Chicago Sun-Times

Maurice Brown’s totally jazzed

Maurice Brown blends hip- hop, jazz with sizzling results

- By MOIRA MCCORMICK FOR THE SUN- TIMES Moira McCormick is a local freelance writer.

It was a f ledgling trumpet prodigy’s dream scenario. Maurice Brown, an eighth- grader in Chicago’s south suburbs, was performing at a seminar led by jazz prodigy- turned- legend Wynton Marsalis, when the trumpet deity, impressed with Brown, took him aside and proffered simple yet career- making advice.

“‘ Practice and practice,’ he said,” Brown, 36, recalled over lunch last week at a popular River North steakhouse. “‘ Keep practicing, and one day you’ll be great — even better than me.’ ”

And not only is Brown currently “one of the brightest stars on the contempora­ry jazz scene” ( as identified by AllMusic. com), who’s collaborat­ed with a multi- genre A- list including Aretha Franklin, John Legend, De La Soul, the Roots, Santigold, Wyclef Jean and Santana. The scintillat­ing trumpeter, composer, recording artist, producer and Grammy Award- winning arranger has, in his “Mobetta” persona, been spearheadi­ng a visionary meld of jazz and hip- hop — from his debut album, “Hip to Bop” ( 2004), to his delectable, melodicall­y rich newest release, “The Mood.” “That’s kinda my lane now,” he acknowledg­ed.

Brown brings his seven- piece band, along with special invitee Talib Kweli — the eminent New York rapper and activist guest- rhymes on “The Mood” — to Martyrs July 28. The concert will be dedicated to his late father, Charles, who passed away suddenly not quite two weeks earlier.

“Dad was really pumped about this show,” Brown said wistfully of his biggest booster. “He’d pre- sold like 20 tickets already and was passing out hundreds of flyers.”

Brown reminisced with affection about his father’s outsize physical presence ( his nickname: Bear) and personalit­y, mirthfully recounting the elder Brown badgering Chicago jazz great Ramsey Lewis — with whom Brown had first performed as a high- schooler, here at Symphony Center — to hire his son way more frequently. “And when I was with Tedeschi Trucks Band,” Brown said of the sprawling jam- rock outfit that landed him a 2012 Grammy, “he would tell Derek Trucks, ‘ Give Maurice more solos!’

“I could always pick his voice out of a crowd of 10,000,” Brown said, smiling.

Brown also characteri­zed his father as “very motivation­al; he’d show me I always have options. “A lotta bad things happen when people feel they have no options,” the artist quietly stressed. “Dad would say, ‘ Even when you think you don’t have options, you got options. Breathe, think about it for a second, and it’ll come to you.’ So I’d save my energy for the stage.”

Brown’s first college stage was at Northern Illinois University, and he continued his jazz studies at Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, partaking of clarinetis­t Alvin Batiste’s expertise. He then put down roots in New Orleans, nourished by the Big Easy music scene’s ever- replenishi­ng fertility, from traditiona­l brass- band and second- line jazz to hip- hop.

Having grown up on Miles Davis and John Coltrane, among other innovative giants of jazz, Brown is drawn to rap’s trailblaze­rs as well: Snoop Dogg, The Notorious B. I. G, Wu- Tang Clan’s Ghostface Killah. “I like people with bars,” stated Brown, emphasizin­g his preference for dazzling wordsmiths.

“I want to connect to what you’re saying, I want you to paint a picture in my mind.” Rap runs as deeply as jazz in his life: “I’ve been rhyming ever since I was 8 or 9, in ciphers [ informal freestyle- rap gatherings] on the block in Harvey [ Ill.] and Markham [ Ill.]. My mom and sister,” he added, grinning, “can spit the verse of my very first rap: ‘ It was the scariest thing I ever seen/ It was Santa Claus on Halloween!’ ”

During his four years of “great weather, great food, great music” in NOLA, Brown lived in the famed jazz district Treme, making his mark around the city and beyond. “I had a steady Tuesday gig at Snug Harbor on Frenchmen Street, selling out two sets a night, [ also playing] the Maple Leaf, the Blue Nile, internatio­nal festivals. I was so comfortabl­e. Local celebrity, making good money; like, this is it! “Then — boom.” Hurricane Katrina forced Brown to relocate, first back home to Chicago and then to New York, where he settled in Brooklyn and still resides, splitting his time between his Bedford- Stuyvesant residence and a brand- new abode in L. A.

The artist made loving note of his one- ofa- kind custom horn, “the first- ever hip- hop jazz trumpet,” on which he collaborat­ed with Switzerlan­d- based master craftsman Thomas Inderbinen. Brown had very specific instructio­ns: “It has to have swag — it has to be like the Rolls- Royce of trumpets. Real slick and aerodynami­c, and I want it to sound warm.”

And the result? Declared Brown with pride, “The sexiest trumpet ever made.”

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