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Mason Proffit

 
Artist:

Mason Proffit

  • Formed: 1969, Chicago, IL
  • Disbanded: 1973
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Wanted! Mason Proffitt", "Rockfish Crossing", "Come & Gone"
  • Representative Songs: "Walk on Down the Road", "Voice of Change", "Children"

Biography

Mason Proffit is widely considered by obscure rock aficionados to be one of the best bands who never made it to the big time. Although they are mostly overlooked today, along with the Byrds, Michael Nesmith, and others, they helped to invent country-rock.

The band was formed in 1969 by members of the recently disbanded Sounds Unlimited, a tough Chicago garage band with a well-developed melodic sense. John and Terry Talbot were the main movers behind Sounds Unlimited and in Mason Proffit they took the vocal harmonies they had developed in Sounds Unlimited and went in a folk and country direction. They were among the first to combine the energy and instrumentation of rock with the subject matter and twang of country. Perhaps the reason they were not hailed as visionaries at the time is that their first three records came out on small labels and didn't sell many copies. 1969's Wanted! Mason Proffit and 1971's Movin' Toward Happiness were released by Happy Tiger and 1971's Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream was released by Ampex. The band's fortunes took a positive turn in 1972 when they were signed by Warner Bros. and released Rockfish Crossing. They used their Warner Bros. connection to tour with the Grateful Dead but it didn't help them with the record buying public. In 1973 they released one last album, Bareback Rider, and then broke up. In 1974 Warner Bros. released a two-record set of Mason Proffit's Happy Tiger recordings. This has been reissued on CD by One Way and is a great place to start if you want to discover the roots of country rock.

In the years after the breakup of Mason Proffit, the Talbot brothers shifted their attention to Christian music, recording albums for Warner Bros., Sparrow, and other labels. ~ Tim Sendra, All Music Guide
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Mason Proffit

Top
Mason Proffit
Origin Chicago, Illinois, USA
Genres Folk rock
Years active 1969 - 1973
Labels Happy Tiger, Ampex, Warner
Website www.masonproffit.com
Former members
Terry Talbot, John Michael Talbot, Tim Ayers, Art Nash, Ron Schuetter, Bruce Kurnow, Bill Cunningham[1]

Mason Proffit was a folk rock band from Chicago, Illinois that released five albums between 1969 and 1973.[2]

Contents

History

Brothers Terry Talbot and John Michael Talbot played together in several local bands around Indianapolis, Indiana and later in Chicago. After their group Sounds Unlimited disbanded, in 1969 they formed Mason Proffit with a focus on the emerging blend of folk, country and rock that would come to be called country rock.[3] Older brother Terry's "Two Hangmen" from their first album Wanted... Mason Proffit, became a regional hit and helped their second album, Movin' Toward Happiness, chart on the Billboard 200. In 1972, the band signed to Warner Bros. Records and continued touring, performing up to 300 concerts each year. Some of Mason Proffit's opening acts during that time included The Doobie Brothers, Steely Dan, John Denver, Mac Davis, and Buffalo Springfield. Their country-rock-bluegrass style was innovative yet difficult to place in a marketing genre. Their live shows were high energy. And once, while jamming with The Scruggs Review, John Hartford and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Earl Scruggs called John Talbot "the best banjo player I've ever heard." Warner Bros. re-released their two first two albums as a compilation called Come And Gone plus two more discs, Rockfish Crossing and Bareback Rider. Mason Proffit disbanded when brothers John and Terry Talbot left the band and began performing as a duo. Warners then released The Talbot Bros., the first of three duo albums with the remaining two released on Sparrow Records. Sparrow eventually re-issued the first Talbot Bros. album, minus the track "Moline Truckin."

After the break-up, the Talbot brothers began to record contemporary Christian music on Sparrow Records, earning themselves a Grammy Award nomination and several Dove Award nominations. The Talbot brothers opened for The Eagles on a national tour.

Terry Talbot (possibly Ron Schutter) 1971
John Talbot 1971

Discography

Year Title Chart Position Label Number
1969 Wanted Happy Tiger 1009
1971 Movin' Toward Happiness 177 1019
Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream 186 Ampex A-10138
1972 Rockfish Crossing Warner Bros. BS-2657
1973 Bare Back Rider 198 BS-2704
1974 Come And Gone * 2S-2746

* double album reissue of Wanted and Movin' Toward Happiness

References

  1. ^ "NME Artists - Mason Proffit". Muze UK LTD. 2008. http://www.nme.com/artists/mason-proffit. Retrieved 2009-03-24. 
  2. ^ Sendra, Tim. "Mason Proffit Biography". Allmusic. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:k9fpxq85ldje~T1. Retrieved 2009-03-22. 
  3. ^ Krakow, Steve. Interview with Nick Digilio. Mason Proffit. The Secret History of Chicago Music. WGN Chicago, Illinois. 2008-10-23. Retrieved on 2009-03-22.

External links


 
 
Learn More
Bare Back Rider (1973 Album by Mason Proffit)
Rockfish Crossing (1972 Album by Mason Proffit)
Come & Gone (1974 Album by Mason Proffit)

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