Against the Law

Against the Law
Studio album by Stryper
Released August 21, 1990
Recorded 1989
Genre Glam metal, hard rock, heavy metal
Label Enigma Records
Producer Tom Werman
Stryper chronology

In God We Trust
(1988)
Against the Law
(1990)
Can't Stop the Rock
(1991)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic [1]

Against the Law is the fifth release, and fourth full-length album, from the Christian metal band Stryper, released on August 21, 1990 (see 1990 in music). Three singles/video were released for this album including "Shining Star", "Two Time Woman" and "Lady" but received minimal airplay.

This album marked a radical change in the musical and visual direction of the band. Gone were the yellow and black spandex outfits, the bold evangelical lyrics and the familiar yellow-and-black band logo with Isaiah 53:5. In their place were leather outfits, and lyrics more focused on rock n' roll and relationships, although arguably from a Christian worldview. The album was praised by many critics as the band's strongest work to date, but a large percentage of Stryper's Christian fanbase felt betrayed by this unannounced creative metamorphosis, and many of them accused Stryper of selling out their image and message for greater mainstream acceptance. As a result, Against the Law sold poorly compared to the band's previous gold and platinum releases.

"Shining Star" is a heavy metal cover of the classic Earth, Wind & Fire song.

Track listing

All songs by Michael Sweet except where noted

  1. "Against the Law" – 3:49
  2. "Two Time Woman" – 3:40
  3. "Rock the People" – 3:34
  4. "Two Bodies (One Mind, One Soul)" – 5:17
  5. "Not That Kind of Guy" – 3:59
  6. "Shining Star" (Philip Bailey, Larry Dunn, Maurice White) – 4:22
  7. "Ordinary Man" – 3:51
  8. "Lady" – 4:53
  9. "Caught in the Middle" – 3:48
  10. "All for One" – 4:31
  11. "Rock the Hell Out of You" – 3:35

Personnel

Stryper

Additional musicians

Production

Alternative versions

The limited-edition cover artwork for Against the Law.

A limited edition version of the album was also released. It included a 14-minute interview with the band, presumably to explain their radical change in appearance and musical direction.

Title of the album

Tim Gaines said the album was titled Against the Law because it was, "our response to these religious folks who Christ said "They swallow a camel and strain on a gnat."[2] In other words: in response to the criticism from Christians protesting against them.

References