From the Music Vault, Part 4: Supersuckers
Published May 24, 2006
Fourth in a series of musing on random selections from my music collection.
Today brings you one of the greatest American music recordings ever made: The Supersuckers' Evil Powers of Rock and Roll.

If anyone ever tells you rock is dead, just sit them down and make them listen to Evil Powers of Rock and Roll. This is the kind of music that makes you believe there is life after nu-metal and emo and boy bands, that there is no such thing as the day the music died, that the negative aura left by every niche and novelty rock band out there can't kill rock and roll because as long as the Supersuckers exist, rock and roll will still be around to kick ass and take names.
This is the kind of album playing in the background of a heated poker game where large, mustached men in denim vests and ten gallon hats drink moonshine and accuse each other of cheating and occasionally pull out a six shooter to make a point.
It's a Saturday night driving up and down the main highway in town, half of it spent giving the finger to people who have nicer cars than you, the other half spent throwing empty Budweiser cans out the window and yelling drunken obscenities at the girls lingering in the Burger King parking lot.
It's music that belongs on a half warped cassette tape that you shove into the tape deck of your 20 year old car and you sing out loud along with it as your car backfires almost in time to the songs.
It reminds you at once of the lights of Vegas, of dirt roads, of Satan, deserts, bar fights, and motorcycles. It's rock and roll, Texas style. And it's one of the best damn albums ever put down on vinyl.
- From the Music Vault, Part 4: Supersuckers
- Published: May 24, 2006
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Rock
- Writer: Michele Catalano
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- Michele Catalano's personal site
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