Chuck Brown passes: The Godfather of Go-Go was 75 RIP Chuck

Wildcats Family member Chuck Brown, who styled a unique mix of funk, soul and Latin party sounds to create go-go music in the nation’s capital, has died after suffering from pneumonia. He was 75.

 

The Godfather of Go-Go Chuck Brown

Below is the AP story regarding the death of Chuck Brown.  Not everyone knows, but Chuck Brown is part of the Wildcat Family.  Both of Chuck’s sons played for the Waldorf Wildcats.  Nekos and Wiley both moved on to Thomas Stone High School and eventually to Virginia Tech to play college ball.  We wish the best for the Brown Family and we thank Chuck Brown for the many years of Go-Go music which has put the DC, MD and VA areas on the map musically.

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Chuck Brown, who styled a unique mix of funk, soul and Latin party sounds to create go-go music in the nation’s capital, has died after suffering from pneumonia. He was 75.

Brown died Wednesday at Johns Hopkins University Hospital in Baltimore. Hospital spokesman Gary Stephenson confirmed Brown had died after a hospital stay that began April 18.

Thanks to Brown and his deep, gravelly voice, go-go music was uniquely identified with Washington. That’s where he continued to play the city’s club circuit to a loyal audience late in life.

In 2007 he told The Associated Press that go-go was influenced by sounds and fast beats he heard early in life, growing up in North Carolina and Virginia, combined with his experience later, playing with a Latin band.

"Go-go is a music that continues on and on, and on and it’s a call and response communication with the audience," Brown said.

Go-go was heavy on percussion with drummers as lead players, accented by guitar riffs, keyboards and horns. Sometimes they would play for two or three hours without stopping. In between tunes, Brown would keep the thunk of percussion going and talk to the crowd.

Brown’s hit "Bustin’ Loose" with his group, the Soul Searchers, helped define go-go’s sound. It spent several weeks atop the R&B chart in 1979. Rapper Nelly later sampled Brown’s "Bustin’ Loose" in 2002 for his massive hit "Hot in Herre," which won Nelly a Grammy.

In 2007, rapper Eve sampled Brown’s song, "Blow Your Whistle," in her hit single "Tambourine."

Brown told the AP he admired such artists.

"Go-Go had some influence on rap because a lot of rap musicians come to my shows. Some of them were students at Howard University," and Brown would often play nearby, he said. "People like Puff Daddy, he’s been to see us when he was a young Howard University student."

Spike Lee, a fan of Brown’s who used go-go for his movie "School Daze"

"Chuck Brown Will Always Be ’Bustin’ Loose’ — the Godfather of Go-Go," Lee said through a spokeswoman.

When he was younger, Brown spent some time in jail. While behind bars, he traded five cartons of cigarettes for his first guitar. After he was freed in 1962, Brown played with several bands and then formed the Soul Searchers. To comply with terms of his parole, they couldn’t play where alcohol was served, so they took to churches, recreation halls and youth centers.

During the crack epidemic of the 1980s, violence in some clubs affected go-go’s reputation. Brown said "we can’t blame the go-go for that," though.

More recently, he said he had seen more grandparents at his shows, with an audience ranging in age from 18 to 60.

Washington was always his most loyal fan base, he said, and he was happy to play here the rest of his life.

Associated Press writer Mesfin Fekadu contributed to this report.