Chuck Brown, born on August 22, 1936, in Gaston, North Carolina, is an American composer, singer, and musician known for creating the go-go music genre. He grew up in a poor Afro-American family in Washington D.C., where he began playing piano and singing gospel at age seven. After a tumultuous adolescence marked by petty crime and imprisonment, Brown returned to music in the 1960s, performing in churches and joining various groups including Jerry Butler and the Earls of Rhythm and Los Latinos. Chuck Brown founded The Soul Searchers around 1966/1968, later renamed Chuck Brown and The Soul Searchers. They released their debut album We the People in 1972, followed by Salt of the Earth in 1974. Brown pioneered go-go music, a funk sub-genre characterized by slow syncopated rhythms, diverse percussion, call-and-response interactions with the audience, and seamless transitions between songs. The group's breakthrough came with the album Bustin' Loose in 1979, which featured the hit single "Bustin' Loose" and became the top-selling soul album of that year. Despite this success, Chuck Brown and The Soul Searchers remained primarily a local phenomenon in Washington D.C., though they continued to perform and record into the 2000s. Brown was nominated for a Grammy Award in 2010 for the song "Love" from the album We Got This, featuring Jill Scott and Marcus Miller. He passed away on May 16, 2012, due to sepsis at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore.
Read All
Read Less