1 |
Musical career | |
Genres | |
Years active | 1982–present |
Labels | |
Academic work | |
Institutions | Lipscomb University |
Roland Stephen Taylor (born December 9, 1957) is an American singer, songwriter, record producer, music executive, film maker, assistant professor, and actor. A figure in what has come to be known as Christian alternative rock, Taylor enjoyed a successful solo career during the 1980s, and also served in the short-lived group Chagall Guevara. In contrast to many Christian musical artists, his songs have often taken aim at Christian hypocrisy or "error" with the use of satirical, sardonic lyrics. In 1997, he founded the record label Squint Entertainment, which fueled the careers of artists such as Sixpence None the Richer, Chevelle, and Burlap to Cashmere. Despite this success, Taylor was ousted from the label by its parent, Word Entertainment, in 2001. He has produced and written for numerous musical acts, one of the most consistent being Newsboys. As a film-maker, Taylor co-wrote, directed, and produced the feature films Down Under the Big Top , The Second Chance , and Blue Like Jazz . After a decade and a half of hiatus, Taylor returned to performing music in 2010 as the front-man for Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil, a supergroup he founded with Peter Furler, Jimmy Abegg, and John Mark Painter. Along with a university residency and continued filmmaking, Taylor would resume work on unfinished Chagall Guevara material into the 2020s.
Taylor, the eldest of three children, was born in Brawley, California. Taylor's father, Roland Taylor, was a Baptist minister. When Taylor was six years old, the family relocated to Northglenn, Colorado, a suburb of Denver. He graduated from Northglenn High School in 1976. While there, he attempted to learn the bass guitar, piano and trombone.
Upon graduation from high school, Taylor enrolled at Biola University in California. During his first year, he was first of the 100 chosen, from 20,000 applicants, to spend the summer at John Davidson's summer camp. At the camp, Taylor spent time learning from singers like Tony Orlando, Florence Henderson, and John Davidson.
Taylor returned home and enrolled at the University of Colorado Boulder, to study "serious music". He graduated there in 1980, but described his Bachelor of Arts degree in music and theater as being worth "slightly more than the cash value of a Pizza Hut coupon." [1]
In 1980, Taylor wrote and directed a pop musical comedy titled Nothing to Lose based on the parable of the Prodigal Son from the Bible. It had a short run at a community theater in Denver. He also wrote and starred in a short film, Joe's Distributing, a parody of avant-garde films.
Taylor wrote articles during this time that were published in The Wittenburg Door and CCM Magazine (for which he won an award from the Evangelical Press Association).
After recording a demo of original songs, Taylor began to write for the musical group the Continental Singers. [2] The Continental Singers' founder, Cam Floria invited Taylor to join the group as assistant director on a tour to France, Italy, and Poland sponsored by Solidarity.
When he returned to the United States, he was asked to perform at the Christian Artists' 1982 Music Seminar in Denver. Billy Ray Hearn, president of Sparrow Records, was backstage and immediately signed Taylor to a recording contract.
He recorded his debut solo project I Want to Be a Clone in 1982 and released it in January 1983. He quickly gained a reputation for writing songs that satirized beliefs and practices with which he disagreed.
In 1983, Taylor recorded his first full-length album. Released in 1984, Meltdown included some of the demo material that was not on Clone along with some new material. His video single of the title track, "Meltdown (at Madame Tussauds)" was played on MTV, which was unusual for a Christian artist at the time. The video featured an appearance by actress Lisa Whelchel. The album also included "We Don't Need No Colour Code", which was critical of Bob Jones University and its anti-interracial dating [ citation needed ] policy, a policy that was not abandoned by the university until 2000.
Another track on Meltdown, "Guilty By Association", one of the original demo songs, includes a jab with an impression in the middle eight at televangelist Jimmy Swaggart. The song "On the Fritz", the title track from Taylor's next studio album, was also targeted at Swaggart. Swaggart later struck back by devoting part of a chapter of Religious Rock 'N' Roll, a Wolf in Sheep's Clothing ( ISBN 0-935113-05-3) to Taylor, whom he saw as playing evil rock music. [3]
During a performance at 1984's Cornerstone Festival, Taylor fractured his ankle while jumping off the stage. He finished the summer's tour in an electric wheelchair. [4]
In 1985, Taylor received his first Grammy nomination in the "Best Male Gospel Performance" category, while also being nominated for Dove Awards as "Gospel Artist of the Year" and for Meltdown as the "Best Contemporary Album of the Year". Taylor and "Some Band" performed at the Dove Awards ceremonies in Nashville in April of that year, where they were introduced by Pat Boone.
Taylor followed that release with On the Fritz , produced by Foreigner's Ian McDonald. Fritz was Taylor's first album to use all studio musicians instead of his usual backing group. Some of the musicians who played on this album were George Small, Tony DaVilio, Hugh McCracken, Carmine Rojas, Larry Fast and Allen Childs. Fritz, keeping with Taylor tradition, took aim once again at religious leaders, such as Bill Gothard [5] ("I Manipulate"), greedy TV evangelists (again) ("You Don't Owe Me Nothing"), politicians using religion or avoiding questions of morality in order to get votes ("It's a Personal Thing"), and public schools teaching "values clarification" to children, asking them to determine who should be thrown overboard in an overcrowded lifeboat ("Lifeboat").
Taylor also recorded a duet with Sheila Walsh, "Not Gonna Fall Away", a tune written and recorded in 1981 by David Edwards. This was released as a 12" single titled "Transatlantic Remixes". Taylor and Walsh embarked on the Transatlantic Tour which included dates in the United Kingdom and the United States.
Taylor and Walsh also participated in the recording of "Do Something Now" in 1985, a collaborative effort, similar to "We Are the World", to raise money for Compassion International's famine relief programs in Africa. Other artists participating included Amy Grant, Larry Norman, Russ Taff, Randy Stonehill, Mylon LeFevre, Steve Camp, Evie, Phil Keaggy, 2nd Chapter of Acts, Sandi Patty, Bill Gaither and Rick Cua.
In between performing, recording and touring, Taylor met and married Debbie Butler of Irvine, California. They were married by Taylor's father at a private ceremony in Connecticut. Mrs. Taylor designed the album cover for a compilation on Sparrow, The Best We Could Find (Plus 3 That Never Escaped) and Myrrh's I Predict 1990, as well as some of Taylor's more colorful stage costumes.
In 1987, Taylor once again lived up to his controversial reputation with a song called "I Blew Up the Clinic Real Good". The song criticizes anyone who claims to be a anti-abortion activist who would blow up abortion clinics or kill doctors. The point of the song was lost on many and resulted in Taylor's album, I Predict 1990 , being pulled from the shelves at some Christian record stores. Taylor himself would occasionally call those stores to explain the song to them. [6] With 1990, Taylor's targets included mainstream universities ("Since I Gave Up Hope I Feel a Lot Better", featuring fiddle work from Papa John Creach of Jefferson Airplane and Hot Tuna). Other tracks included "Jim Morrison's Grave", which once again brought Taylor some MTV exposure, and the Flannery O'Connor inspired "Harder to Believe Than Not To". Some stores also pulled the album as they thought the cover looked like a tarot card. [6]
Taylor's tour for I Predict was his most ambitious to date, bringing him to Australia, Canada, England, Finland, Hong Kong, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, Scotland, Sweden and the Philippines.
Taylor then took a break from music until 1990, when he returned as the lead singer of Chagall Guevara. Their first recording was "Tale o' the Twister", which appeared on the soundtrack to the 1990 film Pump Up the Volume . The band released an album, the self-titled Chagall Guevara , in 1991 on MCA Records. A follow-up album was begun, but it was not finished until 2022 as part of a Kickstarter campaign. The band was released from its contract, following slow sales for their debut, and broke up.
Taylor returned with another solo album, Squint , and a live CD, Liver , in the mid-1990s. Squint included the track "Smug", which uses the persona of Rush Limbaugh as an apparent-example of smugness, and uses Barbra Streisand as an iconic master of apparent-smugness. [7] The album also included the song "Cash Cow", which takes a jab at yet another televangelist, Robert Tilton, as well as "Bannerman" which is a tribute to American Football fans that hold up "John 3:16" banners behind the goalposts.
A tribute to Taylor entitled I Predict a Clone: A Steve Taylor Tribute was released in 1994 that featured performances by Sixpence None the Richer, Fleming and John, Starflyer 59, Circle of Dust, and others.
In the years following those releases, Taylor focused his efforts on running Squint Entertainment and producing projects for other artists, including Sixpence None the Richer's self-titled 1997 release that featured the hit singles "Kiss Me" and a cover of The La's "There She Goes". He would be most noted for his work with Newsboys, co-producing five of the band's albums while making contributions to the band's songwriting. During this time, Taylor also directed and produced the Newsboys' 1996 movie Down Under the Big Top in which the band stars.
Taylor began working as a full-time film maker, directing music videos for Fleming and John, Rich Mullins, Sixpence None the Richer, Newsboys, Guardian, Twila Paris, Dakoda Motor Co., Out of the Grey, and two video albums for himself. [8]
While still running Squint, Taylor had begun a film project called St. Gimp, co-written with Ben Pearson and Willie Williams. That film was abandoned in 2001 when Squint Entertainment lost its financial backing and Taylor was forced out of the company. Taylor co-wrote and directed the feature film The Second Chance starring Michael W. Smith, released February 17, 2006. He also appeared in the documentary film Why Should the Devil Have All the Good Music? (released on DVD in 2006), in interview segments and performing part of "We Don't Need No Colour Code". New music was scarce, but Taylor did contribute one song, "Shortstop", to Squint's 2000 compilation Roaring Lambs . He also recorded "Yo Ho Hero", a collaborative track for the 2008 VeggieTales movie The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything .
In 2010, Taylor began working on a film adaptation of Donald Miller's book Blue Like Jazz . Kickstarter donations helped finish the project, and the film was released theatrically on April 13, 2012, and on DVD/Blu-ray on August 7, 2012. [9]
June 2011 saw the release of "Closer" (featuring Steve Taylor and Some Other Band), a collaboration with Peter Furler on his first solo album, On Fire . The group consisted of Taylor on vocals, Jimmy Abegg on guitar, John Mark Painter on bass, and Furler on drums. According to Furler, an entire album was recorded from these sessions, the material consisting of Taylor/Furler songs unused by the Newsboys. [10] One track from the group, "A Life Preserved", was released August 7, 2012 on the Blue Like Jazz Motion Picture Soundtrack album and credited to Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil. An "official remix" of "A Life Preserved" also surfaced at pastemagazine.com, and Taylor returned to the stage for Creation 2013 festival. [11] A 2013 Kickstarter drive funded the band in studio and on the road. [12]
A February 2014 Kickstarter update revealed previously completed studio work to be an album by tour co-headliner Peter Furler Band (released March 2014), with the four members of the Perfect Foil as producers. [13] Soon after, Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil announced via Kickstarter that their own new album Goliath was completed August 23, 2014. This marked Taylor's first studio album in twenty years. [14] "Only a Ride", the debut single from the album, was released via streaming and mp3 download on September 16, 2014, only to Kickstarter campaign supporters. [15] The music video for "Only a Ride" featured scenes from the film trailer for Stunt Rock , a 1980 film by director Brian Trenchard-Smith. [16] Music videos for "Standing in Line" [17] and the title track to Goliath followed. [18] The album, distributed independently, through Taylor's own Splint Entertainment, was released on November 18, 2014. [19] Plans for extensive touring were announced. [20]
In June 2015, Taylor and the Perfect Foil entered Electrical Audio in Chicago with Daniel Smith of Danielson and engineer Steve Albini. In December 2015, Taylor announced (via Kickstarter) that the resulting EP, Wow to the Deadness, was released in January 2016, under the name Steve Taylor & The Danielson Foil. [21]
Along with new music making, Taylor also had the honor of becoming filmmaker-in-residence at Lipscomb University's cinematic arts program. His roles would include assistant professor of film & creative media and director of the School of Theatre and Cinematic Arts. He would also begin development on another feature film, a political comedy: The Independent. [22]
On August 1, 2020, a live crowdfunding campaign was launched for the release of The Last Amen, the long-delayed Chagall Guevara live album. It was to be accompanied by a collection, Halcyon Days, to include rare and unreleased CG material as well as new recordings with Taylor's former band. The latter nine-track release was made available to Kickstarter backers in mid-May 2022, and was released to the public in June of that year. [23] The band played one show together on July 2, 2022 to celebrate the release of the new album. [24]
Year | Single | CCMpeak chart positions | Album | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AC | CHR | Rock | |||
1983 | "I Want to Be a Clone" | — | — | 3 | I Want to Be a Clone |
1984 | "Sin for a Season" | — | — | 1 | Meltdown |
"Meltdown (At Madame Tussaud's)" | — | — | 1 | ||
"Guilty by Association" | — | — | 16 | ||
1985 | "This Disco (Used to Be a Cute Cathedral)" | — | 3 | 1 | On the Fritz |
"On the Fritz" | — | — | 9 | ||
"Lifeboat" | — | — | — | ||
1986 | "To Forgive" | — | — | 8 | |
"I Just Wanna Know" | 5 | 5 | — | ||
1987 | "Svengali" | — | — | 2 | I Predict 1990 |
1988 | "Harder to Believe Than Not To" | 36 | — | — | |
"I Blew Up the Clinic Real Good" | — | — | 5 | ||
"What Is the Measure of Your Success?" | — | — | 8 | ||
"Under the Blood" | — | — | 20 | The Best We Could Find (+3 That Never Escaped) | |
1989 | "Jim Morrison's Grave" | — | — | 3 | I Predict 1990 |
1991 | "Violent Blue" (Chagall Guevara) | — | — | 10 | Chagall Guevara |
"Murder in the Big House" (Chagall Guevara) | — | — | 1 | ||
1992 | "Escher's World" (Chagall Guevara) | — | — | 4 | |
"Play God" (Chagall Guevara) | — | — | 7 | ||
"If It All Comes True" (Chagall Guevara) | — | — | 4 | ||
1993 | "Bannerman" | — | 5 | 1 | Squint |
1994 | "The Lament of Desmond R.G. Underwood-Frederick IV" | — | — | 1 | |
"The Finish Line" | — | — | 2 | ||
"Curses" | — | — | 1 | ||
1995 | "On the Fritz" (live) | — | — | 6 | Liver |
2000 | "Shortstop" | — | — | 1 | Roaring Lambs |
2014 | "Only a Ride" (Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil) | — | — | — | Goliath |
"Standing in Line" (Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil) | — | — | — | ||
"Goliath" (Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil) | — | — | — | ||
2015 | "A Life Preserved" (Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil) | — | — | — | |
"Moonshot" (Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil) | — | — | — | ||
2016 | "Wow to the Deadness" (Steve Taylor & The Danielson Foil) | — | — | — | Wow to the Deadness |
"Nonchalant" (Steve Taylor & The Danielson Foil) | — | — | — | ||
2020 | "Ecstatic Delight" (Steve Taylor & The Danielson Foil) | — | — | — | Electric Jesus (Soundtrack) |
2022 | "Resurrection #9" (Chagall Guevara) | — | — | — | Halcyon Days |
"Got Any Change?" (Chagall Guevara) | — | — | — | ||
"Fire" | — | — | — | There's a Rainbow Somewhere: The Songs of Randy Stonehill | |
Year | Title | Album |
---|---|---|
1984 | "Meltdown (At Madame Tussaud's)" | Meltdown |
"We Don't Need No Colour Code" | ||
1985 | "Lifeboat" | On the Fritz |
1988 | "What Is the Measure of Your Success?" | I Predict 1990 |
"I Blew Up the Clinic Real Good" | ||
"A Principled Man" | ||
"Jim Morrison's Grave" | ||
"Babylon" | ||
"Svengali" | ||
"Since I Gave Up Hope I Feel a Lot Better" | ||
"Harder to Believe Than Not To" | ||
1991 | "Violent Blue" (Chagall Guevara) | Chagall Guevara |
1993 | "Bannerman" | Squint |
1994 | "Smug" | |
"The Moshing Floor" | ||
"Jesus Is for Losers" | ||
"Sock Heaven" | ||
"Cash Cow (A Rock Opera in Three Small Acts)" | ||
"The Finish Line" | ||
1995 | "On the Fritz" (live) | Liver |
2014 | "Only a Ride" (Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil) | Goliath |
"Standing in Line" (Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil) | ||
"Goliath" (Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil) | ||
2015 | "Moonshot" (Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil) | |
2016 | "Wow to the Deadness" (Steve Taylor & The Danielson Foil) | Wow to the Deadness |
"Nonchalant" (Steve Taylor & The Danielson Foil) | ||
2020 | "Ecstatic Delight" (Steve Taylor & The Danielson Foil) | Electric Jesus (Music From and Inspired By the Motion Picture) |
Title | Year | Credited as | Notes | Ref(s) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Director | Writer | Producer | Editor | Actor | Role | ||||
Joe's Distributing | 1980 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Comedy short | |||
Nothing To Lose | 1980 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||
Baby Talk | 1982 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||
Greenbelt '88 on Super 8 | 1988 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Himself | Documentary short | ||
Rich Mullins: Pursuit of a Legacy | 1994 | Yes | Yes | — | Documentary | ||||
Strong Hand of Love | 1994 | Yes | Himself | ||||||
Down Under the Big Top | 1996 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Feature film | ||
Homeless Man: The Restless Heart of Rich Mullins | 1998 | Yes | Yes | Documentary | |||||
The Cornerstone Festival: Twenty Years and Counting | 2004 | Yes | |||||||
The Second Chance | 2006 | Yes | Yes | Yes | — | Feature film | |||
Kabul 24 | 2009 | Yes | — | Documentary | |||||
Adventure Now | 2010 | Yes | Elko | TV series | |||||
Pound Dogs | 2011 | Yes | Yuppie Guy (voice) | Animated comedy short | |||||
Blue Like Jazz | 2012 | Yes | Yes | Yes | — | Feature film | |||
"Spy vs. Guy" | 2013 | Yes | Spy | Comedy short |
John Mark Painter is an American multi-instrumental musician, composer and arranger. He is best known for his role, with his wife, singer Fleming McWilliams, in the rock duo Fleming and John.
Jimmy Abegg, also known as Jimmy A, is an American musician who grew up in Alliance, Nebraska and is currently living in Nashville, Tennessee.
Tad was an American rock band from Seattle, Washington, formed in 1988 by Tad Doyle. They are often recognized as one of the first bands of the grunge era.
Newsboys are a Christian rock band founded in 1985 in Mooloolaba, Queensland, Australia, by Peter Furler and George Perdikis. Now based in Nashville, Tennessee, the band has released 17 studio albums, 6 of which have been certified gold. As of 2023, the band consists of lead vocalist Michael Tait, drummer and percussionist Duncan Phillips, keyboardist Jeff Frankenstein, electric guitarist Jody Davis, and bassist Adam Agee(formerly of Stellar Kart and Audio Adrenaline) no founding members are featured in the lineup. In addition to performing music, the band has appeared in the films God's Not Dead, God's Not Dead 2, and God's Not Dead: A Light in Darkness.
Squint is the fourth solo studio album by American singer/songwriter Steve Taylor, released in 1993 after his stint as lead singer of Chagall Guevara. It peaked at position 17 on the BillboardTop Contemporary Christian Album Chart. The most recent studio album released by Taylor as a solo artist, it was released to online music stores on November 16, 2018.
PFR is a Christian rock group from Minneapolis, Minnesota. Although the group initially disbanded in 1997, they periodically reunited from 2001 to 2013 and recorded two albums in that time. They reunited again in 2022. Their name was originally "Pray for Rain", but was changed to "PFR" to avoid a conflict with another musical group.
Peter Andrew Furler is an Australian musician, songwriter, producer and record executive, best known as the co-founder and former lead vocalist of the Christian rock band Newsboys.
Take Me to Your Leader is the sixth studio album by Christian pop rock band Newsboys, released in 1996. It was both the last Newsboys album to feature lead vocalist John James and the first to feature bassist/vocalist Phil Joel. The album won a Dove Award in 1997 for its packaging, and was also nominated for "Rock Album of the Year", "Rock Recorded Song of the Year" and "Short Form Music Video of the Year". The album was also recognized with a Grammy nomination for "Best Rock Gospel Album". It is also the band's first album as a sextet.
Lynn Nichols is an American songwriter, and musician from New York who now resides in Tennessee.
Mike Mead is an American drummer, working from the mid-1980s to the mid 2000s with artists in the Christian rock and Contemporary Christian music (CCM) genres.
Going Public is the fifth studio album by Christian pop rock band Newsboys, released in 1994. The album was the band's second commercial success, and it featured "Shine," one of their most popular songs.
Not Ashamed is the fourth studio album by Australian CCM band Newsboys, released in 1992. The album was the Newsboys' first commercially successful album, with "I'm Not Ashamed" becoming a hit on Christian radio. With this album, producer Steve Taylor started co-writing many of the band's songs with Peter Furler, who also began sharing lead vocals duties with then-primary vocalist John James.
Boys Will Be Boyz is the third studio album by Christian pop rock band Newsboys, released in 1991.
The 30th Annual GMA Dove Awards were held on March 24, 1999, recognizing accomplishments of musicians for the year 1998. The show was held at the Nashville Arena in Nashville, Tennessee, and was hosted by John Tesh.
In the Hands of God is the thirteenth studio album by Christian band Newsboys. It was released on 5 May 2009, being the last album the band released before the departure of singer and founding member Peter Furler. It also features the return of Jody Davis, after a five-year hiatus, the first album on which keyboard player Jeff Frankenstein took on some production duties, and is the first album to feature any recording with Michael Tait as lead vocalist since singing guest vocals on "The Fad of the Land" from their 2002 live DVD Thrive: From The Rock 'N' Roll Hall of Fame. Tait later replaced Furler.
Chagall Guevara is an American rock band formed in 1989 by solo artist Steve Taylor, guitarists Dave Perkins and Lynn Nichols, bassist Wade Jaynes, and drummer Mike Mead.
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Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil is an American alternative rock supergroup formed in 2010 by singer Steve Taylor with drummer Peter Furler, guitarist Jimmy Abegg, and bassist John Mark Painter. Taylor formerly saw success as a new wave singer during the 1980s and early 1990s, and also fronted the short-lived band Chagall Guevara. However, by the mid-1990s he abandoned performing music and transitioned into work as a record producer, songwriter, and film-maker. In 2010 Taylor, who was frustrated at the slow pace of his fundraiser for his feature film Blue Like Jazz, collaborated with Furler, Abegg, and Painter to record the song "A Life Preserved" for the film's soundtrack, and began recording other material. Taylor, Abegg, and Painter then featured on the Peter Furler song "Closer", under the name "Steve Taylor & Some Other Band", on Furler's album On Fire. With those collaborations as a starting point, Taylor relaunched his career as a performing musician, and the lineup was branded as Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil. The group released a studio album entitled Goliath on November 18, 2014 to critical acclaim and modest commercial success. In 2015, Daniel Smith of Danielson, with whom the band had been touring, joined on in a collaboration touted as Steve Taylor & The Danielson Foil. Under this incarnation, the group released the EP Wow to the Deadness on February 5, 2016, and toured until February 12. A live album under this incarnation of the band was also released, and the band also contributed to the soundtrack for the 2020 film Electric Jesus.
Goliath is the sixth studio album by alternative rock singer Steve Taylor, and his first with the group Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil, consisting of Taylor, Peter Furler, Jimmy Abegg and John Mark Painter. It was released by Splint Entertainment on November 18, 2014 and marks his first studio release since 1993's Squint.
Wow to the Deadness is an EP by Steve Taylor & The Danielson Foil, a temporary collaboration between the supergroup Steve Taylor & The Perfect Foil and Daniel Smith of Danielson. Recorded in 2015 at Electrical Audio in Chicago, Illinois, and produced by Steve Albini, the EP was released on February 5, 2016, through Steve Taylor's Splint Entertainment and Smith's Sounds Familyre Records.