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Mason Proffit - Come & Gone (CD)

Come & Gone
$10.99
5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: Come & Gone

Release Date:05/13/2008
Label:One Way Records Inc
UPC:046633363822

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User Reviews: Come & Gone

  • Overall:

    thought provoking music still needed

    By BrianH  May 28, 2000

    <EOM>

Pro Reviews: Come & Gone

  • All Music Guide

    After Mason Proffit signed to Warner Bros. Records, the label reissued the band's first two albums, Wanted and Moving Toward Happiness, as a double-LP set under the title Come Gone. "Hear the voice of change," commanded the Talbot brothers at the opening, and the song, "Voice of Change," was both a political statement calling out to President Nixon's "silent majority" and a statement of purpose from the band. Like their peers on the West Coast, the Midwestern Talbots attempted to merge the musical and social concerns of the folk-rock movement with elements of traditional country. But they were a bit more Western-styled than the Flying Burrito Brothers and less of a good-time outfit than Poco. The music took off from folk and country sources into progressive rock, the pedal steel guitar and fiddle augmented here and there by strings, while the brothers' tenor harmonies gave the group a distinctive vocal sound. Mason Proffit wanted to change musical tastes and political beliefs at the s...ame time. They lamented the plight of Native Americans in "Flying Arrow," and while they could pick a mean hoedown on "Old Joe Clark," their version somehow managed to express anti-war sentiments. They recognized the connection between the cowboy myth and the independent spirit of truck drivers, and they mixed it all in with a sort of primitive Christianity. In this, they were very much of their time. Mike Cameron's "Good Friend of Mary's" fit into the Jesus cult that identified the Christian savior as a proto-hippie, preaching peace and love while wandering the country in long hair and sandals, and the Talbots sang it with their warm tenor harmony in complete sincerity. Such music wasn't going to make it far out of the early 1970s, but in 1973 it remained appealing. - William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Mason Proffit

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... Read more