South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Green feels Brown’s spirit singing hits

- By Rodney Ho

CeeLo Green has thrived in different incarnatio­ns: as part of the legendary hip-hop group Goodie Mob, as part of the duo Gnarls Barkley and as a solo artist.

Now he is taking a different direction paying tribute to one of his heroes and fellow Georgian James Brown. He will be playing a mix of Brown classics and his own hits on upcoming tour dates.

Green has a clear memory of seeing Brown for the first time as a child on TV, rapt by the imagery.

“He was still with The Famous Flames,” he recalled in a recent interview. “It was black and white. He was in a houndstoot­h vest. He had taken his jacket off. He was doing ‘Night Train.’ It was an excerpt from that performanc­e. I was like, ‘Wow!’ I remember looking at his feet, his footwork. It was remarkable.”

For decades afterward, he has always admired the man, whose music has been widely sampled by many a hip-hop artist.

“He’s been omnipresen­t,” Green said. “I grew up as a kid in the 1980s and watching the subculture bubbling over ultimately becoming hip-hop. He basically fathered that.”

Sadly, though Green had a chance to meet Brown just a few months before Brown died suddenly of a heart attack in 2006, it didn’t happen.

Green was performing with Gnarls Barkley in London during the height of “Crazy.” Brown was in concert across town. Green and his band were offered the opportunit­y to stop by to say hello to Brown, but the timing didn’t work given their own schedule. In retrospect, Green regretted skipping it.

“I wished I had just

jumped in a cab and gone myself,” Green said. “Maybe I could have gone over there and kneeled at the helm of his garment so he could christen me or knight me.”

Instead, he felt “super depleted” after Brown died.

Last fall, Green joined Paine College in Augusta, Georgia, as part of its Distinguis­hed Artist in Residence program with a focus on recruiting and developmen­t. While there, he came up with this tribute idea.

He tested out the tribute show at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival this spring and thought it turned out well.

“It was a lot of love and adoration,” he said. “I take pride in my fanship. I want to make sure that bridge to the past is strong. I want to be the James Brown of my generation. But he’ll always be soul brother number one.”

Green said while performing Brown’s tunes in New Orleans, he felt Brown’s spirit in him.

“I felt possessed,” Green said. “I felt it in my feet.”

He said he doesn’t remotely try to imitate Brown. It’s simply an homage.

“It’s almost like a relationsh­ip with God,” he said. “I just want to please the maker. I’ve been doing this for 27 years. It’s very ironic how doing this music older than myself makes me feel younger.”

July 3 birthdays: Actor Michael Cole is 82. Actor Kurtwood Smith is 79. Writer Dave Barry is 75. Actor Betty Buckley is 75. TV host Montel Williams is 66. Actor Tom Cruise is 60. Actor Thomas Gibson is 60. Actor Yeardley Smith is 58. Actor Audra McDonald is 52. Actor Olivia Munn is 42. Singer Elle King is 33.

 ?? ROB KIM/GETTY ?? CeeLo Green, seen May 26, is playing a mix of James Brown classics during his upcoming tour dates.
ROB KIM/GETTY CeeLo Green, seen May 26, is playing a mix of James Brown classics during his upcoming tour dates.

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