Jesus Christ Superstar started life as a most improbable concept album from an equally unlikely label,
Decca Records, which had not, until then, been widely known for groundbreaking musical efforts. It was all devised by then 21-year-old composer
Andrew Lloyd Webber and 25-year-old lyricist
Tim Rice.
Jesus Christ Superstar had been conceived as a stage work, but lacking the funds to get it produced, the two collaborators instead decided to use an album as the vehicle for introducing the piece, a fairly radical
rock/theater hybrid about the final days in the life of
Jesus as seen from the point of view of
Judas. If its content seemed daring (and perhaps downright sacrilegious), the work, a "sung-through"
musical echoing operatic and oratorio traditions, was structurally perfect for an album; just as remarkable as its subject matter was the fact that its musical language was full-blown
rock music. There was at the time an American-spawned hit theater piece called
Hair that utilized elements of
rock music, but it wasn't as unified a work as
Webber and
Rice's creation, and it was less built on
rock music than on
pop music that referred to
rock;
Webber and
Rice's work presented a far sharper, bolder musical edge and pushed it much further and harder than
Hair ever did. Serving as their own producers, the two creators got together more than 60 top-flight singers and musicians (including
Chris Spedding,
John Gustafson,
Mike Vickers,
P.P. Arnold, and members of
Joe Cocker's
Grease Band, not to mention
Murray Head,
Ian Gillan, and
Yvonne Elliman in key singing roles), and managed to pull the whole production together into a more than coherent whole that contained a pair of hit singles (the title track and
"I Don't Know How to Love Him") to help drive AM radio exposure. What's more, the whole album sounded like the real article as far as its
rock music credibility was concerned -- it was played good and hard for a studio creation. Released in America by
Decca as a handsomely decorated double-LP set complete with illustrated libretto,
Jesus Christ Superstar seemed to pick up where
the Who's
Tommy (also a Decca release) and
Hair had left off, and audiences from across the age and cultural spectrum responded. Teenagers who didn't know from
Jesus,
opera, or oratorios liked the beat, the
hard rock sounds, and the singing and bought the album, as did parents who felt that the record offered a chance to understand some aspects of this youth culture around them, and especially its music -- and so did some more forward-thinking clergy and theologians, who saw any opportunity to spread the word about
Jesus where it wasn't previously going as intrinsically good.
The result was a chart-topping LP followed in short order by a Broadway production and, a little later, a multi-million-dollar movie (oddly enough, the original double LP created barely a ripple in England in 1970 and 1971, though there was eventually a British stage production that went on to become what was then the longest-running
musical on London's West End). And all of this acceptance and embrace in America took place scarcely five years after an innocent observation by
John Lennon concerning the relative popularity of
the Beatles and
Jesus, made in England but reported in the American tabloids, had led to protests and a media boycott of the band's music and their 1966 tour across the Bible Belt.
Jesus Christ Superstar, by contrast, passed through the border and Southern states without any controversy, speaking volumes in the process about what had happened to American society in the interim. The original release was also the first "event" album of the '70s, presaging a brace of generally less successful efforts in that direction, ranging from
Lou Adler and
Lou Reizner's orchestrated version of
Tommy (
Pete Townshend's
rock opera basically blown up to
Jesus Christ Superstar dimensions) to the
soundtrack All This and World War II and
Leonard Bernstein's
Mass. The original double-LP set was released on CD in the late '80s in a decent-sounding double jewel case/slipcased edition re-creating the artwork from the LP, and in 1993 it was also reissued in
MCA's gold-plated audiophile Masterdisc series with altered cover art. Another re-release, using an upgraded analog-to-digital transfer, this time in a slim double jewel case format with the original booklet reproduced in miniature, was mastered in exceptionally vivid fidelity. Each CD edition has sounded good, however, and was an improvement on the LP edition, but the 1996 release offers beautifully crisp fidelity with a close, loud sound on all of the instruments, but especially the bass -- it still rocks, and the singing of
Gillan,
Head,
Gustafson, and
Elliman still stands out. [A remastered version of the original 1970 soundtrack was released in 2012.] ~ Bruce Eder