NAPPY BROWN (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
Napoleon Brown
Goodson Culp (October 12, 1929 – September 20, 2008) better known by
his stage name Nappy Brown, was an American R&B singer. His hits
include the 1955 Billboard chart #2, "Don't Be Angry" and "Night
Time Is the Right Time". His style is instantly recognizable; Brown
used a wide vibrato, melisma, and distinctive extra syllables.
Brown was the son of Kathryn Culp and Sammie Lee Brown. After his
mother died he was brought up by Fred and Maggie Culp. They attended
Gethsemane AME Zion Church and he attended school in Charlotte,
North Carolina.
He began his career singing gospel music before switching to R&B. In
1954 he won a recording contract with Savoy Records, which yielded a
series of hits, including "Don't Be Angry" (#2 R&B, #25 pop, 1955),
"Pitter Patter" (#10 R&B, 1955), and "It Don't Hurt No More" (#8
R&B, #89 pop, 1958). Brown was among the biggest stars in R&B,
frequently touring with the revues of Alan Freed.
His songs, along with those of his peers and contemporaries (such as
Little Richard, Chuck Berry, and Fats Domino), were among the first
wave of African-American pop music to become noticed and popular
with white audiences. Elvis Presley reportedly used to see Brown
perform whenever he appeared in Memphis. In addition to Brown's
influence on blues music, and 1950s R&B and pop, Brown's powerful
and protean voice, combined with his distinctive emotive style, is
widely viewed as a key link in the development of soul music.
In the early 1980s, a renewed interest in R&B led to some of Brown's
early songs being released on European albums. At the urging of Bob
Margolin, former guitarist for Muddy Waters's band and a fan of
Brown, Brown returned to the music industry, beginning with a
successful tour of Scandinavia in 1983. In 1984, 14 years since his
last recording, Brown signed with Landslide Records and released the
album Tore Up with The Heartfixers. Other recordings followed.
Brown's Savoy Records hit, Piddly Patter was featured in the John
Waters film, Cry-Baby, starring Johnny Depp.
Nappy Brown's final album, Long Time Coming, recorded in May 2007,
on Blind Pig Records, was released on September 25, 2007. Reviews
were overwhelmingly positive; the album and Brown were each
nominated for a Blues Music Award (the genre's highest honor). The
album, produced by Scott Cable, featured the guitarists Sean
Costello, Bob Margolin, Junior Watson, and other special guests
performing Brown's hits and several new songs. In the fall of 2007,
Nappy Brown was Living Blues Magazine's September cover artist, and
followed that honor with a European tour. Brown was a musical guest
on Garrison Keillor's Prairie Home Companion on October 20, 2007.
At the ceremony for the Blues Music Awards in May 2008, Brown gave
one last electrifying performance, capping an incredible comeback
year. On June 1, 2008 following a performance at the Crawfish
Festival in Augusta, New Jersey, Brown fell ill due to series of
ailments and was hospitalized. In his last conversation with his
wife Ann, Nappy said that this last year was the best of his life
and was brought to tears by reading all of the cards and letters
from fans. He died in his sleep on September 20, 2008 at Mercy
Hospital in Charlotte, North Carolina at the age of 78.
Brown was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame on August 24, 2002.
(Info mainly Wikipedia)
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