Chuck Prophet

Mid Sussex Music Hall, Hassocks.

Ticket type Cost (face value)? Quantity
GENERAL ADMISSION £27.50 (£25.00)
Black Deer Live and Brighthelmstone are delighted to bring one of Americana's finest
songwriters and guitar players to Mid Sussex.

For twelve long days, Chuck Prophet waited. A stage four lymphoma diagnosis had knocked
the wind out of him, dragged him off the road and into surgery, and now here he was, a
perpetual motion machine forced to sit still, confronting his mortality for the first time as he
wondered if he’d live long enough to see the end of the year, let alone get back on tour.
“I was going through a tunnel,” he recalls. “It was dark. But I had music: music to play, music
to listen to, music to get me out of my head. Music was my savior.”
That much is plain to hear on Wake The Dead, Prophet’s extraordinary—and unlikely—new
album. Recorded with ¿Qiensave?, a band of brothers from the Central Coast farming
community of Salinas, California, the collection dives headfirst into the world of Cumbia
music, which consumed and comforted Prophet during his illness and subsequent recovery.
The songs are intoxicatingly rhythmic, with arrangements that blur the lines between
tradition and innovation, between past and present, between cultures and countries. There
are flashes of rock and roll, punk, surf, and soul, all filtered through the streets of San
Francisco and wrapped up in the rich legacy of a genre that traces its roots back hundreds of
years and thousands of miles.
“Some say this music started in the jungles of Peru and Colombia,” Prophet explains. “Then it
really caught fire in the 1960s. In fact, there was such a demand for Cumbia in Mexico that
DJs would travel to Colombia just to bring records back. Now that’s trafficking I can get
behind!”
While Cumbia’s exact origins are debated, such details are in many ways irrelevant to Wake
The Dead. Prophet approaches the music not as an academic or an historian, but as a fan with
a voracious appetite and an insatiable curiosity. “When I was growing up listening to The
Clash and their flirtations with reggae, the thing I remember most is how the music hit me,
how it made me feel. The more you listened, the more was revealed, but on the most
fundamental level, those records just felt good, and that was really important to me with this
album.”
Prophet’s illness arrived amidst a streak of more than a dozen critically acclaimed solo albums
stretching all the way back to 1990, when the California native first shifted focus from his
tenure with pioneering neo-psych band Green on Red to working under his own name. Since
then, Prophet’s songs have appeared in a slew of films and television shows, and his work has
been covered by Bruce Springsteen, Solomon Burke, Heart, and a host of others. Uncut
proclaimed him a “renaissance-rocker,” and NPR declared that “no one can turn tales from
the outer limits into catchy songs quite like Prophet does.” Decades of relentless touring
and bold artistic reinvention came to a screeching halt in 2022, though, when doctors found
a mass in Prophet’s intestine.
 “I had a lot of time to just sit and listen while I was sick,” he explains. “When I finally got to
feeling better, I started jamming with this Cumbia band called ¿Qiensave? that I’d fallen in
love with.” The immediate reaction from audiences made it clear they were on to something
special.
Like so many of life’s little joys, it’s something Prophet—who’s in full remission—appreciates
now more than ever. “It’s a good day to walk on water / Good day to swallow your pride,” he
sings in the album’s final moments. “Good day to call your mother / Oh, it’s a good day to be

alive.” Chuck will be touring the UK with members of his own band and ¿Qiensave?, playing
his classics along with tracks from the new album.      

Mid Sussex Music Hall is only 9 minutes on the train from Brighton and 51 minutes from London. 
The venue is in Hassocks train station car park and also has amble free parking.