AMG: Slim Cessna’s Auto Club, the country-punk band who’ve been spreading their gospel of tongue-in-cheek hellfire since the early ’90s, return to Alternative Tentacles for their fifth studio full-length, Cipher. As per usual, the album is a kind of puritanical sermon on good and evil, God and the Devil, combined with a Western lawlessness that can be nearly chilling at times. Slim’s the main singer here, his half-crazed voice like one of a man who’s been pushed too far one too many times, leading the way through the songs of sin and condemnation, women and whiskey, with only a very few hints at redemption. Slim’s god is a vengeful one, as ready to punish as he is save. The momentously creepy “Jesus Is in My Body: My Body Has Let Me Down” tells the story of a destructive apocalypse, while “Everyone Is Guilty #2″ goes from asking to open for Jesus (“your name still would draw a crowd/It would help our careers if we could warm up your show”) to a menacing break in which the vocalist drawls out accusations and demands that Jesus take responsibility for them. The band doesn’t let anyone else off the hook, either, naming, in the recurring “Introduction to the Power of Braces,” the ways in which their own faith has bent and how they will attempt to straighten it, or listing off specific sinners — themselves included — in “Children of the Lord.” The Auto Club play with familiar themes, like their take on Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” (itself a borrowed melody), called “This Land Is Our Land Redux,” a near-violent demand to take back the country from what it’s become, while the aforementioned “Children of the Lord” plays off the Sunday school song “Rise and Shine.” There’s a dark liveliness, a rebelliousness to the music, one that Slim Cessna has always exhibited, shown not only in the lyrics and vocal inflection but in the instrumentation, which is sprawling and tight at the same time, electric and acoustic, and the entire effect of which is absolutely captivating.
Archive for May, 2011

Slim Cessna’s Auto Club: Cipher (2008)
May 6, 2011
Slim Cessna’s Auto Club: Buried Behind the Barn (2004)
May 6, 2011
Twisted twangsters Slim Cessna’s Auto Club roar back with some raw, heart-shattering tracks from 2000 and 2001. Led by the vocals of Cessna and Munly, the Auto Club bares even more of their troubled souls than usual. Briefly released as a limited-to-200 CDR in 2004, these songs are basically unreleased, original versions of later album tracks and compilation songs. Whatever their destination, all eight are undeniably prime ‘n’ primal Auto Club–a rambunctious mix of joyful twang, acoustic Folk, Hillbilly picking, and old-time Gospel backed with words of spiritual angst, roadhouse wisdom, and whiskey-drinking sin ‘n’ salvation.