Webquest: Motown and the History of James Brown
Motown and James Brown Assignment
•Learning Objective: Identify the way James Brown contributed to the evolution of Motown in the 1960s
1) Diana Ross and the Supremes, 1966
1) The Last Poets, 1970
2) Watch this video of Smokey Robinson:
(You might have to copy and past the link into a new browser window)
3) Listen to the song Listen to the song “You Really Got a Hold On Me" by Smokey Robinson and the Miracles
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AdDnqSFYXFs
Now read the lyrics to the song:
I don't like you, but I love you
Seems that I'm always thinking of you
Oh, oh, oh, you treat me badly
I love you madly, you really got a hold on me
You really got a hold on me, you really got a hold on me, you really got a hold, baby
I don't want you, but I need you
Don't want to kiss you, but I need you
Oh, oh, oh, you do me wrong now
My love is strong now you really got a hold on me
You really got a hold on me, you really got a hold on me, you really got a hold, baby
I love you and all I want you to do is just hold me
Hold me, hold me, hold me
Tighter
Tighter
I want to leave you, don't want to stay here
Don't want to spend another day here
Oh, oh, oh, I want to split now, I can't quit now
You really got a hold on me, you really got a hold on me, you really got a hold, baby
I love you and all I want you to do is just hold me, please
Hold me, squeeze, hold me, hold me
You really got a hold on me
You really got a hold on me
I said you really got a hold on me
4. Whatch the video for "(Say it Loud) I’m Black and I’m Proud" by James Brown
5. Read the Biography of James Brown below:
or, click the link to open a PDF: •https://teachrock.org/wp-content/uploads/L049H02.pdf?x96081
Biography of James Brown
From the Chapter Essay by Ricky Vincent:
The most important force in the change in black music from blues based to rhythm-based music was
James Brown. Brown’s 50-plus year career began in 1952 and lasted until his passing on Christmas
Day 2006. Brown was known as “Soul Brother Number One” by fans who appreciated his intensely
passionate delivery, his professionalism, and his close community connections.
Born in a one-room shack in rural South Carolina, James Brown was raised by his aunts in Augusta,
Georgia, who ran a brothel. There Brown learned first hand the nuances and necessities of the
hustle, and Brown was soon on the streets of Augusta engaging in odd jobs, and eventually petty
crimes and juvenile offenses. At the age of 16 Brown was caught stealing a coat from a car, and was
given an eight year sentence.
Upon his release in 1952 after only 3 years Brown stayed with the family of local singer Bobby Byrd,
and joined Byrd’s group the Gospel Starlighters. Shortly after seeing the popularity of secular
performance in the region, the group renamed itself the Famous Flames and performed a repertoire
of rhythm and blues hits.
Brown developed an appealing raw style that was popular throughout the South at the time. His first
recording is now legendary, as the urgently begging ballad “Please, Please, Please” has been a part
of his show for 50 years. The James Brown tour became the most celebrated R&B show on the
circuit, with a show stopping performance, crisp, clean band and a number of stage antics,
giveaways, raffles, and visits from local celebrities.
In October 1962 Brown saw an opportunity to take his popularity nationwide, and put up his own
money to record a concert at the Apollo Theater in Harlem. Brown’s raw display of soul was exactly
the type of energy that was appreciated by his audiences and Live at the Apollo topped the album
charts for most of 1963.
By 1965 James Brown was known as the “Hardest working Man in Show Business” and engineered a
new recording deal with King records. Brown’s first recording on his own terms was “Papa’s Got a
Brand New Bag,” a choppy rhythmic dance machine that worked perfectly with his aggressive,
punchy singing style. The jerky rhythm was unfamiliar to most American music fans because Brown
was pushing “the one” in the rhythm like no other Western music had. A heavy pulse on the downbeat
– “the one” -- was unfamiliar to Western music audiences, and Brown’s breakthrough developed the
original funk groove. The song elevated Brown’s status even further, and accessible yet highly
rhythmic singles followed such as “I Got You (I Feel Good)” and “Cold Sweat” shortly afterward.
By this time the Civil Rights Movement was growing more confrontational and bitter, yet Brown did
not shy away from it. James Brown was indirectly involved in the first “Black Power” march. In the
summer of 1966 James Meredith, the first black person to integrate Mississippi State in 1962
announced his one man “march against fear” across the state. On the second day of his trek,
Meredith was shot by a sniper and wounded. The entire apparatus of the Civil Rights Movement
came to Meredith’s aid, and vowed to finish the march for him. To begin the march, Brown played a
benefit concert in Tupelo, Mississippi, and went to visit Meredith in support of him. The march would
become known as the first “Black Power” march, because Student Non Violent Coordinating
Committee (SNCC) leader Stokely Charmichael introduced the phrase to excited marchers along the
route.
Shortly afterward, Brown wrote the first of his message songs, “Don’t Be a Dropout,” and followed it
with “Get it Together,” and “Money Won’t Change You” within months. The rugged grooves and
piercing screams of Brown became a trademark of the urgency and prideful presentation of the black
man in full awakening.
James Brown’s concerts were often meeting places for activists and organizers as well as celebrities
and hangers on. Brown heard firsthand the issues that were at the forefront of the “Black Revolution”
taking place and Brown responded with his same direct talk to the black militants that he gave to his
label owners and civic leaders up to and including his connections in the White House.
In 1968 James Brown was at the center of a conflagration that swept the country. On April 4th, Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in Memphis. Brown had a scheduled concert the next night
at the Boston Garden, and through some tense negotiations agreed to have the concert televised
locally to keep blacks from exploding on the streets of downtown Boston. Brown then went across the
country speaking on radio and television with pleas to keep the peace and to “learn, don’t burn.”
Brown had the credibility to reach the angry masses on the streets after Dr. King’s death. Unlike most
mainstream black celebrities, James Brown was unafraid of the phrase “Black Power.” He saw it as
part of a sound business model of self-help, when others feared it would represent black militant
aggression. But not everyone understood Brown’s motives. That summer of 1968 Brown volunteered
to take his band to Vietnam to perform for the troops. Shunned by the anti-war movement, Brown was
undaunted, his patriotism trumping (or defining) his political affiliations.
Upon is return from Vietnam Brown found himself at odds with many of his politically progressive
supporters. Brown responded with the boldest statement of black pride ever recorded “Say It Loud
(I’m Black and I’m Proud).” Into the chaos of war protests, assassinations, riots and national soul
searching, Brown had emerged triumphant. Recorded in August, and released in September, “Say It
Loud” was the number one R&B song on the radio in October when Tommie Smith and John Carlos
raised their fisted gloves at the Mexico City Olympic Games.
Like the aftermath for Smith and Carlos, Brown found himself shunned by the mainstream pop
apparatus after “Say it Loud.” Despite its uplifting message, the song was also seen as dangerous.
His records were no longer heard on pop radio, and he would no longer be invited on pop showcases.
“That song cost me a lot of my crossover audience,” Brown recalled. “I don’t regret recording it
though… It was badly needed at the time. It helped Afro-Americans in general, and the dark-skinned
man in particular. I’m proud of that.” “Say It Loud” would be Brown’s last top 10 pop hit for 18 years
(Until “Living In America” in 1986).
Undeterred, Brown developed a stronger approach to the rhythm in his music. His audience was now
almost exclusively black, wearing afros and raising their fists to give “Power to the People.” Brown’s
post “Say it Loud” period produced some of the greatest groove music ever recorded: “Ain’t It Funky
Now,” “The Funky Drummer,” “Mother Popcorn,” “Give it Up or Turn it Loose” were burning up
dancefloors worldwide. “I was hearing everything, even the guitars, like they were drums,” Brown
recalled of that time. James Brown was singlehandedly transforming American popular music from a
sound that was melody based, into a sound that was rhythm based.
6) Diana Ross, 1966
6) Diana Ross, 1968
7) Listen to "What's Going On" by Marvin Gaye by clicking the Youtube link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPkM8F0sjSw
Now, look at the lyrics to the song:
Mother, mother
There's too many of you crying
Brother, brother, brother
There's far too many of you dying
You know we've got to find a way
To bring some lovin' here today, eheh
Father, father
We don't need to escalate
You see, war is not the answer
For only love can conquer hate
You know we've got to find a way
To bring some lovin' here today, oh oh oh
Picket lines and picket signs
Don't punish me with brutality
Talk to me, so you can see
Oh, what's going on
What's going on
Yeah, what's going on
Ah, what's going on
In the mean time
Right on, baby
Right on brother
Right on babe