Soul-Junk

[1] By the time Trumans Water moved to Portland, Oregon in 1994 he had already left and concentrated on Soul-Junk as a full-time independent solo project,[2] eventually taking the moniker Glen Galaxy.

[4] Shortly before joining Trumans Water, however, he had returned to Christianity; later telling his bandmates God had called him to leave the band.

[2] Alternative Press stated in a review of 1953 that their indie musical arrangements are outstanding, "tuneful, energetic and original (almost to a fault).

[7][8] The whole point is to make something that people would want to puzzle overWhile there are fewer lyrics derived from scripture, the albums 1956 through 1958 still reflect on the groups' Christianity based viewpoint, sometimes offering critiques of the Church in a stream-of consciousness manner.

[9] On 1956 the sound shifts toward hip hop,[10] leading CCM Magazine to describe it as "beyond offbeat, beyond eclectic... beyond the grasp of its market.

"[2] The resulting sound is fragmented; Soul Junk's "berserk-hop"[7] on these albums is "hip-hop so out-there, so deconstructed, so avant-garde"[8] that it creates a "carnival aesthetic".

Shortly after recording 1960 (with Daniel Smith from Danielson Famile), Glen started playing with his son Jude on drums and daughter Mila.