Chuck Prophet

Chuck Prophet

Chuck Prophet (in 2009)
Background information
Birth name Charles William Prophet[1]
Born June 28, 1963[2]
Occupation(s) Singer-songwriter, guitarist and producer
Notable instruments
Fender Telecaster

Charles William "Chuck" Prophet (born June 28, 1963) is an American singer-songwriter, guitarist and producer. A Californian, Prophet first achieved notice in the American psychedelic/desert rock group Green on Red, with whom he toured and recorded in the 1980s.[3] He has also recorded a number of solo records, and gained prominence as a musician and songwriter.

Life and work

Chuck Prophet was born in Whittier, California, United States. After recording one E.P. and eight albums with rock group Green on Red, he released his first solo record Brother Aldo on Fire Records in 1990. He has been compared to everyone from Ray Davies,[4] to Leonard Cohen,[5] Tom Petty,[6] Randy Newman[7] and Alex Chilton.[7] Prophet is also a sought-after guitarist known for his unique rhythmic yet lyrical style. He has worked as a sideman or session musician with many artists, including Kelley Stoltz, Bob Neuwirth, Kelly Willis, Aimee Mann, Warren Zevon, Jonathan Richman, Lucinda Williams and Cake. He has collaborated with songwriter Dan Penn and Jim Dickinson.[8] He records and tours with his wife Stephanie Finch, who is a singer, keyboardist and guitarist.

Prophet in the club Thumb's Up, in Yokohama, Japan

Prophet was signed to New West Records by Peter Jesperson in 2002. He made two records for New West: No Other Love and Age of Miracles. After years of mostly European and UK success, 2002’s No Other Love was a breakthrough record for Prophet stateside due to the success of the summer single "Summertime Thing" and endorsements from Lucinda Williams, who gave him the opening slot for her summer tour.[9]

Prophet was signed to Yep Roc Records in 2007.

Recorded in San Francisco and Nashville, 2007's Soap and Water received critical praise. Prophet toured Europe and North America in support of the album and appeared with his band on the Late Show with David Letterman and Last Call with Carson Daly. In order to better motivate the various musicians and engineers who were involved in the production of this album, Prophet gave them a stake in the master recordings.[10]

Prophet has contributed to several Kelly Willis records, and produced 2007's Translated From Love for Rykodisc. Willis and Prophet co-wrote six of the albums tracks and Prophet played guitar throughout.

Evangeline Recording Co. released a limited-edition work entitled Dreaming Waylon's Dreams, which he recorded in San Francisco. The record re-creates Waylon Jennings' 1975 country album Dreaming My Dreams in its entirety and features, among others, members of American Music Club and Meat Beat Manifesto. The package and booklet were printed by the legendary Bruce Licher (Savage Republic, Independent Music Project, REM fan club etc.) using a custom letterpress design on original stock. Included in the packaging is a recounting of the events surrounding the recording of the record by close friend John Murry (who also played on the record). Each piece was lovingly printed by hand on a circa 1930's printing press. And each one is numbered. Dreaming Waylon's Dreams is one of the rarest and most sought-after items in Prophet's discography. It is a limited edition of only 1000.

In 2008 Prophet co-wrote all the songs on Alejandro Escovedo's Real Animal, to which he also contributed guitar and vocals. The LP was recorded in Lexington, Kentucky and produced by noted producer Tony Visconti.

Released by Rounder Records, in 2001, Raisins in the Sun was a one-off collaboration with Jules Shear, Harvey Brooks, Paul Q. Kolderie, Jim Dickinson, Sean Slade, and Winston Watson, recorded in May 1999.

In May 2009, Prophet along with a band of musicians including Ernest "Boom" Carter headed to Mexico City to record a collection of "political songs for non political people".[11] ¡Let Freedom Ring! was released on October 27, 2009 on Yep Roc. Michael Hoinski of The Village Voice compared ¡Let Freedom Ring! to Bruce Springsteen's Born in the U.S.A., citing the recordings as "albums that manifest patriotism through disenchantment, and both rely heavily on marginalized characters to expose socioeconomic woes."

In 2009, Prophet along with Brad Jones produced Jace Everett's Red Revelations CD. Prophet co-wrote four songs and played guitar. The CD includes Everett's "Bad Things", best known as the theme song to HBO's True Blood. Prophet's song "You Did (bomp shooby doobie bomp)" is part of the True Blood (season 2) soundtrack.[12]

In January 2011, he formed the Spanish Bombs along with Chris Von Sneidern and San Francisco rhythm section The Park. The Spanish Bombs performed The Clash's LP London Calling in its entirety at the Actual Music Festival in Spain. This special project came at the invitation of curators Houston Party. This festival show was followed by a 12-date tour of Spain.[13]

February 7, 2012, was the release date of the Temple Beautiful CD, a "nuanced, insightful and passionate ode to San Francisco" on Yep Roc Records. It was met with positive reviews scoring 82 on Metacritic.

On March 3, 2013, Prophet played a Benefit Concert at The Great American Music Hall for Tom Mallon, a producer who documented much of the San Francisco Punk scene and went on to produce the early American Music Club records. Mallon is struggling with a brain tumor. Members of many seminal San Francisco bands played as well including members of American Music Club, Frightwig, Ugly Stick, Flying Color.

On September 23, 2014, Prophet's latest album, Night Surfer, was released on Yep Roc Records. The album was met with positive reviews, including a three-and-a-half out of five star rating from All Music Guide.

Songwriter

In 1996, Prophet was signed to Funzalo Music BMG Publishing and spent much of 1997 in Nashville as a staff writer. He has gone on to have his compositions and co-writes recorded by many artists including Alejandro Escovedo, Solomon Burke, Heart, Michael Grimm, Kim Carnes, Peter Wolf, Kim Richey, Carter's Chord, Jace Everett, Arc Angels, Mofro, Calvin Russell, Chris Knight and Kelly Willis. He has toured with Memphis producer and pianist Jim Dickinson, who recorded Prophet's "Hungry Town". In Nashville, Tennessee, Prophet and songwriter Kim Richey penned "I'm Gone", a top-40 country hit in 2002 for singer Cyndi Thomson.[14]

References in popular culture

The Mission Express

The "Mission Express" is a bus line that runs through Prophet's neighborhood and is the name of his current band.

The line-up:

Former members:

Selected discography

Solo

Other contributions

With Green on Red

References

  1. SongLyrics, Aidan Hawken - Fly Straight, Songwriters: ...Charles William Prophet...
  2. California Births, 1905 - 1995, Charles W. Prophet
  3. Sullivan, Denise. "Biography: Chuck Prophet". Allmusic. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  4. Allen, Jim. "Album review: Chuck Prophet – ‘¡Let Freedom Ring!’ (Yep Roc)". LimeWire. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  5. Kamin, Jeff. "Age of Miracles Review". Artistdirect. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  6. Wilson, Steve. "Chuck Prophet – Let Freedom Ring". KC Free Press. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  7. 7.0 7.1 McLeese, Don. "Sonicboomers - ALBUM OF THE WEEK". Sonic Boomers. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  8. Murry, John. "Chuck Prophet Biography". WXPN. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  9. Murry, John. "Biography". Retrieved 17 July 2010.
  10. "Press : Soap And Water". Chuck Prophet. 2008-11-12. Retrieved 2014-03-25.
  11. Hoinski, Michael. "On the Haunting Songs of Chuck Prophet". The Village Voice. Retrieved 17 July 2010.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Rogers, Jessie. "The Very Best Noise: Chuck Prophet Checks In". Tea Party Boston. Retrieved 17 July 2010.
  13. Vaziri, Aidin (17 January 2011). "Chuck Prophet doing 'London Calling'". SFGate, San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 16 January 2011.
  14. "Soap And Water". Retrieved 17 July 2010.
  15. Bezezekoff, Leigh. "Live in San Francisco, Day 3: Chuck Prophet". KEXP. Retrieved 29 June 2010.
  16. "選んで家具ソファー!". Revolutionsummerfilm.com. Retrieved 2013-06-04.

External links