God's America (band)

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God's America
Image:God's america.jpg
Clockwise from top left: Lindsay Childs, Ian Deaton, and Sarah Case.
Background information
Origin Flag of the United States Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Genre(s) Post-hardcore, Art Rock, Experimental Rock
Years active 2005-2006
Label(s) Rob's House, Stickfigure
Associated acts Blame Game, Fag Static, Thy Mighty Contract (Ian Deaton)
DoublePenetration969 (Lindsay Childs)
Website God's America (band) at MySpace

God's America was an experimental post-hardcore Atlanta, GA.-based trio, formed in 2005, which consisted of Lindsay Childs, Ian Deaton, and Sarah Case. Garnering a cult following and playing numerous shows in the local Atlanta underground scene, God's America disbanded in the summer of 2006 before guitarist Ian Deaton moved to London.

Contents

[edit] History

Co-founded after guitarist Ian Deaton's departure from Blame Game with drummer Lindsay Childs in the summer of 2005. The band's name was inspired by in particular by the Alan Jackson song Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)[1] and the rise of Fundamentalist Christianity[2] in post-9/11 America in general . Vocalist Sara Case joined before the self-released, DIY cassette that would eventually go out of print and be re-released as a CD-R on Stickfigure Records. God's America played its last show at the Drunken Unicorn on August 26, 2006.


Opening for such bands as Fatal Flying Guilloteens[3] and touring with Deerhunter, God's America demonstrated an uncanny ability to produce cacophonously Beefheartian guitar structures without being bogged down by the constraints of turn-of-the-century post-hardcore excesses.

[edit] Discography

Album Year Label Format
s/t 2006 Rob's House 7"
God's America/Bradford Cox & Moses Archuleta 2006 Rob's House Cassette
god's america... 2006 Stickfigure Cassette/CD-R

[edit] References

  1. ^ Radford, Chad (2008, August 6), An American Band, <http://atlanta.creativeloafing.com/gyrobase/an_american_band/Content?oid=20802>. Retrieved on 5 March 2008 
  2. ^ Day, Curt (August 17, 2005), Christian Fundamentalism, <http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=8524>. Retrieved on 9 March 2008 
  3. ^ McManus, Brian (November 10, 2005), “Road Trip”, Houston Press, <http://www.houstonpress.com/2005-11-10/news/road-trip/1> 

[edit] External links