There goes another legend

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  • Corven
    Are you Kidding me??
    • Jun 2004
    • 4080

    There goes another legend

    James Brown died at 73
    BBC, News, BBC News, news online, world, uk, international, foreign, british, online, service


    I broke my spoon on the viagra sundae.
  • TomTom
    Paging Doctor Weeds...we have a shortage on 1st St.
    • May 2002
    • 16206

    #2
    Re: There goes another legend

    Damn....too early. I thought he lives forever. R.I.P. James.

    Comment

    • man_who_wasnt_there
      Gold Gabber
      • Feb 2006
      • 853

      #3
      Re: There goes another legend

      Sorry about the reposting.

      RIP like a Sex Machine!
      Steve James 1978–2008

      Comment

      • chuckc
        DUDERZ get a life!!!
        • Jun 2004
        • 5458

        #4
        Re: There goes another legend

        this is very sad. i had always wanted to see james brown live and now i never will.

        in fact i have bought tickets to see him two seprate times in my life and both times the shows got cancelled.

        I am very sad to hear this. he was a legend that is for sure. one of the best ever.

        Comment

        • miketpoto
          Shabisquik The Ghetto Queen
          • Jan 2005
          • 4223

          #5
          Re: There goes another legend

          jesus Christ... it's JAMES BROWN IS DEAD.

          You people suck

          Comment

          • man_who_wasnt_there
            Gold Gabber
            • Feb 2006
            • 853

            #6
            Re: There goes another legend

            Steve James 1978–2008

            Comment

            • KinKyJ
              Platinum Poser
              • Jun 2004
              • 13438

              #7
              Re: There goes another legend

              ^^^ now there's a classic boom choon
              Originally posted by chuckc
              this is very sad. i had always wanted to see james brown live and now i never will.

              in fact i have bought tickets to see him two seprate times in my life and both times the shows got cancelled.

              I am very sad to hear this. he was a legend that is for sure. one of the best ever.
              Saw him 2 years ago. too old to do his split, but hell, I wanna rock like that when I'm 71...

              Comment

              • chanty
                John, John, where art thou!
                • Jun 2004
                • 4622

                #8
                Re: There goes another legend

                RIP James Brown....sad news indeed!
                Awww...I didn't mean A holes, as in "A holes"...I meant it like, as in, my friends....

                Comment

                • rubyraks
                  DUDERZ get a life!!!
                  • Jun 2004
                  • 5341

                  #9
                  Re: There goes another legend

                  truly sad news. I was fortunate to see him a number of times over the years. Some of the most memorable occasions for me were at one of those 90s woodstocks (can't remember if it was 94 or 99), an amazing concert he did with Chaka Khan back around 2000 and lastly at his 70s birthday concert in a nice outdoor park right near my workplace on a whim. He always managed to put on a hell of a show and how he had that much energy at 70 is still beyond me. He was one of the greatest and will sorely be missed.

                  RIP
                  "Work like you don't need the money.
                  Love like you've never been hurt.
                  Dance like nobody's watching.
                  Sing like nobody's listening.
                  Live like it's Heaven on Earth."

                  Comment

                  • dawnx
                    The Donator
                    • Jun 2004
                    • 534

                    #10
                    Re: There goes another legend

                    RIP James

                    Comment

                    • DancingQueen
                      AVB FanClub | President
                      • Oct 2005
                      • 4061

                      #11
                      Re: There goes another legend

                      Very sad indeed

                      R.I.P James Brown, your music will live on forever
                      sigpic
                      RIP Steve "Jibs" James - Your footprint is forever on my soul and in my heart xoxo
                      RIP Jeff Shewchuk aka DJ Jeff Taylor (day_for_night) - You will live on in my heart forever xoxo

                      Life isn't about how to survive the storm, but how to dance in the rain.

                      Comment

                      • chuckc
                        DUDERZ get a life!!!
                        • Jun 2004
                        • 5458

                        #12
                        Re: There goes another legend

                        THIS ARTICLE SAYS IT BEST....


                        ATLANTA -- James Brown, the dynamic, pompadoured "Godfather of Soul," whose revolutionary rhythms, rough voice and flashing footwork influenced generations of musicians from rock to rap, died early Christmas morning. He was 73.

                        Brown was hospitalized with pneumonia at Emory Crawford Long Hospital on Sunday and died of heart failure around 1:45 a.m. Monday, said his agent, Frank Copsidas of Intrigue Music.

                        He initially seemed fine at the hospital and even told people that he planned to be on stage in New York on New Year's Eve, Copsidas said.

                        Brown was one of the major musical influences of the past 50 years. From Mick Jagger to Michael Jackson, David Bowie to Public Enemy, Brown's rapid-footed dancing, hard-charging beats and heartfelt yet often unintelligible vocals changed the musical landscape. He was to rhythm and dance music what Bob Dylan was to lyrics.
                        "He was an innovator, he was an emancipator, he was an originator. Rap music, all that stuff came from James Brown," entertainer Little Richard, a longtime friend of Brown's, told MSNBC.

                        "James Brown changed music," said Rev. Al Sharpton, who toured with him in the 1970s and imitates his hairstyle to this day.

                        "He made soul music a world music," Sharpton said. "What James Brown was to music in terms of soul and hip-hop, rap, all of that, is what Bach was to classical music. This is a guy who literally changed the music industry. He put everybody on a different beat, a different style of music. He pioneered it."
                        Brown's classic singles include "Papa's Got A Brand New Bag," "(Get Up I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine," "I Got You (I Feel Good)" and "Say It Loud ? I'm Black and I'm Proud," a landmark 1968 statement of racial pride.

                        "I clearly remember we were calling ourselves colored, and after the song, we were calling ourselves black," Brown told The Associated Press in 2003. "The song showed even people to that day that lyrics and music and a song can change society."
                        He won a Grammy for lifetime achievement in 1992, as well as Grammys in 1965 for "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" (best R&B recording) and for "Living In America" in 1987 (best R&B vocal performance, male.) He was one of the initial artists inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986, along with Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry and other founding fathers.

                        Brown, who lived in Beech Island, S.C., near the Georgia line, triumphed despite a turbulent personal life and charges of abusing drugs and alcohol.

                        After a widely publicized, drug-fueled confrontation with police in 1988 that ended in an interstate car chase, Brown spent more than two years in prison for aggravated assault and failing to stop for a police officer.

                        From the 1950s, when Brown had his first R&B hit, "Please, Please, Please" in 1956, through the mid-1970s, Brown went on a frenzy of cross-country tours, concerts and new songs. He earned the nickname "The Hardest Working Man in Show Business" and often tried to prove it to his fans, said Jay Ross, his lawyer of 15 years.
                        Brown's stage act was as memorable, and as imitated, as his records, with his twirls and spins and flowing cape, his repeated faints to the floor at the end as band members tried in vain to get him to leave the stage.

                        His "Live at The Apollo" in 1962 is widely considered one of the greatest concert records ever. And he often talked of the 1964 concert in which organizers made the mistake of having the Rolling Stones, not him, close the bill. He would remember a terrified Mick Jagger waiting offstage, chain smoking, as Brown pulled off his matchless show.

                        "To this day, there has been no one near as funky. No one's coming even close," rapper Chuck D of Public Enemy once told the AP.
                        Brown routinely lost two or three pounds each time he performed and kept his furious concert schedule in his later years even as he fought prostate cancer, Ross said.
                        With his tight pants, shimmering feet, eye makeup and outrageous hair, Brown set the stage for younger stars such as Michael Jackson and Prince. And the early rap generation overwhelmingly sampled his music and voice as they laid the foundation of hip-hop culture.

                        "Disco is James Brown, hip-hop is James Brown, rap is James Brown; you know what I'm saying? You hear all the rappers, 90 percent of their music is me," Brown told The AP in 2003.

                        Born in poverty in Barnwell, S.C., in 1933, Brown was abandoned as a 4 year old to the care of relatives and friends. He grew up on the streets of Augusta, Ga., in an "ill-repute area," as he once called it, where he learned how to hustle to survive.
                        "I wanted to be somebody," Brown said.

                        By the eighth grade in 1949, Brown had served 3 1/2 years in Alto Reform School near Toccoa, Ga., for breaking into cars. While there, he met Bobby Byrd, whose family took Brown into their home. Byrd also took Brown into his group, the Gospel Starlighters. Soon they changed their name to the Famous Flames and their style to hard R&B.

                        In January 1956, King Records of Cincinnati signed the group, and four months later "Please, Please, Please" was in the R&B Top Ten.
                        Pete Allman, a radio personality in Las Vegas who had been friends with Brown for 15 years, credited Brown with jump-starting his career and motivating him personally and professionally.

                        "He was a very positive person. There was no question he was the hardest working man in show business," Allman said. "I remember Mr. Brown as someone who always motivated me, got me reading the Bible."

                        While most of Brown's life was glitz and glitter ? he was the manic preacher in 1980's "The Blues Brothers" ? he was plagued with charges of abusing drugs and alcohol and of hitting his third wife, Adrienne.
                        In September 1988, Brown, high on PCP and carrying a shotgun, entered an insurance seminar next to his Augusta office. Police said he asked seminar participants if they were using his private restroom. Police chased Brown for a half-hour from Augusta into South Carolina and back to Georgia. The chase ended when police shot out the tires of his truck.

                        Brown received a six-year prison sentence. He spent 15 months in a South Carolina prison and 10 months in a work release program before being paroled in February 1991. In 2003, the South Carolina parole board granted him a pardon for his crimes in that state.

                        Soon after his release, Brown was on stage again with an audience that included millions of cable television viewers nationwide who watched the three-hour, pay-per-view concert at Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles.

                        Adrienne Brown died in 1996 in Los Angeles at age 47. She took PCP and several prescription drugs while she had a bad heart and was weak from cosmetic surgery two days earlier, the coroner said.

                        More recently, he married his fourth wife, Tomi Raye Hynie, one of his backup singers. The couple had a son, James Jr.

                        Two years later, Brown spent a week in a private Columbia hospital, recovering from what his agent said was dependency on painkillers. Brown's attorney, Albert "Buddy" Dallas, said the singer was exhausted from six years of road shows.
                        Brown was performing to the end, and giving back to his community.
                        Three days before his death, he joined volunteers at his annual toy giveaway in Augusta, and he planned to perform on New Year's Eve at B.B. King Blues Club in New York.

                        "He was dramatic to the end ? dying on Christmas Day," said the Rev. Jesse Jackson, a friend of Brown's since 1955. "Almost a dramatic, poetic moment. He'll be all over the news all over the world today. He would have it no other way."

                        Brown is survived by at least four children ? two daughters and sons Daryl and James Brown III, Copsidas said. Friends were making flight arrangements Monday to come to Atlanta to determine how to memorialize Brown, Copsidas said.

                        Comment

                        • FM
                          Wooooooo!
                          • Jun 2004
                          • 5361

                          #13
                          Re: There goes another legend

                          best sample ever? The drum solo in "Funky Drummer"
                          FM

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                          • rainman
                            Platinum Poster
                            • Dec 2005
                            • 1869

                            #14
                            Re: There goes another legend

                            Rip

                            Comment

                            • hulkhuss
                              Are you Kidding me??
                              • Jun 2004
                              • 3699

                              #15
                              Re: There goes another legend

                              Rip

                              At least he lives on forever with our smilie!!!!!!!!!!!
                              http://www.mixcloud.com/RMasie/

                              http://soundcloud.com/r-masie

                              https://www.facebook.com/R-Masie-117851198318029/

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