Kenny Brown (guitarist)
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Kenny Brown | |
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File:Kenny Brown.jpg | |
Background information | |
Born | Selma, Alabama, United states |
July 5, 1953
Genres | Blues |
Instruments | Guitar |
Associated acts | R. L. Burnside, Mississippi Fred McDowell |
Kenny Brown (born July 5, 1953 on the Air Force base in Selma, Alabama) is an American blues slide guitarist skilled in the North Mississippi Hill Country blues style.
Brown apprenticed with Mississippi Joe Callicott, who was his neighbor in Nesbit, Mississippi, from age 12[1][2] to 15, when Callicott died.[3] He had heard Othar Turner and others in nearby Como picnics, and cited Junior Kimbrough, Johnny Winter, and Johnny Shines as influences.[3]
Around 1971, beside working in construction, Brown began playing with two other musicians. Johnny Woods would make an occasional playing partner to his death in 1990.[3] More steady was Brown's learning with R. L. Burnside, who claimed Brown as his "adopted son,"[4][5] and affectionately called him "white boy on guitar"[3] and "my white son."[citation needed] Brown has noted that they had trouble to book dates, when European event organizers would hear he is a white musician playing the traditionally African American blues,[6] and that American record producers and critics have similar reservations.[1]
Still in the early seventies they started to perform in their region, and would keep up as a duo for twenty years. Cedric Burnside joined their tours from about 1994,[7] as Burnside's reputation surged. In the 1990s and early 2000s Brown participated in most of Burnside's tours and recordings, including the Burnside-Jon Spencer Blues Explosion collaborations[3] and the remixed albums.
Brown first appeared abroad in Sweden in 1989, and later in the 1992 Åmåls Blues Fest with George "Mojo" Buford.[6]
On record, he plays second guitar on two of Junior Kimbrough's albums throughout, and on some tracks on the posthumous compilation, God Knows I Tried. He is on tracks by Asie Payton, CeDell Davis and Paul "Wine" Jones, as well as Frank Frost and Cyndi Lauper.
Brown's own debut album was Goin' Back to Mississippi (1996), produced by Dale Hawkins. He has recorded one album for Fat Possum Records, Stingray (2003). He released Cheap, Fast, and Dirty (2006) with Danish guitarist Troels Jensen, at Olufsen Records. Meet Ya In The Bottom (2008) is a CD Baby release. His double album Can't Stay Long (2011) [8] was released on Devil Down Records.
In their 2003 tour he has opened for Widespread Panic (and the extended combo Smiling assassins[9]), as he earlier had with Burnside,[10][11]
Brown's guitar work was featured in the 2006 film Black Snake Moan, where he provided backing for star Samuel L. Jackson's vocals.[12] He can be seen in the film's climax as a guitarist in a blues band, playing alongside Cedric Burnside.
In a 2015 date his band included Dale Beavers, Terrence ‘T-Money’ Bishop, J. Farrell Bonds, Takeeshi Imura and Cedric Burnside.[13]
Brown has lived in Potts Camp, Mississippi, in the North Mississippi Hill Country, with his god-son Jocco Rushing.[14]
Films
- You See Me Laughin': The Last of the Hill Country Bluesmen (2003; released by Fat Possum Records in 2005). Produced and directed by Mandy Stein. Oxford, Mississippi: Plain Jane Productions, Inc; Fat Possum Records.
References
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External links
- Kenny Brown at ReverbNation
- Kenny Brown page from Fat Possum Records site
- Kenny Brown at AllMusic
- Kenny Brown discography at Discogs
- Extended discography at CD Universe
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- ↑ Kenny Brown page, at Fat Possum
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- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Jefferson interview. Issue 141, March 2004. Swedish original, via Google Translate
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- ↑ Kenny Brown: Can't Stay Long at AllMusic. Retrieved August 22, 2015.
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- ↑ Kenny Brown on IMDb
- ↑ Kenny Brown Band, Memphis in May
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