James Brown tried to murder Joe Tex, PCP, the Microphone Trick, "Please - get me out of this cape" Etc.
James Brown tried to murder Joe Tex, PCP, the Microphone Trick, "Please - get me out of this cape" Etc.
Often at Club 15 in Macon, Georgia, Brown would get into clashes with
other men over women. One clash worth mentioning is the 1963
fight between Joe Tex and Brown.
Joe Tex and James Brown were bitter
rivals from the early days of their careers.
One particular night, Brown went after soul singer Joe Tex after Tex did
a performance making fun of Brown’s cape act.
“Brown took two shotguns into Club 15, an after-hours juke
joint, where Otis Redding and the Pinetoppers were playing, gunning for
Joe Tex.
In the melee, he ended up shooting six or seven people before
jumping behind the wheel of his tour bus and taking off.
A member of his
entourage handed out hundred dollar bills to keep everyone (including
the injured) quiet.”
In response, Tex wrote a song called "You Keep Her".
Brown later fired a gun at Tex in a nightclub.
It has been said that a feud between Tex and James Brown began after James Brown allegedly began fooling around with a woman Tex was dating, as well as the report that James Brown took his dance moves, especially the microphone trick.
Tex mocked James Brown's act of throwing a cape
over his shoulder and screamed,
"please - get me out of this cape".
James Brown later fired a gun at people who frequent nightclub clubbers.
James Brown lived a lot of life. He was a
Civil Rights activist, an entrepreneur, and the most innovative musician
of our time.
Throughout his life, he met multiple Presidents, courted
many women, and performed plenty of illegal activities.
He lived his
life offstage as vivaciously as he did onstage.
Top 5 Brown Most Bizarre Moments.
1. james brown was electrocuted 4 times
As a young child, Brown was leaning against an air compressor at the
gas station where his dad worked when a short circuit sent an electric
current through him—singing his hair and melting his shoes to his feet.
He became a legend in the neighborhood as the kid that couldn’t be
killed.
2. James Brown tried to murder Joe Tex with a shotgun
Often at Club 15 in Macon, Georgia, Brown would get into clashes with
other men, often over women.
One clash worth mentioning is the 1963
fight between Joe Tex and Brown.
Joe Tex and James Brown were bitter
rivals, and the rivalry dates back to the early days of their careers.
One particular night, Brown went after soul singer Joe Tex after he made fun of Brown’s cape act.
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According to local
witnesses,
“Brown took two shotguns into Club 15, an after-hours juke
joint, where Otis Redding and the Pinetoppers were playing, gunning for
Joe Tex.
In the melee, he ended up shooting six or seven people before
jumping behind the wheel of his tour bus and taking off.
A member of his
entourage handed out hundred dollar bills to keep everyone (including
the injured) quiet.”
3. james brown held an extravagant Funeral for his poodle named Poojie
The Brown family poodle Poojie died when the maid accidentally swung
the door open too quickly and cracked the dog’s head. Brown buried the
dog in a white casket and held a funeral at his house in Augusta.
Sobbing during Poojie’s lavish funeral, Brown took a knee and was
immediately cloaked with his cape by his personal valet, Danny Ray.
4. James Brown led a two-state automobile chase
Brown was known to occasionally run afoul of the law, most notably in
1988 during a bizarre, PCP-fueled police chase from South Carolina to
Georgia. Brown entered an insurance seminar in Augusta, Georgia, armed
with a shotgun and a pistol, and ordered everyone to leave (reports
state he was upset that they were using his private bathroom). He then
took off in his pickup truck and attempted to outrun police, who chased
him into South Carolina and then back into Georgia. Even after police
had shot out three of his tires, Brown continued to drive on wheel rims
until he ended up in a ditch six miles down the road. Brown was charged
with assault and battery with intent to kill and later became inmate
number 155413 at the State Park Correctional Institute in South
Carolina.
5. james brown had a dark side
James Brown demanded respect, but he dished it out too. Once Brown
was arrested for beating his wife, Adrienne Rodriguez and attacking her
mercilessly with a lead pipe and shooting at a car she was hiding in
while they were both on PCP. Brown was also reported to hate swearing.
When his fourth wife Tomi Rae would cuss, he would fine her; and she
would have to pay. Brown was also prone to intense jealousy. Tomi Rae
reported that he built a brick wall around their pool so none of the
workers in the house would see me her in a bikini.
James Brown lived a lot of life. So it’s inevitable then that the James Brown biopic Get On Up — even with a running time of 138 minutes — might have to leave some of it out. (Read our review of the movie here.)
The fact that it’s PG-13 means that the more scandalous parts of the
singer’s life go untouched. Born in the post-Reconstructionist South in
1933, James Brown went on to become the “Godfather of Soul,” first as
part of a group (the best known iteration is the Famous Flames), and
then as a solo artist. Throughout his life, he met multiple presidents,
courted many women, and performed plenty of illegal activities. Vulture
read RJ Smith’s biography on James Brown, The One, to
imagine what other stories could have been told if some premium cable
channel suddenly decides to do a raunch-and-drug-filled miniseries.
1. He was electrocuted for four minutes as a kid. Part of the James Brown lore is that he was “stillborn”
and that his aunt breathed life into him. It made him believe that he
was invincible. In another childhood anecdote, a pre-adolescent Brown
was leaning against an air compressor at the gas station where his dad
worked when a short circuit sent an electric current through him—singing
his hair and melting his shoes to his feet. He became a legend in the
neighborhood as the kid that couldn’t be killed.
2. James Brown pretended to be Little Richard in performances. When
Little Richard had his hit “Tutti Frutti,” he went to Los Angeles,
leaving several weeks of commitments open around the South. They shared
the same agent, so James Brown filled in as Little Richard. At a show in
Alabama they knew it wasn’t him, and chanted, “We want Richard!” Brown
rose to the challenge, doing backflips around the stage until they no
longer cared that he was an impostor.
3. He stole “It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World” from a woman. Betty
Jean Newsome, a woman he had met at the Apollo, was traveling with him
when he heard her singing a song she had come up with. Brown took it,
added some words, and put it out under his own name: “It’s a Man’s Man’s
Man’s World.” She had to take him to court to get a songwriting credit.
She said, “God don’t like ugly and he sure don’t go along with
thieves!” It wouldn’t be the only time Brown would be accused of theft:
J.C. Davis, a saxophonist, confronted Brown about stealing his song
“Night Train.” Davis said that Brown said the song would be released
under his name, but when he found out that it wasn’t, he drove down to
Tampa, where Brown was, and confronted him with a gun. He got kicked out
of the group.
4. He started gunfights in the club. Often at Club
15 in Macon, Georgia, Brown would get into brawls with other men, often
over women. He went after soul singer Joe Tex after Tex did a
performance making fun of Brown’s cape act. In the melee, seven people
got shot, but the injured parties were given $100 each and told not to
create any more trouble. Money!
5. He was physically abusive and a philanderer. Brown
learned a lot from watching his own father physically abuse his mother,
and repeated the same actions with the women in his life. He would
often court women who sang with him, and would abuse them until they
couldn’t take it anymore. In one of the more egregious instances, he
allegedly hit one of them, Tammi Terrell, with a hammer.
6. His racial politics were, um, complicated. The
movie largely sidesteps a lot of James Brown’s politics. He supported
then-vice-president Hubert Humphrey during his presidential campaign,
only to turn around and perform at Richard Nixon’s inauguration. He was
friendly with the notoriously racist Strom Thurmond, but also performed
at civil-rights events. He released “America Is My Home,” which many
black leaders read as critical of black power and the anti-war movement,
only to release “Say It Loud — I’m Black and I’m Proud” soon afterward.
He was an individualist at heart, and while he recognized the need to
fight for equal rights, he didn’t like the idea of something being
“given” to you. In a way, he preferred a separatist America, where
blacks fended for themselves by creating their own institutions of
support.
7. He climbed up a 300-foot radio tower in Ciudad Acuña just across the Rio Grande in Mexico. You know, for fun.
8. He performed in The Blues Brothers with John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd. Dan Aykroyd’s performance as his manager Ben Bart in Get on Up has
double significance, because James Brown performed with Aykroyd in the
1980 musical as a church leader who guides the way for the two
protagonists. He would later also appear in 1985’s Rocky IV, singing the super patriotic, “Living in America,” and two years later he guest-starred on a particularly insane late-series episode of Miami Vice.
9. He had a lavish funeral for his dog Poojie. The
family poodle Poojie died when the maid accidentally swung the door
open too quickly and cracked the dog’s head. Brown buried the dog in a
white casket and held a funeral at his house in Augusta.
10. He had a special obsession with Elvis.
He
constantly compared himself to Elvis Presley, who Brown felt was the
only other artist comparable to him in his lifetime. When he heard that
Elvis died, he received a private viewing of the body where he cried
over it, saying,
“Elvis, you rat. I’m not number two no more …”
11. His relationship with Adrienne Lois Rodriguez was insane. They met on the set of the TV show Solid Gold,on
which Rodriguez worked as a hairstylist. Brown told Sharpton to get her
number. The two fell in love, got married (she would be Brown’s third
wife), and had a tumultuous relationship: They were both addicted to
PCP; she called the cops on him a number of times for domestic violence;
she once stabbed a woman in the butt who she thought was sleeping with
Brown; she set his clothes on fire; she allegedly put PCP into his
creamed corn. In 1996, she died after undergoing liposuction owing to a
combination of PCP and prescription medications.
12. He kept performing even though he was dying. Brown
kept up a rigorous tour schedule well into his 70s. His trumpeter
Hollie Farris remembered they were doing a show in South America when
the doctor gave him shots, put a catheter in him, only to take it out,
do a one-and-a-half-hour show, and then come back and put the catheter
back in. In another performance in Tbilisi, Georgia,
Brown performed in a swimming facility with the stage at the edge of
the pool. Brown jumped into the pool at the climax of “Sex Machine” and
had to be fished out by his bandmates. He got back onstage and finished
the song.