WEATHER ALERT

Auto Club more at home at Bible study than cruise night

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Slim Cessna doesn't suffer from religious guilt -- it's more like religious confusion.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Opinion

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 26/07/2012 (5106 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Slim Cessna doesn’t suffer from religious guilt — it’s more like religious confusion.

“I was raised religious and I may or may not still be. Some days I am and some days I’m not,” Cessna says over the phone from Fairplay, Colo.

The issue of religion comes up because for the past 20 years Cessna and his band — Slim Cessna’s Auto Club — have offered their take on biblical tales and other stories of sin and salvation, fire and brimstone, heaven and hell, Jesus saving and times when Jesus missed the mark.

Slim Cessna
Slim Cessna

“It (the Bible) offers such good material for stories and in a way, it’s a part of a tribute to the history of folk stories,” Cessna says. “That’s kind of what we do: they’re stories and the characters in the stories are going through a wide range of things in our songs. There’s something about the history of American music and the history of folk music in there. It can get pretty weird and superstitious. It’s an interesting way to look and think about things.

“I’m also interested in the power of gospel music. Whether you believe in it or not, there’s a power to it that’s incredible and very real. Without it, rock music wouldn’t be here, or not that way it is now.”

The musical story of Cessna and his six-piece band is a bit all-over-the-place. Over the years the Auto Club has delved into alt-country, rockabilly, rock ‘n’ roll, blues and gospel.

Their latest album, Unentitled, is the band’s attempt to incorporate more pop into their sound with a stronger emphasis on crafting melodies.

“It’ll give it an A for effort. The most important part of that, whether we achieved it or not, was to do something different outside of our world, our understanding of what that is; whether we even understand what pop music is,” says Cessna, who shares frontman duties with Jay Munly, better known as Munly Munly.

Regardless of the band’s understanding of the genre, Unentitled is filled with melodic hooks that are woven seamlessly into the aural concoction the band has been perfecting for the past two decades.

Winnipeggers will get to hear what the band is preaching when Slim Cessna’s Auto Club brings its famous live show to the city for the first time ever on Sunday at the West End Cultural Centre (local garage-rock/soul faves the Vibrating Beds open the show). Tickets are $18.25 at Ticketmaster and the WECC.

To celebrate the band’s 20-year anniversary, the group — which has featured more than a dozen different members over the years — held a three-night residency at the Lion’s Lair in Denver, where it formed and where it is still based, although Cessna himself calls Pittsburgh home these days.

“It is a tiny little rock club with a 110-person capacity. We had a blast — it was the first place that ever let us play on a weekend. That was one of our early goals as a band: to play the Lion’s Lair on a weekend,” Cessna, 46, says with a laugh.

Despite the band’s name, they were never car enthusiasts or belonged to any auto clubs popular in the Denver area.

“We used to see awesome posters for these car clubs and auto shows; before we were even playing shows we had that name. We didn’t have cool cars, it was just kind of funny to use.

“My friend San Juan John had tons of cars, like Toyota pickups and Datsuns. It was all nerd cars. We weren’t driving low-riders, it was more like junk and you drive whatever runs,” Cessna says.

They might not have had cool vehicles, but their sound was interesting enough to catch the attention of Jello Biafra, who has released six of the band’s albums on his Alternative Tentacles label.

Cessna met the former Dead Kennedys frontman through producer/Auto Club member Bob Ferbrache. Biafra and Cessna both grew up in Boulder, Colo., and during one of Biafra’s trips to visit his parents he became a fan of the group after seeing a live show.

“It’s an honour to be on that label. It means the world to me, still,” Cessna says. “The Dead Kennedys was an important part of my life and still is. He’s a guy I looked up to for years and he’s a music lover. He’s got discriminating tastes.

“He puts things on his label he knows will never sell because he wants to listen to it on vinyl; he doesn’t listen to CDs. I think that’s why he puts out our records.”

rob.williams@freepress.mb.ca

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Animal rescue worker reportedly killed in dog attack

Morgan Modjeski 4 minute read Preview

Animal rescue worker reportedly killed in dog attack

Morgan Modjeski 4 minute read Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

Police are investigating after a woman died on the Sandy Bay First Nation, reportedly after being attacked by dogs.

The woman was identified by family as 37-year-old Amanda Nobiss.

“It’s just disbelief,” said Sherri Nobiss, her mother, in a phone call. Her family is devastated by the loss. “You just want to know what has happened.”

She said Amanda was a dedicated animal advocate who was volunteering with K9 Advocacy Manitoba in the community at the time. Amanda, who was from Winnipeg, is pictured with a dog in almost all of her photos on social media.

Read
Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

Main Street crash involving motorcycle linked to speeding

Morgan Modjeski 3 minute read Preview

Main Street crash involving motorcycle linked to speeding

Morgan Modjeski 3 minute read Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

Speed appears to be a factor in a serious four-vehicle collision, including a motorcycle, on Main Street Friday.

Police did not immediately release information about the crash, but at around 7 p.m., a large section of Main Street was taped off between Jarvis and Dufferin Avenue. Traffic was redirected and pedestrians were told to stay clear.

Behind the tape, a crumpled white sedan was smashed into the side of a building, and a damaged motorcycle was on its side in the middle of the street. Two SUVs were also damaged.

The Free Press watched video captured from cameras at the nearby Northern Hotel that shows the two vehicles involved in the crash — the motorcycle that had a rider and a passenger, and the white sedan — speeding side-by-side southbound on Main Street. The speed limit in the area is 50 kilometres per hour.

Read
Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

Outreach centre rife with drug use, needles, but daycare, community members say safety concerns go unheard

Scott Billeck 7 minute read Preview

Outreach centre rife with drug use, needles, but daycare, community members say safety concerns go unheard

Scott Billeck 7 minute read Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

Children at an Osborne Village daycare are routinely exposed to discarded needles, human feces and drug use, prompting growing safety concerns from parents, residents and business owners.

The concerns centre on Augustine Centre at River Avenue and Osborne Street, where SPLASH Child Care shares the building with Oak Table, a drop-in operated by 1JustCity that provides meals, wellness and addiction supports, along with programs that help people build skills, and secure housing and employment.

The daycare looks after 132 children, from just a few months old to age 12.

Lesley Massey, executive director of the daycare, said parents fear for their children’s safety.

Read
Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

Fringe reviews #13: Achievement unlocked, levelling up

Free Press review team 9 minute read Preview

Fringe reviews #13: Achievement unlocked, levelling up

Free Press review team 9 minute read 12:35 PM CDT

Black Fish, East of Berlin, Green Grab, Rowena Riddle, On Tidy Endings, Saving the Station, The Taming of the Shrew, Nat King Cole, Where We Fly From Hospital Beds

Read
12:35 PM CDT

City denies teen received ‘life-altering injuries’ from police dog bite in lawsuit defence

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Preview

City denies teen received ‘life-altering injuries’ from police dog bite in lawsuit defence

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Yesterday at 12:14 PM CDT

City officials have denied a 17-year-old girl’s claim she received life-altering injuries when a Winnipeg police dog bit her, arguing her lawsuit over last year’s incident should be rejected.

The teen, whom the Free Press is not naming because she is a minor involved with a police matter, seeks unspecified damages from the City of Winnipeg, in a statement of claim filed in the Court of King’s Bench in March.

The teen, described as “a small, slightly built girl,” claims she was “attacked, arrested and detained” by several Winnipeg Police Service officers around 1 a.m. on June 4, 2025.

The girl’s court papers say that in order to detain the teen, officers first deployed “a large, vicious and dangerous, non-human, canine animal,” which the lawsuit calls the “beast” in subsequent references.

Read
Yesterday at 12:14 PM CDT

Fringe reviews #8: Experience points awarded

Free Press review team 9 minute read Preview

Fringe reviews #8: Experience points awarded

Free Press review team 9 minute read Friday, Jul. 17, 2026

Another Side of Rice, The Crown Witness, The Cult of the Comfy Wizard, Dead Chef, Embarrassed Naked Female, Goose!, How Bono Saved My Life, Paper Fathers, Rumours in Motion, Site #57.

Read
Friday, Jul. 17, 2026