Just a few weeks before he headed to Texas to make his first-ever solo album last summer, Craig Finn snuck back home. He saw a Twins game, took in the Rock the Garden concert and attended his niece's baptism -- all in one weekend.
No wonder the Hold Steady frontman opted to record in Austin instead of his hometown.
"Too many good distractions there," he said. "Whereas Austin in July is an entirely different story."
The Texas heat provided a good incubator for Finn's slower-stewing solo effort, "Clear Heart Full Eyes," which came out Tuesday. Equally valuable were Austin's wealth of musicians, who added a light blanket of atmospheric twang that sounds nothing like the Hold Steady. The lyrics -- some of Finn's most personal to date -- are almost as distinguished.
However, the sweaty confines did not melt away two songwriting elements that permeate Finn's music: his lyrical nods to specific Twin Cities sites, and his not-so-specific references to Christianity -- each born from his Edina upbringing.
"There's a lot of Jesus on the record," Finn, 40, admitted with a laugh two weeks ago by phone from his New York apartment. He returns to town Saturday to promote "Clear Heart Full Eyes" with the Texas musicians who played on the album.
"In the Hold Steady, I'm usually the only one that has Jesus on my mind. I felt like I could get away with cramming a lot more of him onto this record."
In one of the disc's most emotional songs, "Western Pier," Finn sings between eerie waves of slide guitar: "Jesus is a judge, and he's kind and he's just / Forgives us for our avarice and lust." One rollicking, up-tempo song is even called "New Friend Jesus," which imagines Christ hanging out with the narrator.