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Hello Folks. This is Chuck, encouraging you to sign up for our almost-monthly newsletter (plus the occasional free tix).

Your info will be safe with us. We are very discreet. Power to the people right on.

NEWS

TEXAS TOAST

Folks,

We’re back from our Euro tour. We came, we saw, we got up and played twenty-four shows in twenty-five days or something, and we still somehow managed to avoid using the kettle in the room. (Dan Stuart suggests you stay away from those electric room kettles. He claims people boil their underwear in them.)

Sounds pretty serious.

Seriousness aside, the band is playing great and things have been going pretty well. (How well, Chuck?) Well, let me put it this way: if you can afford to have your clothes dry-cleaned, then you’re not doing too badly, right? I love dry cleaning. I’d get my socks dry-cleaned if I thought I could.

Even though I’m typing this at 4:00 AM, I am starting to feel like my old self again (whoever that is) after this last run of shows. Haven’t had the time to feel homesick. I am sure I will enjoy getting back out there, but there is no homesickness quite as strong as the homesickness when you are still at home but know you are about to leave. But this having your body clock turned around upside down is kind of cool. There have been times where I get so restless I jump out of bed at 4:00 AM. And I’ve even gone so far as to walk to my office. Which is kind of an experience. I mean, walking through the Tenderloin at 4:30 AM? I recommend it highly.

Meanwhile, The Bobby Fuller Died For Your Sins Tour continues. We’re headed to Texas this weekend for shows in Houston and Austin. Two nights at the Continental Club in Austin. And dig this: EARLY SHOW AND LATE SHOW ON SATURDAY. We’re always excited to play in Austin at our home away from home, the Continental Club. We all dig playing the Continental.

We heart Texas. There’s more to Texas than Texas football. Austin is a great place to eat a taco. Come join us. Bring home a rattlesnake bolo tie! Eat some Texas toast. Climb aboard an armadillo! Or better yet go surfing. I’m not kidding. Dig this place: a wave machine in the middle of Texas: http://nlandsurfpark.com

Meanwhile in Merchville: we need a very rich fan to order 1,000 copies right now. Bobby Fuller Died for Your Vinyl. At the everyday low price of $19.99. HERE: http://www.theconnextion.com/chuckprophet/chuckprophet_index.cfm?ArtistID=174

What are you waiting for?

Onwards,

–CP

GIGSVILLE USA:

12/6/2017 - Houston TX Coffeehouse Live at St. Andrew’s w/The Mission Express

12/8/2017 - Austin TX Continental Club w/The Mission Express

12/9/2017 - Austin TX Continental Club w/The Mission Express

12/28/2017 - LA - Bootleg w/The Mission Express w/ Jesse Malin supporting!!!

12/29/2017 - SF - Chapel w/The Mission Express w/ Jesse Malin supporting!!!

12/30/2017 - Sebastopol - Hopmonk w/The Mission Express

2/16/18 - Ponte Vedra FL Ponte Vedra Music Hall w/The Bottle Rockets!!!

2/21/18 - Tampa FL Skipper’s Smokehouse w/The Mission Express

2/22/2018 - Tampa FL WMNF Tropical Heatwave Cruise w/The Mission Express

2/23/2018 - Tampa FL WMNF Tropical Heatwave Cruise w/The Mission Express

2/24/2018 - Tampa FL WMNF Tropical Heatwave Cruise w/The Mission Express

2/25/2018 - Tampa FL WMNF Tropical Heatwave Cruise w/The Mission Express

2/26/2018 - Tampa FL WMNF Tropical Heatwave Cruise w/The Mission Express

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GIGSVILLE: Get up to the minute details on live shows here: http://chuckprophet.com/gigs/

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Bobby Fuller Died For Your Sins

Chuck Prophet, Bobby Fuller Died For Your Sins

★★★★☆

Download this: Bobby Fuller Died For Your Sins; In The Mausoleum; Post-War Cinematic Dead Man Blues; Alex Nieto

Master guitarist and accomplished songwriter Chuck Prophet is on top form with this latest collection of reflections and rejections. The pervasive tone of zeitgeist fatigue crystallises in “Post-War Cinematic Dead Man Blues”; but it’s there from the start, in the assertive anthem about the potency of cheap music, personified in the mysterious death of Bobby (“I Fought The Law”) Fuller in 1966: in the manner of Alex Chilton, Prophet somehow manages to be both wistful and euphoric at once. He’s clearly an encyclopaedic master of musical form, piling up influences across these tracks, notably the terse, hypnotic twitch of Alan Vega’s space-age rockabilly that drives “In The Mausoleum”. But the most effective borrowing applies the “Rockin’ In The Free World” riff to the police killing of “Alex Nieto”, which draws strength from Prophet’s repeatedly returning to the victim’s character: “Alex Nieto was a pacifist, a 49ers fan”. Powerful and personal, it’s a persuasive protest tribute straight from the heart.

LIKE RIDING SHOTGUN DOWN SOME MYTHIC HIGHWAY

“Protest songs that leave you more pissed than you were before and half-told tales that leave you curiouser and curiouser” - Robert Christgau

“The excellent songs keep coming.” – Los Angeles Times

“Ultimately, every track on this masterfully sculpted set courses with life-affirming pop-rock passion” - Classic Rock

“Everywhere ageless rock’n’roll brio comes freighted with careworn sagacity.” - Mojo

“There’s something elegantly and acerbically wasted about Chuck Prophet.’’ A-—Entertainment Weekly

Folk and Rock (France) Album of the month ****

“The overall mood is bright, hovering somewhere between the lyrical directness of Jonathan Richman and the West Coast energy of Tom Petty.” - Uncut

“Prophet’s new album feels like riding shotgun down some mythic highway with a rock true believer.” – NPR, First Listen

“Bobby Fuller may have died for your sins, but Chuck Prophet is freakin’ god!” - Jim Caligiuri, The Austin Chronicle

“A fresh, full-color take on the darker side of all things Golden State.” – NPR, Heavy Rotation

“He’s a throwback who believes two guitars, bass, drums and a sense of humor make for great music, and he’s right.” – Associated Press

“He has recorded over a dozen solo albums that just keep getting better.” – NPR, World Cafe

“The music attests to the enduring resilience of rock-and-roll itself.” – Philadelphia Inquirer

“Memorable melodies, exuberant playing, detailed lyrics and unflinching honesty…yet another example of not just Prophet’s love of rock and roll, but an ability to create it with the spirit and intensity of the best.” – American Songwriter

“Prophet’s voice has grown richer with time and his melodies sharper.” – San Francisco Chronicle

“If you’re as moved by music as Chuck Prophet, you’ll want to listen to his new album.”– KEXP

“He calls this collection of tunes ‘California Noir,’ and the album delivers on that promise with songs that explore the deteriorating American dream and all its faded glory.” – Magnet

“Smart, honest and thoughtful…Prophet has rarely been better as a vocalist, finding the right tone on every track.” – AllMusic

“When Chuck Prophet releases a new album, it’s never a bad year for rock and roll.” – No Depression

“Prophet’s Ray Davies-like vocals merge with the blistering chops of the Mission Express to create a rousing, thought-provoking mélange of the highs and lows of society.” – Elmore

“Chuck Prophet is a big time rock and roll star in a country that has forgotten that it needs big time rock and roll stars.” – PopMatters

“What could be sad reflections becomes deliverance by the power, emotion and release of rock ‘n’ roll.” – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

“Prophet has an effortless feel for pop music’s power, fun and grace.” – Lexington Herald-Leader

“There is morbidity in ‘Bobby Fuller Died For Your Sins,’ but to hear Prophet tell it, it sounds like a blast.” – Glide Magazine

“Chuck Prophet continues his creative roll.” – The Guardian

“Hovering somewhere between the lyrical directness of Jonathan Richman and the West Coast energy of Tom Petty.” – Uncut

“Prophet brings heft, heart, and honesty to songs with dynamic melodies and lyrical depth.” – The Daily Country

“A reminder of how potent straightforward melodic pop/rock can be. That is not, in any way, meant to suggest that this is simple music; the themes on Bobby Fuller Died For Your Sins are deep.” – The Record Collector

“And what if Prophet was Connie Britton? ‘My skin would smell like berries,’ he sings. Sweet”. - The Washington Times

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Old Friends (LYRICS)

What Makes the Money Dance? (LYRICS)

Summertime Thing (LYRICS)

That’s How Much I Need Your Love (LYRICS)

Elouise (LYRICS)

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GIGSVILLEmore »

Thu May 16 Moe’s Alley
Santa Cruz, CA
Fri May 17 Hipnic XV
Big Sur, CA
Sat May 25 Sweetwater Music Hall
Mill Valley, CA
Fri Jun 07 Hotel Congress Plaza
Tucson, AZ
Sat Jun 08 Roger Clyne & The Peacemakers’ Circus Mexicus 25 Aniversario
Puerto Peñasco, SO