Long-form companion pieces to the album.

Before You Listen

On June 7, 1844, a group of insiders published a single issue of a newspaper. Three days later, it was destroyed by order of the man it exposed. Seventeen days after that, he was dead. The newspaper was the Nauvoo Expositor. The man was Joseph Smith. This album tells that story. WHAT YOU’RE ABOUT TO HEAR Every lyric on this album is drawn from primary sources - the actual words of the people who lived this story. We didn’t embellish. We didn’t dramatize. We amplified. ...

7 min · Sudden Day Project

Album Analysis

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Sudden Day: Songs from the Nauvoo Expositor is a 16-track concept album drawing entirely from the Nauvoo Expositor, published June 7, 1844. The album tells the complete story of the whistleblowers who exposed Joseph Smith’s secret practices - and what it cost them. Mission: Don’t let the Expositor die in history. Give voice to the silenced. Make the disease known so the remedy can be applied. Methodology: Every lyric traceable to primary sources. Historical accuracy over dramatic embellishment. Sympathetic approach over confrontational messaging. Singability over clever wordplay. ...

11 min · Sudden Day Project

After You Listen

You’ve just heard the voices of people who have been dead for 180 years. And a woman whose name we never knew - “a departed spirit, once the resident of St. Louis” - who finally got to cry aloud. WHAT WE DIDN’T DO We didn’t attack. We didn’t preach. We didn’t embellish. We amplified. The Expositor writers did the work in 1844. They documented everything. They signed sworn affidavits knowing it could cost them their lives. William Law had been Joseph Smith’s right hand. Jane Law had refused the Prophet’s advances. Austin Cowles had heard the secret revelation read aloud in the High Council. ...

6 min · Sudden Day Project

Companion Essay

SUDDEN DAY: A Companion Essay Songs from the Nauvoo Expositor Walking Through the Album for Those Who Cannot Hear “The remedy can never be applied, unless the disease is known.” — Nauvoo Expositor, June 7, 1844 Introduction: One Newspaper, One Day, One Story On June 7, 1844, a group of former believers published a single issue of a newspaper in Nauvoo, Illinois. Three days later, it was destroyed by order of the man it exposed. Seventeen days after that, he was dead. The newspaper was the Nauvoo Expositor. The man was Joseph Smith, founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. ...

69 min · Sudden Day Project