The James Brown Reader: 50 Years of Writing About The Godfather of Soul
fishmongerfunk
4,154 Posts
i just picked up this anthology which is edited by nelson george and alan leeds and have been enjoying it. i thought i might share one of the saucier/funnier/more disturbing entries (includes james haranguing bill withers: "You ain't shit, you can't sing, you ain't nothing motherfucker!!") so i scanned it.
not sure if this is going to be readable, but here goes nothing:
edit: yeah that didn't quite work. if you want me to email you the full 20 page article, just pm me. alternatively, if you can read it somehow and want me to post the rest on this page, let me know.
not sure if this is going to be readable, but here goes nothing:
edit: yeah that didn't quite work. if you want me to email you the full 20 page article, just pm me. alternatively, if you can read it somehow and want me to post the rest on this page, let me know.
Comments
As far as the Bill Withers tale...that was from the big Zaire tour (as seen in the documentary Soul Power). I heard from somebody (not that it's true, mind you) that Withers pulled a knife on JB on that tour and they were cool with each other from then on?
"Food stamps!"
It's interesting how similar some of the articles are ("he now owns the radio station he used to shine shoes in front of"). Also how the press went from adulation to jeers simultaneously.
There are very helpful record reviews at the end.
He was a very strange man.
A musical genius who was one step ahead of an industry he was always just outside of.
His preacher like monologues show a lack of smarts, yet his success shows an abundance of smarts.
It seems like he stayed off drugs in the 50s, 60s and 70s, when everyone was doing them, only to become addict and crazed at the end of the 80s.
A royal asshole who rewarded loyalty and lapped up praise.
I think when I got done reading I had different things I wanted to talk about, but from a distance this is what I remember.
I guess the final takeaway is he didn't have an ounce of humility.
there are many wtf moments in this book. while "food stamps" is sort of a jaw dropper, the one that i thought the oddest was james at graceland for elvis' funeral, crying on the corpse and saying, "elvis, you rat. you rat! i'm not no. 2 no more!".
has anyone here read the fred wesley book and is it any good?
This kind of goes to Laser's point, which is how much of an enigma Brown really was. Wesley tells stories about how Brown would come into the studio when the band was rehearsing/recording and pound out senseless riffs on the keyboard, hum some tunes and say, "thats what I want", then leave. From there, the band would just kinda do their own thing.
This doc really shows that aspect of Brown...truly a mad genius in my mind.