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Tom Brown

 
Artist: Tom Brown

Worked With:

Elvis Presley, Mike Moran
  • Genres: Country
  • Instrument: Engineer

Biography

The RCA label was proud to have Tom Brown as one of its staff engineers for a period of more than three decades. Jazz fans will send him a bouquet for recording alto saxophonist and bandleader Art Pepper live at the Village Vanguard; these recordings are some of the finest in the live jazz canon, at least in terms of recording quality. He deserves another bouquet from the same crowd for putting up with the insanely demanding drummer boy wonder Buddy Rich when that bandleader, riding high with a trendy big band, decided to cut a live recording and nearly cut the engineers' throats in the process. The weirdest production Brown was a part of has got to be Carla Bley's master opus Escalator Over the Hill, four years in the making. This record's hick vocal duets by Charlie Haden and Linda Ronstadt are the contextual link to An Ozark Mountain Christmas, an example of a Brown assignment during more recent years. It seems to represent a trend, as in the ongoing tally Brown seems to have done more country & western productions than any other genre. Of course, this would depend on whether Elvis Presley, one of RCA's biggest artists, counted as country or rock & roll. Brown always thought of Presley as country, and he should have the last word on any argument in his own biography. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Tom Brown (satirist)
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Tom Brown (1662 – 18 June 1704) was an English translator and writer of satire, largely forgotten today save for a four-line gibe he wrote concerning Dr John Fell.

Brown was born at either Shifnal or Newport in Shropshire; baptismal records indicate he was christened on 1 January 1663. He took advantage of the free schooling offered in the county during his day by attending Adams' Grammar School, afterward continuing his education at Christ Church, Oxford and there meeting the college's dean, Dr Fell.

Fell was well-known as a disciplinarian, and Brown throughout his life displayed a disdain for restrictions. The legend behind Brown's most recognised work is therefore plausible: it states that Brown got into trouble while at Oxford, and was threatened with expulsion, but that Dr Fell offered to spare Brown if he could translate an epigram from Martial (I, 33, 1):

Non amo te, Sabidi, nec possum dicere quare;
Hoc tantum possum dicere, non amo te.

According to the story, Brown replied without missing a beat:

I do not love thee, Dr Fell,
The reason why I cannot tell;
But this I know, and know full well,
I do not love thee, Dr Fell.

Fell is said to have stayed Brown's dismissal from the college in admiration of this translation. However the story is of apocryphal provenance, and it is known that Brown left Christ Church without a degree, moving to Kingston upon Thames where he stayed three years as a schoolmaster, and later to London where he took up residence on Aldersgate Street in the Grub Street district.

Brown made a modest living from his writing in Latin, French and English, in addition to offering services of translation. He refrained however from ever attaching himself to a patron, and expressed contempt toward those who did so. He pursued a libertine lifestyle, and his satirical works gained him several enemies in their subjects.

His best-known works, apart from the quatrain, are probably Amusements Serious and Comical, calculated for the Meridian of London (1700) and Letters from the Dead to the Living (1702), although his writings were quite prolific. Several works of the period whose author is unknown are suspected to be his.

Toward the end of his life he began to regret the licentiousness with which he had lived it, and on his deathbed he secured from his publisher (one Sam Briscoe) a promise that any posthumously published works would be censored of "all prophane, undecent passages". The promise was promptly reneged upon.

Many of Brown's works went unpublished until his death, and the publication date of many is in question, as is his stature as a writer. Contemporary opinion was mixed; Jonathan Swift spoke quite highly of Brown's work, and indeed parts of Gulliver's Travels and other of Swift's works may have been significantly influenced by Brown's writings. On the other hand, those whom Brown mercilessly lampooned during his lifetime understandably did nothing to further his good reputation after his demise.

The 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica gives this verdict: "He was the author of a great variety of poems, letters, dialogues and lampoons, full of humour and erudition, but coarse and scurrilous. His writings have a certain value for the knowledge they display of low life in London." Presently the best description of Brown's legacy may be that of Joseph Addison, who accorded him the appellation "T-m Br-wn of facetious Memory".

Brown was buried in the grounds of Westminster Abbey.

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