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Oscar Brown

 
Black Biography: Oscar Brown, Jr.

entertainer

Personal Information

Born on October 10, 1926, in Chicago, IL; died on May 29, 2005; married Irene Brown, 1948 (divorced); married Maxine Brown, 1954 (divorced); married Jean Pace, mid-1960s; children: Napoleon, Maggie, Donna, Iantha, Africa, Oscar
Education: Attended University of Wisconsin, University of Michigan, and Lincoln University.
Military/Wartime Service: US Army, mid-1950s.
Memberships: Communist Party, 1947-52; American Authors' League.

Career

Actor, director, playwright, producer, singer, writer; Secret City, Chicago, IL, radio actor, 1941; WJJD and WVON, Negro News Front, radio announcer, 1947-52; Columbia Records, singer, 1961-65; Jazz Scene USA, television host, 1962; Verve Records, singer, 1965; Atlantic Recrods, singer, 1972-73; Howard University, Washington, D.C., artist-in-residence, 1970s; From Jump Street: The Story of Black Music, PBS, host, 1980; University of California at Riverside, regents professor, early 2000s.

Life's Work

Oscar Brown Jr. was not a man easily defined. Labels like songwriter, composer, actor, singer, director, producer, playwright all fit, but not quite. He was also an activist, a visionary, and a social commentator. As influenced by the Harlem Renaissance as he was by the Civil Rights Movement, Brown had a desire to create and to communicate. "I wanted to present a picture of black culture to anyone who could hear it," the Los Angeles Times quoted him as saying. In doing so he penned over 1,000 songs, recorded 11 albums, and wrote several plays. Though he never received the recognition many felt he deserved during his life, his music and words have had a continued influence on a whole new generation of artists and activists.

Took to Airwaves as Teen

Oscar Cicero Brown Jr. was born on October 10, 1926, in Chicago, Illinois. His father, Oscar Sr., was a lawyer and real estate agent and his mother, Helen Clark Brown, taught school. Though African Americans were legally, socially, and economically second-class citizens throughout most of the country, Brown and his sister Helen enjoyed a comfortable middle-class upbringing. "I really enjoyed growing up in Chicago, you could say I was fat, dumb and happy," Brown told Black World Today. "I wasn't aware of a lot of the problems." However, Brown soon learned about activism by example. His father was a leader of the Chicago branch of the NAACP and both of his parents were active church-goers, committed to giving back to their community.

At the age of 15, Brown got his first taste of show business when he landed a role on the national radio series, Secret City. He recalled in "Legend: Moments in the Spotlight," an essay posted on the Oscar Brown Jr. Web site, "My father was an attorney and had wanted me to follow in his footsteps. However, when I obtained employment as a radio actor in high school, making sixty four dollars and sixty cents a week for only six hours of work at a time when others were making forty dollars a week for forty hours of work, the choice to get involved in the arts was a no-brainer."

Brown eventually bowed to his father's wishes and gave college a shot. During his early education, Brown had been an excellent student. "I was smart enough to have been 'double promoted' twice in grade school so I was only sixteen years old when I enrolled at the University of Wisconsin in the fall of 1943," Brown wrote in "Legend." For the next few years Brown bounced from Wisconsin to the University of Michigan to Lincoln University in Pennsylvania. With the exception of English, Brown was a failure in college. "I never got out of my college freshman year," Brown told Global Black News. "However, I was turned on to writing."

Fought Racism with Politics and Revolution

After returning to Chicago in 1947, Brown landed a broadcasting job with Chicago's first African-American radio news show, Negro News Front. It brought him face-to-face with the current events affecting the black community. "[That] sort of pivoted me," Brown told Black World Today, "it changed me around and made me not only an actor but also an activist." He became involved with the Civil Rights Congress, a movement led by Chicago activist Will Patterson that openly accused the U.S. government of genocide against black peoples. Brown also joined the Communist Party. "[It] was the only outlet available to participate in the struggle for black people," he wrote in "Legend."

At the age of 21, Brown decided to go into politics. He joined the Progressive Party and ran for Illinois State representative. "Undaunted by an overwhelming defeat, I ran again in 1952 in the Republican Primary for 1st District Congressman," he recalled in "Legend." He lost that bid as well. As Brown became more politically active, his on-air commentaries became increasingly radical. By 1953 the white station owners had had enough and Negro News Front was cancelled. By the mid-1950s the Communist Party had also had enough. "I got kicked out for being a black nationalist....We were too black for the Reds," he was quoted in Black World Today.

Over the next few years Brown served in the U.S. Army and worked for his father. He also married and divorced his first wife, Irene Hebert, and was headed towards divorce from his second wife, Maxine Fleming. Eventually he returned to his first love--writing--and started to compose songs. In order to get them heard, he began singing in local night clubs. In turning to music, he did not abandon politics. "The liberation of black people from the domination of racist whites can only be achieved by application of the necessary force. Can music provide this force? Yes, it can, due to its matchless ability to stir the human spirit," he wrote in an essay entitled "Music: The Liberating Force," published on his Web site.

Found Jazz Fame with First Album

In 1959 Brown attended the Chicago opening of Lorraine Hansberry's play, A Raisin in the Sun. There he met the playwright's husband, Robert Nemiroff, a music publisher from New York. Impressed with Brown's music, Nemiroff made an introduction to executives at Columbia Records. Columbia promptly offered Brown a recording contract. Brown was not so sure. "When they first sent me the contract for a singer, I wanted to go in as a writer," he told Global Black News. "I let a year go by before I realized that was the best offer I was going to get so I signed as a singer."

Brown's 1960 album Sin and Soul debuted to critical acclaim and made Brown a national celebrity. The 12 songs moved from hard-hitting social commentary to light-hearted humor, all bound by the rhythmic flow of classic jazz. "Bid 'Em In" offered a somber look at slave auctions delivered with a lyrical style that many critics have called a foreshadowing of rap. "Signifyin' Monkey" was a humorous reworking of an old black folk tale. "Brown Baby" was a lullaby written for his newborn son, Oscar III. It was later made famous by gospel legend Mahalia Jackson. Several songs were instrumentals by other jazz artists to which Brown added lyrics, including Mongo Santamaria's "Afro Blue," Nat Adderley's "Work Song," and Bobby Timmons' "Dat Dere."

The success of Sin and Soul introduced Brown into the world of jazz greats. Brown's performance style made him an instant sensation. "He was really a dramatist," long-time friend Joe Segal told Chicago Tribune. "He was more than a vocal artist because his shows were very easy and dramatic at the same time." Brown was soon sharing the stage with names like Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, and John Coltrane. He teamed up with drumming great Max Roach to pen lyrics for Roach's 1960 Civil Rights album, We Insist! Freedom Now Suite. In 1962 he headlined a sold-out show in London called Oscar Brown Entertains.

Produced Plays for Broadway and Gang Members

Even as Sin and Soul was cementing his fame as a singer, Brown remained a writer at heart. Making the rounds of New York's music scene he always had a copy of his musical, Kicks and Company, in hand. Dealing with racism and revolution, Kicks was both timely and riveting. Determined to produce the show on Broadway, Brown embarked on a string of fundraisers including private performances for guests from Martin Luther King to Harry Belafonte. In an unprecedented--and never repeated--display of support, NBC's Today Show dedicated a full-two hour program to Brown and Kicks. Though the play never made it to Broadway, it did have a brief run in Chicago in 1961.

In 1962 Brown moved to Los Angeles to host the television program Jazz Scene USA. There he met singer and dancer Jean Pace. The two would eventually marry and collaborate on dozens of projects during a 30-plus-year partnership. Back in Chicago, Brown wrote and produced the musical Opportunity Please Knock. It was success, not only for its music but for its performers--members of the notorious Chicago street gang, Blackstone Rangers. TheWashington Post wrote that Black originally confronted the gang members about "steppin' on my hustle, scaring my audience." Eventually he recruited them to appear in the show. The result was a reduction in gang violence and national fame. Members of the gang were invited to perform on the popular TV show The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour. Brown was also recruited by Gary, Indiana, officials to launch a talent search in that town's troubled inner-city. Among his early discoveries were five brothers known as the Jackson Five.

Brown produced several other plays during the 1960s, including Joy 66, Summer in the City, and Buck White. The latter, a musical based on themes of black power and militancy, made it to Broadway with Muhammad Ali in the title role. At the time Ali was under a government-enforced hiatus from boxing due to his refusal to join the Vietnam War draft. Meanwhile Brown continued to write and record music including the albums In a New Mood... , Between Heaven and Hell, and Tells It Like It Is!, all for Columbia. In 1965 he moved to Verve and recorded the critically hailed Mr. Oscar Goes to Washington. Like Sin and Soul, this album showcased Brown's vocal dexterity and ability to swing from politically confrontational songs such as "Brother Where Are You" and "Forty Acres and a Mule" to lighthearted humor as in "Living Double in a World of Trouble," about having two girlfriends at once.

Performed Until the End

By 1972 Brown had recorded nine albums and collaborated on dozens more. Though jazz aficionados considered him a visionary, Brown could not get a new recording contract. "I think I was a bit too political for them," he told Global Black News. Nonetheless, Brown stayed active in music and theater. He served as artist-in-residence at Howard University in Washington, D.C., where he produced Slave Song, a musical drama told in rhyme. He produced a television special, Oscar Brown Is Back, that won two Chicago Emmy awards. In 1983 his play Great Nitty Gritty debuted in Chicago, once again with local youth in the cast. Brown also made television appearances, hosting music specials such as the 13-week PBS series From Jump Street: The Story of Black Music, and guest starring on shows like Brewster Place and Roc. He also regularly performed onstage, often with his daughter, jazz singer Maggie Brown. His son Oscar III had also shared the stage with his father until his 1996 death in an auto accident.

Brown made a comeback in 1995 with the album Then and Now, a compilation of old and new songs. Despite his age, his voice was still commanding and his message still relevant. Three years later, Brown recorded the live album Live Every Minute during a tour of Europe. He was 72 at the time. Over the next few years Brown toured worldwide, headlining shows and appearing at political rallies, including several against the Iraq War. He also became an honored guest on the Russell Simmons show Def Poetry Jam. In 2003 the show Serenade the World: The Music and Words of Oscar Brown Jr. debuted to packed houses in New York. In 2004 a documentary about his life, Music Is My Life, Politics Is My Mistress, premiered.

In 2004, when asked by NPR radio host Tavis Smiley what he gets out of performing at the age of 78, Brown responded, "Same thing I got out of it at 38...people are applauding." He added, "That's the best of all possible worlds. And so, you know, the more I can keep that going...." Brown did keep it going, all the way to May 29, 2005, when he died of respiratory failure. The loss was great, but as his daughter Maggie said in a statement quoted in the Chicago Defender, "he has left a wealth of works that will continue to touch the world."

Awards

Chicago/Midwest Regional Emmy Awards (2), both for Oscar Brown Is Back In Town, 1975; City of Chicago, Senior of the Year Award, 2002; California State Legislature, "Oscar Brown Day," early 2000s; Pan African Arts Society, Gordon Parks Maverick Award, 2004; Pan African Film and Arts Festival, Lifetime Achievement Award, 2005.

Works

Selected works

    Albums
    • Sin and Soul, Columbia, 1960.
    • In a New Mood... , Columbia, 1962.
    • Between Heaven and Hell, Columbia, 1962.
    • Tells It Like It Is!, Columbia, 1963.
    • Mr. Oscar Goes to Washington, Verve, 1965.
    • Finding a New Friend, Fontana, 1966.
    • Movin' On, 32 Jazz, 1972.
    • Brother Where Are You, Atlantic, 1973.
    • Fresh, Atlantic, 1972.
    • Then and Now, Weasel, 1995.
    • Live Every Minute, Minor Music, 1998.
    Plays
    • Kicks and Company, 1961.
    • Joy 66, 1966.
    • Summer in the City, 1960s.
    • Opportunity Please Knock, 1967.
    • Slave Song, 1970s.
    • Great Nitty Gritty, 1983.

    Further Reading

    Periodicals

    • Chicago Tribune, May 31, 2005.
    • Los Angeles Times, May 31, 2005.
    • Washington Post, May 31, 2005.
    On-line
    • Oscar Brown Jr., www.oscarbrownjr.com (July 6, 2005).
    • "Oscar Brown, Jr.: The Man, His Music and His Words," Global Black News, www.globalblacknews.com/OscarBrown.html (June 12, 2005).
    • "Oscar Brown Jr., Legendary Patriarch of Culture, Dies," Chicago Defender, www.chicagodefender.com/page/local.cfm?ArticleID=925 (June 12, 2005).
    Other
    • "Oscar Brown Jr. Discusses Why He's Still Performing at 78," interview with Tavis Smiley, "The Tavis Smiley Show," National Public Radio, December 14, 2004.

    — Candace LaBalle

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    Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
    Artist: Oscar Brown, Jr.
    Top
    See Oscar Brown, Jr. Lyrics
    • Born: October 10, 1926, Chicago, IL
    • Died: May 29, 2005, Chicago, IL
    • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
    • Genres: Vocal Music
    • Instrument: Lyricist, Vocals
    • Representative Albums: "Kicks! The Best of Oscar Brown Jr.," "Sin & Soul...And Then Some," "Then and Now"
    • Representative Songs: "But I Was Cool," "Work Song," "Hazel's Hips"

    Biography

    Although rooted in jazz, singer, poet, and activist Oscar Brown, Jr. defied musical categorization throughout his long and eclectic career -- a forerunner of the political consciousness that would become predominant in soul, funk, and hip-hop in the decades to follow, his efforts to exact social change spread across the arts and even into government, spurring two unsuccessful but memorable campaigns for office. Born on Chicago's South Side on October 10, 1926, Brown was the son of a successful attorney and property broker who wanted his firstborn someday to 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, Brown 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 did not 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.") Through all this time, singing and songwriting remained little more than sidelines, but that all 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 via 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. "Brown Baby," a lullaby written for his newborn son, went on to emerge as something of a modern standard, with covers by vocalists including Mahalia Jackson and Lena Horne.

    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 television's Today Show. The show 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, Oscar Brown Entertains, he toured the U.S. and Europe, in 1962 stopping long enough to host the television series Jazz Scene USA, during taping meeting 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 stuff -- 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, IN, 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 1970s 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. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
    Wikipedia: Oscar Brown
    Top
    Oscar Brown
    Birth name Oscar Brown Jr.
    Born October 10, 1926
    Origin Chicago, Illinois, United States
    Died May 29, 2005 (aged 78)
    Genres Jazz
    Occupations Singer
    Playwright
    Poet
    Songwriter
    Instruments Vocals
    Associated acts Max Roach

    Oscar Brown, Jr (October 10, 1926May 29, 2005) was an American singer, songwriter, playwright, poet, and civil rights activist.

    He ran for office in the Illinois state legislature and U.S. Congress, both unsuccessfully.

    Contents

    Early life

    Born and raised on the south side of Chicago, he was named for his father Oscar Brown, Sr., who was a successful attorney and real estate broker. His singing debut was on the radio show Secret City at age fifteen. Brown attended Englewood High School in Chicago, the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and Lincoln University (Pennsylvania) but did not obtain a degree. He also served a stint in the U.S. Army.

    Music

    Oscar's father had intended for him to follow in his footsteps and to become a practising lawyer. While he did help his father at his practice, he ventured off into other careers, such as advertising and serving in the army in the mid-1950s. When Mahalia Jackson recorded one of his songs, he began to focus on a career in music. His first major contribution to a recorded work was a collaboration with Max Roach, We Insist! - Freedom Now, which was an early record celebrating the Black freedom movement in the United States. Columbia Records signed Oscar who was already in his mid-30's and married with 5 children[1] as a solo artist. In 1960, he released his first LP, Sin and Soul, recorded from June 20 to October 23 1960. The cover to the album included personal reviews by well-known celebrities and jazz musicians of the time, including Steve Allen, Lorraine Hansberry, Nat Hentoff, Dorothy Killgallen, Max Roach and Nina Simone (Simone would later cover his "Work Song") The album is regarded as a 'true classic'[2] for openly tackling the experiences of African-Americans with songs such as "Bid 'Em In" and "Afro-Blue". The album is also significant for Oscar's ability to take several popular jazz instrumentals and combine them with self-penned lyrics on songs like "Dat Dere", "Afro-Blue" and "Work Song". This began a trend that would continue with several other major jazz vocalists. Jon Hendricks, for example, three years later composed lyrics for the Mongo Santamaria song "Yeh Yeh" (later a hit for Georgie Fame) Bob Dorough similarly composed lyrics for Mel Torme's version of Comin' Home Baby! and musicians Larry Williams and Johnny "Guitar" Watson would also go on to compose lyrics for Cannonball Adderley's classic "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy" for Marlena Shaw. Several of the tracks from Sin and Soul were embraced by the 60's Mod movement, such as "Humdrum Blues".[3], "Work Song" and "Watermelon Man".

    The Sin and Soul album was followed by Between Heaven and Hell. The success of Sin and Soul meant that much more money was spent on production and Quincy Jones and Ralph Burns were bought in to handle the arrangements. To this day, it is the only Oscar Brown LP from his time at Columbia that has not been released on CD.

    However, Oscar was soon to fall down the pecking order at Columbia following a rearrangement of the management at the company. His third album was notable for the lack of any self-composed songs, and Columbia was finding it difficult to know how to deal with Oscar's talents. They were unsure whether he was more suited to the more middle of the road/easy listening nightclubs rather than being presented as a jazz artist.

    He was given much more creative freedom for his fourth album, and he was back to his creative best, composing songs such as "The Snake", which became a Northern Soul classic when it was covered by Al Wilson, and has featured on several adverts. Despite this return to form, and having been told by the new head of Columbia that he was high on the companies' priorities, his contract at Columbia was not renewed.

    Humanitarian work

    He founded The Oscar Brown, Jr. H.I.P. Legacy Foundation to carry on his work. But his first attempt at mounting a major musical stage show in New York City was Kicks & Co. (c. 1960). Host Dave Garroway turned over an entire broadcast of the Today show to Brown to perform numbers from the show and try to raise the necessary funds to launch it on the stage. As with virtually all of Brown's theatrical endeavors, the public was not won over sufficiently to allow financial breakeven despite acclaim by some critics. (His longest-running relative success, thanks to participation by Muhammad Ali, was Big-Time Buck White.)

    Kicks & Co. is set on an all-African-American college campus in the south, during the early days of attempted desegregation. The character Mr. Kicks is an emissary of Satan sent to try to derail these efforts, in which the play's protagonist, Ernest Black, has become involved. Another notable musical show, Joy, saw two incarnations (in 1966 and 1969) and again addressed social issues of the time. Appearing with Oscar were his wife, Jean Pace, and the Brazilian singer/accordionist Sivuca. RCA released the original cast recording around 1970 (long out of print).

    Publications

    Brown wrote at least 1,000 songs (only 125 have been published), twelve albums, and over a dozen musical plays. Paperback book: WHAT IT IS—POEMS AND OPINIONS OF OSCAR BROWN JR., Oyster Knife Publishing (Chicago, IL, USA), 2005, 102 pgs., edited by Arthur Ade Amaker and Oscar Brown, Jr.: includes lyrics to some of his better-known songs as well as lyrics to songs Brown never got to record.

    Albums

    • Max Roach: Freedom Now Suite (c. 1959)--lyricist for songs performed by Abbey Lincoln
    • Sin and Soul... and Then Some (1960)--available on CD
    • Between Heaven and Hell (1962)--out of print LP [alternate takes of some tunes appear on Sin and Soul CD]
    • Oscar Brown, Jr. Tells It Like It Is/In a New Mood (1962/63)--two original LP releases combined on single CD
    • "Mr. Oscar Brown, Jr. Goes to Washington" (1964) [live nightclub recording]--available on CD
    • "Finding A New Friend" (w/Luiz Henrique) (1966)-- out of print LP
    • "Joy" (1970)--long out of print LP
    • "Movin' On" (early 1970s)--available on CD
    • "Fresh" (early 1970s)--previously available on CD, apparently out of print
    • "Brother Where Are You" (mid-1970s)--as above for availability
    • "Then & Now" (1995)--released on CD, may be available
    • "Live Every Minute" (1998) [backed by German NDR Big Band]--available on import CD]]]]

    Musicals

    • "Kicks & Co."
    • "Oscar Brown, Jr. Entertains" (one-man show in London, UK)
    • "Lyrics of Sunshine and Shadow"
    • "Summer in the City"
    • "Opportunity Please Knock"
    • "Joy '66"; "Joy '69"
    • "Big-Time Buck White"
    • "Slave Song"
    • "Oscar Brown, Jr.'s Back in Town" (won two local Emmys for Chicago TV)
    • "Great Nitty Gritty"

    Songs

    • "The Snake"
    • "Work Song" (lyrics to Nat Adderley's music)
    • "All Blues" (lyrics to Miles Davis' music)
    • "Dat Dere" (lyrics to Bobby Timmons' music)
    • "Afro Blue" (lyrics to Mongo Santamaria's music, sometimes recorded by others without crediting the lyricist)
    • "Signifyin’ Monkey"
    • "Forty Acres and a Mule"
    • "Brother Where Are You"
    • "Brown Baby"
    • "World Full of Gray"
    • "But I Was Cool"
    • "The Tree and Me"

    Media appearances

    • Negro Newsfront (1940s), radio show
    • The Tonight Show with Steve Allen (c. 1960)
    • The Today Show with Dave Garroway (c. 1960)
    • Jazz Scene U.S.A. (1960s), television show--Host
    • From Jump Street: The Story of Black Music (early 1980s)--13-part public TV series, USA [host]
    • Def Poetry Season 2 (2002) [poet]

    References

    1. ^ Liner Notes for Sin and Soul, by Robert Barron Nemiroff
    2. ^ http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:fbfrxql5ld0e
    3. ^ The track is included in the Ace records series Mod Jazz, who describe the song as a 'Mod anthem'; http://www.acerecords.co.uk/content.php?page_id=59&release=4587.

    External links


     
     
    Learn More
    Movin' On (1972 Album by Oscar Brown)
    Anthology (2003 Album by Phil Upchurch)
    Sin & Soul...And Then Some (1960 Album by Oscar Brown, Jr.)

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