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Chuck Prophet's new album, Temple Beautiful,
takes its name from a former synagogue that hosted punk-rock shows in
the late '70s and early '80s; it was next door to the temple overseen by
cult leader Jim Jones. That may sound like a grim or black-humored
reference point around which to erect an album, but with Prophet,
grimness, humor, fact and fiction mingle freely. Before anything else,
he's a guitar player with a melodically nasal voice whose phrasing
favors the whimsical and the querulous.
Over
the course of this album, Prophet takes you on a tour of San Francisco
as he's lived and dreamed it, watching Castro Street Halloween parades,
the famous local stripper Carol Doda and the San Francisco Giants-era
Willie Mays. Prophet says his album is filled with "Google-free" facts
and non-facts to suit the mythology he wants to create about the city
he's so fond of.
Courtesy of the artist
One of the ways Prophet achieves tension and
release in his songs is by contrasting the content of the lyrics with
the tone of the music. Take, for example, "White Night, Big City," about
the 1978 murder of San Francisco supervisor Harvey Milk and the riots
that followed the trial of Milk's killer, Dan White. Prophet frames his
version of that narrative with a song that has a jaunty melody, a
refrain featuring doo-wop harmonies and openhearted compassion. The
result is music whose ironies aren't cheap ones.
Ultimately, you can listen to Temple Beautiful
for the superficial catchiness of its tunes, Prophet's slashed guitar
chords and his searching, keening vocals and have a good time. And if
you want to, you can listen more closely to what he's getting at on this
album, and experience the album as one man's alternative history of
three decades of West Coast culture and politics. All that, plus a few
awfully good songs about having your heart broken.
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Comments
SEO Florida
Amazing Track.
SEO Florida
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