James Joseph Brown, Jr. was an American recording artist and musician. One of the founding fathers of funk music and a major figure of 20th century popular music and dance, he is often referred to as "The Godfather of Soul". 
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Born: May 3, 1933, Barnwell 
Died: December 25, 2006, Atlanta 
Movies and TV shows: The Blues Brothers, Blues Brothers 2000, Going My Way, Sands of Iwo Jima, Objective, Burma!, Targets, Ski Party, Montana, Mean Johnny Barrows, Young and Willing, Gun Street, Brimstone, Future Shock, Rin Tin Tin: The Test 
Children: Deanna Brown Thomas, Yamma Noyola Brown Lumar, Venisha Brown, Daryl Brown, James Joseph Brown II, Teddy Brown, Terry Brown, Larry Brown, Lisa Brown 
Born in Barnwell, South Carolina, on May 3, 1933, into extreme poverty, James Brown worked his way to  the top of the funk and R&B music earning the moniker "The Godfather  of Soul." His unique vocal and musical style influenced many artists.  Brown was also renowned for his work in social activism, both in his  songwriting ("America is My Home," "Black and Proud") and advocating the  benefits of education to schoolchildren. 
The "Godfather of Soul," James  Brown, was born James Joe Brown Jr. on May 3, 1933, in a  one-room shack in the woods of Barnwell, South Carolina, a few miles east of the  Georgia border. His parents split ways when he was very young, and at  the age of 4, Brown was sent to Augusta, Georgia, to live with his  Aunt Honey, the madam of a brothel. Growing up in abject poverty during  the Great Depression, a young Brown worked whatever odd jobs he could  find, for literally pennies. He danced for the soldiers at nearby Fort  Gordon, picked cotton, washed cars and shined shoes.  Brown later recalled his impoverished childhood: "I started shining shoes at 3 cents, then went up to 5 cents, then 6 cents. I never did get up to a dime. I was 9 years old before I got a pair of underwear from a real store; all my clothes were made from sacks and things like that. But I knew I had to make it. I had the determination to go on, and my determination was to be somebody." 
Dismissed from school at the age of 12 for "insufficient clothing," Brown turned to working his various odd jobs full-time. As an escape from the harsh reality of growing up black in the rural South during the Great Depression, Brown turned to religion and to music. He sang in the church choir, where he developed his powerful and uniquely emotive voice. 
However, as a teenager Brown also turned to crime. At the age of 16, he was arrested for stealing a car and sentenced to three years in prison. While incarcerated, Brown organized and led a prison gospel choir. It was in jail that Brown met Bobby Byrd, an aspiring R&B singer and pianist, forming a friendship and musical partnership that proved one of the most fruitful in music history.  Always a gifted athlete, upon his release from prison in 1953 Brown turned his attention to sports and devoted the next two years primarily to boxing and playing semiprofessional baseball. Then, in 1955, Bobby Byrd invited Brown to join his R&B vocal group, The Gospel Starlighters. Brown accepted, and with his overbearing talent and showmanship, he quickly came to dominate the group. Renamed the Famous Flames, they moved to Macon, Georgia, where they performed at local nightclubs. 
In 1956, the Famous Flames recorded a demo tape of the song "Please, Please, Please" and played it for Ralph Bass, a talent scout for King Records. Bass was thoroughly impressed by the song, and especially by Brown's passionate and soulful crooning. He offered the group a record contract, and within months "Please, Please, Please" had reached No1. 
SuperStardom 
The Flames immediately hit the road, touring the Southeast while  opening for such legendary musicians as B.B. King and Ray Charles. But  the band wasn't immediately able to record another hit to match the  success of "Please, Please, Please," and by the end of 1957, the Flames  had returned home. 
Needing a creative spark and in danger of losing his  record deal, in 1958, Brown moved to New York, where, working with  different musicians whom he also called the Flames, he recorded "Try  Me." The song reached No. 1 on the R&B charts, cracked the Hot 100  Singles chart and kick-started Brown's music career. He soon followed  with a string of hits that included "Lost Someone," "Night Train" and  "Prisoner of Love," his first song to crack the Top 10 on the pop  charts, peaking at No. 2. In addition to writing and recording music, Brown toured relentlessly. He performed five or six nights a week throughout the 1950s and '60s, a schedule that earned him the title "The Hardest-Working Man in Show Business." Brown was a flashy showman, incredible dancer, and soulful singer, and his concerts were hypnotizing displays of exuberance and passion that left audiences in raptures. His saxophonist, Pee Wee Ellis, once said, "When you heard James Brown was coming to town, you stopped what you were doing and started saving your money." 
Brown fastidiously  mastered and performed whatever dances were popular at the time—"the  camel walk," "the mashed potato," "the popcorn" —and often improvised  his own after announcing that he was about to "do the James Brown." A  shrewd and ruthless bandleader and businessman, Brown scheduled his  tours to hit "money towns" on the weekends, and demanded perfection from  his backup singers and musicians. He infamously fined musicians for  missing notes, and during performances he called out musicians to  improvise on the spot. As one of Brown's musicians said, with  considerable understatement, "You had to think quick to keep up." On a single night—October 24, 1962—Brown recorded a live concert album at the Apollo Theater in Harlem. Initially opposed by King Records because it featured no new songs, Live at the Apollo proved Brown's greatest commercial success yet, peaking at No. 2 on the pop albums chart and firmly establishing his crossover appeal. 
Brown went on  to record many of his most popular and enduring singles during the  mid-1960s, including "I Got You (I Feel Good)," "Papa's Got a Brand New  Bag" and "It's a Man's Man's Man's World." With its unique rhythmic  quality, achieved by reducing each instrument to an essentially  percussive role, "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" is considered the first  song of a new genre, funk, an offshoot of soul and a precursor of  hip-hop. 
In the mid-1960s, James Brown also began devoting more and more energy to social causes. In 1966, he recorded "Don't Be a Dropout," an eloquent and impassioned plea to the black community to place more focus on education.  
A staunch believer in exclusively nonviolent protest, Brown once declared to H. Rap Brown of the Black Panthers, "I'm not going to tell anybody to pick up a gun." 
On April 5, 1968, the day after Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination, with riots raging across the country, 
Brown gave a rare televised live concert in Boston in an attempt to prevent rioting there. His effort succeeded; young Bostonians stayed home to watch the concert on TV and the city largely avoided violence. A few months later he wrote and recorded "Say It Loud: I'm Black and I'm Proud," a protest anthem that has unified and inspired generations. 
Throughout the 1970s, Brown continued to perform ceaselessly and  recorded several more hits, most notably "Sex Machine" and "Get Up Offa  That Thing." Although his career fell off during the late 1970s due to  financial troubles and the rise of disco, Brown made an inspired  comeback with a multifaceted performance in the classic 1980 film The Blues Brothers. His 1985 song "Living in America," featured prominently in Rocky IV,  was his biggest hit in decades. 
However, after becoming one of the  first musicians inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986—the year of its inception—in the late 1980s, Brown slowly slid into a  mire of drug addiction and depression. The culmination of his personal  troubles came in 1988, when he entered an insurance seminar high on PCP  and bearing a shotgun before leading police on a half-hour high-speed  car chase from Augusta, Georgia, into South Carolina. The police had to  shoot out Brown's tires to end the chase. The incident led to Brown  spending 15 months in jail before being released on parole in 1991. 
Re-emerging from prison rehabbed and very much his old self, Brown  returned to touring, once again delivering inspired and energetic  concerts, albeit on a schedule much reduced from his heyday. 
Brown married four times over the course of his life and had six  children. His wives' names were Velma Warren (1953-1969), Deidre Jenkins  (1970-1981), Adrienne Rodriguez (1984-1996) and Tomi Rae Hynie  (2002-2004). 
James Brown passed away on December 25, 2006, after a weeklong battle with pneumonia. He was 73 years old. 
James Brown is unquestionably one of the most influential musical pioneers of the last half-century. The Godfather of Soul, the inventor of funk, the grandfather of hip-hop—Brown is cited as a seminal influence by artists ranging from Mick Jagger to Michael Jackson to Afrika Bambaataa to Jay-Z. Perfectly aware of his role in American cultural history, Brown wrote in his memoir, "Others may have followed in my wake, but I was the one who turned racist minstrelsy into black soul—and by doing so, became a cultural force." And although he wrote widely and was widely written about, Brown always maintained that there was only one way to truly understand him: "As I always said, if people wanted to know who James Brown is, all they have to do is listen to my music." | 


 
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