
Since
the release of his critically acclaimed 2002 album, Just Chillin'
- which won a Grammy® in the prestigious Best Pop Instrumental Category
- this innovative and original guitarist has been front and center in
the fast evolving fusion of pop, R&B and jazz that has captured the
imagination of true music aficionados across the country and around the
world.
Now, with the release of West Coast Coolin', Norman Brown
consolidates his reputation as a premier recording and performing artist
with a collection of ten tracks -- written and co-written by the artist
- that take the sonic adventure of Just Chillin' into breathtaking new
spheres. It's an innovation due in large part to Brown's exceptional
skills as a distinctive urban vocalist, with the specially selected
tracks of West Coast Coolin' providing the perfect vehicle for
this dazzling new facet of his career. As a result, Norman Brown joins a
very select list of versatile urban artists gifted as both
instrumentalists and vocalists.
"My fans kept asking me to do more singing," explains Brown on the
impetus and inspiration behind West Coast Coolin'. "At the same time I
wanted to go further into some of the great Soul and R&B sounds that
have been such a tremendous influence on me. I tried to bring those two
goals together on this new album." Assisting in the process was a top
flight team of producers, including Paul Brown, the man behind the
boards for both Just Chillin' and its predecessor, 2000's Celebration,
as well as the accomplished R&B and Urban Contemporary producers James
Poyser and Viktor Dupliax (known for their work with Jill Scott, Erykah
Badu, D'Angelo and Macy Grey), who likewise had a hand in the magic of
Just Chillin'.
The result is a dazzling collection of consummately crafted tracks that
showcase both Brown's urban vocals skills on such tracks as "I Might,"
"Angel" and "Come Over" and his richly nuanced guitar styling on key
cuts like "Up N At Em," "Let Play " and "Right Now." Simply put, West
Coast Coolin' delivers on all the promise of this extraordinary
artist...and then some.
All which should come as no surprise to savvy music fans. Over the
course of five landmark releases and a virtually constant itinerary of
international touring, this gifted and gloriously versatile guitarist
and vocalist has established himself as one of a handful of preeminent
instrumentalists and composers in contemporary musical realms, setting a
standard for virtuosity that has placed the Shreveport, La. native in a
category of one.
It's a love affair with music that began at the tender age of eight,
after the family had relocated to Kansas City. It was there that Brown
first heard the mind-blowing brilliance of Jimi Hendrix and determined
to make the guitar his life. The obligatory garage rock apprenticeship
followed, but it was Brown's steelworker father who eventually
introduced his son to the equally life-changing influence of Wes
Montgomery and turned his talents toward jazz.
After graduating high school, Brown headed west to study at the renowned
Musician's Institute in Los Angeles, eventually landing a teaching job
at the school even as he put together his first jazz combo and began
playing on the city's thriving club scene. Adding George Benson to his
list of seminal influences, Brown had already garnered a small but
fanatical following when he landed his first recording contract with
Motown Records. Over the course of the next four years he released three
critically acclaimed albums, Just Between Us (1992), the gold-selling
After The Storm (1994) and Better Days Ahead (1996). The decade drew to
a close with a new label, Warner Bros. Records, and one of his most
accomplished and assured offerings, the above mentioned Celebration,
which marked the beginning of his fruitful collaboration with ace
producer Paul Brown.
Celebration was followed, two years later, by the Grammy winning Just
Chillin', spotlighting an altogether more laid back sound and an A-list
of supporting vocalists that included Michael McDonald, Chante Moore,
Miki Howard and others.
The album was followed by a further round of extensive touring that
included SRO appearances in North America, Japan, Europe and Africa,
where Brown played for wildly appreciative audiences. Even with his
packed calendar he somehow managed to find time to begin writing new
material that built and elaborated on the innovations of West Coast
Coolin'.
"I knew I wanted to get more into singing," he reveals, "so most of the
songs I wrote had that purpose in mind. At the same time I wanted to
move deeper into the R&B grooves that I'd been exploring both on stage
and in the studio. I was interested, more than anything, it giving the
music the space to evolve." That intent got a powerful boost with a 2002
Grammy for Just Chillin' as Best Pop Instrumental. "It was a tremendous
affirmation," Brown acknowledges. "I knew I was heading in the right
direction."
It's a direction that, on West Coast Coolin', has brought Norman
Brown to some of the most singularly satisfying musical soundscapes of
his lifelong journey. "It's important to reach your audience, to give
them an experience they will remember," he concludes. "But music is also
about finding out what gives you joy and pursuing that. I think on this
album, I've managed to do both."
In the process, Norman Brown has lived up to an expectation for
originality that continues to grow with each concert and every new
album.
Norman uses the La
Bella Flat Wound Stainless 20P Electric Guitar series.
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