Thursday, 10 October 2024

Oscar Brown Jr born 10 October 1926

Oscar Brown Jr. (October 10, 1926 – May 29, 2005) was an American singer, songwriter, playwright, poet, civil rights activist, and actor. Brown discovered The Jackson 5. Aside from his career, Brown ran unsuccessfully for office in both the Illinois state legislature and the U.S. Congress. Brown wrote many songs (125 have been published), 12 albums, and more than a dozen musical plays. 

Born on Chicago's South, Brown was the son of a successful attorney and property broker who wanted his firstborn to someday assume control of the family business; instead, Brown was drawn to writing and performing, and by 15 was a regular on writer Studs Terkel's radio program Secret City. After skipping two grades, he entered the University of Wisconsin at 16, but finding the world of academia little to his liking, he returned to broadcasting, and in 1944 was tapped to host Negro Newsfront, the nation's first Black news radio broadcast. Dubbed "America's first Negro newscaster," he relinquished the gig in 1948 to run for the Illinois state legislature on the Progressive Party ticket -- he didn't win, and spent the remainder of the decade working on writer/producer Richard Durham's Black Radio Days series, followed by a two-year stint in the U.S. Army. 

Though a card-carrying Communist, in 1952 Brown mounted an unsuccessful campaign for U.S. Congress on the Republican ticket, aligning himself with the right wing solely to get his name on the ballot. (He resigned from the Communist Party in 1956, declaring himself "just too Black to be red.") All this time, singing and songwriting remained little more than sidelines, but all that changed in 1958, when Brown attended the opening of Lorraine Hansberry's landmark play A Raisin in the Sun -- there he met Hansberry's husband, the New York City music publisher Robert Nemiroff, and their fledgling friendship soon yielded a record deal with Columbia. 

In 1960, Brown collaborated with Max Roach on the legendary bop drummer's trenchant Civil Rights project We Insist! Freedom Now Suite, soon followed by his solo debut, Sin & Soul. Launched after an extended residency at the famed Village Vanguard, the record featured readings of popular jazz instrumentals like Nat Adderley's "Work Song" and Mongo Santamaria's "Afro Blue" with new, socially charged lyrics penned by Brown himself. " 

                                    

The creative and commercial success of Sin & Soul made Brown a star, and after writing lyrics for Miles Davis' classic "All Blues," he reunited with Hansberry and Nemiroff for Kicks & Co., a stage musical that earned Brown an unheard-of two-hour appearance on NBC's Today Show. The musical nevertheless closed shortly after its preview series at Chicago's McCormick Place in 1961, and after reworking some of the material to create a one-man show, he toured the U.S. and Europe in 1962, stopping long enough to host the television series Jazz Scene USA. During the taping, he met his future wife, singer/dancer Jean Pace. 

Through his concert appearances and LPs, including 1963's Tells It Like It Is! and 1965's Mr. Oscar Brown, Jr. Goes to Washington, he kept his social and political beliefs front and center, refusing to accept the common wisdom that mainstream audiences wanted no part of such things -- with Pace, he wrote and directed a series of stage shows casting teens from Chicago's impoverished neighborhoods, and the most famous of the couple's collaborations, 1967's Opportunity Please Knock, was even produced in conjunction with the Blackstone Rangers youth gang. The Browns' work with underprivileged youth also earned a 1968 invitation from Gary, Indiana mayor Richard Hatcher to helm a summer talent project that was a springboard for then-unknowns the Jackson 5 and actor/singer Avery Brooks. 

After relocating to San Francisco in 1969, Brown and Pace transformed the stage comedy Big Time Buck White into a musical that, upon making the leap to Broadway, starred boxing legend Muhammad Ali in the title role. Brown spent much of the '70s as an artist-in-residence teaching musical theater at Washington, D.C.'s Howard University, New York City's Hunter College, and Chicago's Malcolm X College. In 1972, after a seven-year hiatus from the recording studio, he delivered Where Are You?, followed by a pair of releases for Atlantic: 1973's Brother Where Are You? and 1975's Fresh. 

Also in 1975, he starred in the revived Evolution of the Blues and starred in a Chicago television special, Oscar Brown Is Back in Town, which earned a pair of local Emmy Awards. Brown was next tapped to host the acclaimed 1980 PBS series From Jump Street: The Story of Black Music, and went on to appear in network series including Brewster Place and Roc. His first album in two decades, Then and Now, appeared on Weasel Disc in 1995, and in 2001 he was the subject of a documentary, Music Is My Life, Politics My Mistress. 

Brown died from complications from a blood infection on May 29, 2005.    (Edited from article by Jason Ankeny @ AllMusic)

4 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Oscar Brown Jr. – Kicks! The Best Of Oscar Brown Jr.(2004 BGP)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/dDvfJ

1 Mr. Kicks
2 Work Song
3 The Snake
4 Straighten Up And Fly Right
5 Humdrum Blues
6 Signifying Monkey
7 It Ain't Necessarily So
8 Afro Blue
9 Dat Dere
10 Hazel's Hips
11 Watermelon Man
12 Jeannine
13 Tall Like Pine
14 Sixteen Tons
15 But I Was Cool
16 One For My Baby
17 Opportunity Please Knock
18 All Blues
19 Excuse Me For Living
20 Work Song
21 When Malindy Sings
22 Elegy (Plain Black Boy)
23 The Tree And Me

The first overview of the essential recordings of Oscar Brown Jr on Columbia. This compilation includes tracks from all four of his Columbia albums, including seven tracks from his first, the acknowledged classic "Sin And Soul". Oscar was a pioneer of protest songwriting and he was a key figure in the early civil rights movement, as reflected in his lyrics. Many of his songs are famous in their own right - with mod and R&B clubbers especially fond of ‘Humdrum Blues’ - and his songs ‘Work Song’ and ‘The Snake’ have become standards. This CD includes the original, superior versions.

A big thank you goes to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday singer and also to Bob Haldeman for the loan of above album at short notice.

thanksloads said...

Thank you for posting

T.G. said...

Thanks a lot, especially for this one, it's phantastic, also the biography! The first time I heard Oscar Brown Jr. was with The song "Brother where are you?" Very amazing!

Rob Kopp said...

Thanks Bob, Denis and Bob