Austin Chronicle - Live Shots (October 6, 2000)
BY JIM CALIGIURI


Chuck Prophet at the Cactus Cafe, September 26


Chuck Prophet has quite a few friends among the musicians of Austin. How else
does one explain the large turnout of locals like Alejandro Escovedo, Beaver Nelson,
Ethan Azarian, the Derailers' Mark Horn, Lisa Mednick and Kevin Carroll among
others, when the Cactus was less than half full. Perhaps the Bay Area-based guitarist
was spurred on by the support of like-minded artists, maybe not. Either way, Prophet
and his trio of backing musicians, including longtime companion Stephanie Finch on
keyboards and vocals, performed an emotionally charged evening of songs and
stories.

With a shaggy blond mane and similar stature, Prophet recalls Tom Petty, but
where head Heartbreaker sings in broad strokes, Prophet meanders a bit. From the
swampy sounds of opener "La Paloma" and the Farfisa beat of "The Hurting
Business," the title of Prophet's swell Hightone debut which made up the majority of
the night's material, to the dizzying guitar workouts that punctuated several songs and
the sultry soul of "Dyin' All Young," the singer-songwriter-guitarist took chances at
almost every turn. They felt less like risks and more like natural possibilities with

Prophet's sure-handed delivery and dominating stage presence, but his problem
remains the same: attracting an audience. How do you sell something that truly slides
between the cracks, between soul, rock, folk, blues, and country? His music cuts and
pastes from such a broad palette that describing it accurately is elusive. Still, his
sense of melody and hooks is unmistakable. Songs like "Diamond Jim" and "You
Been Gone" were fiery and loud, yet despite their electricity, they possessed an
undercurrent of folk music; Prophet is one of us, alright, he just uses a different way
to communicate the time-worn emotions of love, loss, and forgiveness. The musicians
in the audience undoubtedly understood this as they soaked up some of Prophet's
energy. The rest of us witnessed a unique performer doing his best to help us
understand that music is best when it can't be described and that sometimes the
square peg does fit into that round hole.