Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - June 17, 2012, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE 14
ENTERTAINMENT A14 SUNDAY, JUNE 17, 2012
In this 10- part series, we pay tribute to
the rock ' n' roll- era visionaries who came
up with the musical vocabulary we're still
hearing today - the ones without whom the
language of rock ' n' roll would not sound the
same.
M ONTREAL - How fitting that
Papa's Got a Brand New Bag ,
James Brown's 1965 revelation,
opens full strength with a bullish blast of
brass that leaves the listener gasping for
air.
The effect of hearing that presciently
titled manifesto in all its newness can
only be imagined by a younger generation.
Even people now in their 50s can barely
remember it first- hand. But history still
speaks loudly: with that small piece of
wax, Brown was cancelling the old rules
and drawing up a new plan. It would be
only a few years before the Godfather of
Soul's syncopated, interlocking rhythms,
voice- as- percussion, turned- around beat
and staccato guitar chords would be codified
as the funk we still hear in today's
rock and rhythm and blues.
That 45- rpm turning point didn't
exactly come out of the blue. The previous
year, Out of Sight had cleared a daring
path for it, while a whole new audience
- young white kids - got a chance to
see Brown, in all his live glory, make the
mighty Rolling Stones look a bit silly by
preceding them in the concert film The
T. A. M. I. Show. ( To this day, it's impossible
to watch that Brown performance on DVD
without carrying a grin on your face for
about three days.)
The Augusta, Ga., native's incendiary
live act, honed to perfection as he became
the Hardest- Working Man in Show Business,
was almost as influential as his
music.
His 1963 Live at the Apollo album still
places highly on many lists of all- time
greatest live recordings.
Michael Jackson took notice. When the
pint- sized singer auditioned for Motown's
Berry Gordy Jr. at the age of 9 as part
of the Jackson 5, he performed Brown's
I Got the Feeling and lifted Soul Brother
No. 1' s moves lock, stock and barrel.
Jacko would later add his own, effective
but never better.
" Nobody has influenced me more than
this man right here," Jackson said tearily
before giving Brown a lifetime achievement
award at a Black Entertainment
Television ceremony in 2003.
Brown's disciples who weren't practising
splits and slides in front of a mirror
were studying the records. It was a
learning process that extended through
the next three decades as soul singers,
funk- rockers, rappers and contemporary
R& B artists worried less about songcraft
and melody to embrace the rhythm- iseverything
principle posited by Brown,
who sometimes based astonishing tracks
like Cold Sweat on only one chord. Sly and
the Family Stone, Parliament- Funkadelic,
Prince and Public Enemy all kissed their
Godfather's ring.
And while hip hop is outside the purview
of this list, it's still worth noting
that Brown is considered by many to be
the most sampled artist of all time, with
his 1970 record Funky Drummer alone
providing a hugely influential drum break
on recordings by other artists that were
released well after Brown's own career
went into decline in the 1980s.
Like all great bandleaders, Brown was
surrounded by brilliant musicians such
as Bobby Byrd, Maceo Parker and Clyde
Stubblefield, who made serious contributions
to the sound that changed it all.
These men must have their due.
But it's the man at the microphone that
even today's hottest artists still revere.
Check out Janelle Mon�e's opening moves
- and some of her others - in the Tightrope
video.
At an Experience Music conference in
2010, Mon�e, 26, said she wasn't inspired
by the music of her youth, so she went
back and studied the masters. " To me,
James Brown was funk, was rock, was
soul, all those genres," Mon�e said. " I got
everything I needed from him."
A planet full of other rhythm- obsessed
disciples can nod vigorously in agreement.
- The Montreal Gazette
By Bernard Perusse
Who wrote
THE BOOK OF ROCK?
No. 7:
James
Brown
Known as the
Godfather of Soul ,
Brown was
a major influence
on music with
his rhythmis-
everything
principle
KEY TRACKS:
1. I Got You ( I Feel Good)
2. Papa's Got a Brand
New Bag
3. Cold Sweat Part 1 and
Part 2
4. Say It Loud - I'm
Black and I'm Proud
5. Get Up ( I Feel Like
Being a) Sex Machine
Trevor Payne
on James Brown:
IN the mid-' 60s, dancing was all the
rage. When records like I Got You
( I Feel Good) came out, this was a
brand new sound to dance to. Like
the big- band era of the ' 40s, the
focus was again on the beat and the
danceable aspects of the song.
When I think of James Brown,
I think of a dancer first, an entertainer
second. He knew he was a
brilliant dancer. And he had the
ability to write the type of lyric that
best showcased his dancing.
He was able to take his position
and the level of acceptance he had
achieved and use it as one part
of his career to focus on trying to
influence not only blacks, but just
about any teenager or preteen who
had thoughts about the fast life and
the easy life. He focused on the
importance of an education. Songs
like I Don't Want Nobody to Give
Me Nothing ( Open Up the Door,
I'll Get It Myself) and songs about
staying in school, I think that was
very honourable.
The message rang through
anywhere his music was popular,
which was worldwide. We have
many, many artists - not only
musicians, but in all the arts - and
people in education and in the ministry
and even in politics that were
pleading with kids to get an education,
so I wouldn't want to give him
credit for being the originator of
that. But he wore it very well.
- Trevor Payne is the director of
the Montreal Jubilation Gospel
Choir.
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