Mason Proffit - Movin' Toward Happiness (Reissue) (1971/2006)

  • 05 Apr, 09:17
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Artist:
Title: Movin' Toward Happiness
Year Of Release: 1971/2006
Label: Wounded Bird Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Country Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 36:29
Total Size: 98/260 Mb (scans)
WebSite:

Mason Proffit - Movin' Toward Happiness (Reissue) (1971/2006)


Tracklist:

01. Michael Dodge — 3:01
02. Hard Luck Woman — 2:59
03. Children — 2:54
04. Hokey Joe Pony — 2:27
05. Flying Arrow — 3:33
06. Old Joe Clark — 4:04
07. Let Me Know Where You’re Goin’ — 2:31
08. Melinda — 3:41
09. Good Friend Of Mary’s — 2:48
10. He Loves Them — 3:35
11. Everybody Was Wrong — 5:21

Line-up::
Terry Talbot – electric & acoustic guitars, fiddle, piano, vocals
John Michael Talbot — electric guitar, steel guitar, dobro guitar, banjo, vocals
Tim Ayres — bass
Ron Schuetter — guitar, vocals
Art Nash – drums, percussion

Based in Chicago, Mason Proffit played a style of country-rock that owed less to the more pop-oriented style of L.A. bands like Poco than it did to the newly bluegrass-happy Grateful Dead of American Beauty and its emerging offshoot, the New Riders of the Purple Sage. Despite the pedal steel guitar, fiddle, banjo, and Dobro, the Talbot brothers, who led the group, were less about a new Nashville than about a fusion of the Old West with hippiedom. 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 antiwar sentiments. They recognized the connection between the cowboy myth and the independent spirit of truck drivers, and they managed to mix 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 emerging Jesus cult that identified the Christian savior as a kind of 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 '70s, but in 1971 it was perfectly appealing, and Movin' Toward Happiness managed to make the national charts despite being released on the band's own label, suggesting that they had the potential to appeal beyond a cult.


  • mufty77
  •  13:20
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Many thanks for lossless.