
With the help of singer Bobby Byrd's family, Brown gained parole and started a gospel group with Byrd, changing their focus to R&B as the rock revolution gained steam. Born into poverty in the South, he ran afoul of the law by the late '40s on an armed robbery conviction.


Fittingly, his music became even more influential as it aged, since his voice and rhythms were sampled on innumerable hip-hop recordings, and critics belatedly hailed his innovations as among the most important in all of rock or R&B.īrown's rags-to-riches-to-rags story has heroic and tragic dimensions of mythic resonance. Through the gospel-impassioned fury of his vocals and the complex polyrhythms of his beats, Brown was a crucial midwife in not just one, but two revolutions in American music he was one of the figures most responsible for turning R&B into soul and he was, most would agree, the one figure most responsible for transforming soul music into funk. And no other musician put on a more exciting, exhilarating stage show: Brown's performances were marvels of athletic stamina and split-second timing. Other singers were more popular, others were equally skilled, but few other musicians were so influential over the course of popular music. Dynamite" - those are mighty titles, but no one can question that James Brown earned them more than any other performer. "Soul Brother Number One," "The Godfather of Soul," "The Hardest Working Man in Show Business," "Mr.
