Friday, August 8, 2014
Sleepy's Theme | Still Smokin' [video]
Organized Noize was the primary architect behind virtually the entire "Hotlanta" sound of the 1990s. As the mainstay of the production
group, Pat "Sleepy" Brown (whose father was a member of '70s funk band Brick) could lay claim to being one of the most influential
behind-the-boards men in music. Along with fellow multi-instrumentalists Rico Wade and Ray Murray, Brown was responsible for hit
singles from TLC ("Waterfalls") and En Vogue ("Don't Let Go (Love)"), arguably the two most influential female R&B groups of the
decade, and, on the rap side during the creation of the landmark '90s albums of Goodie Mob and OutKast, who, alongside Organized
Noize, are two of the key cogs in the mammoth Dungeon Family collective. It was Brown's somnolent falsetto, in fact, that could be
heard oozing from OutKast's premiere hit "Player's Ball" in 1994. It was no surprise, then, when Brown, Wade, and Murray sought an
outlet on the side to record their original music. They first stepped out on their own as three-fifths of Society of Soul, which
released a extraordinary 1995 album, Brainchild, bringing the '60s and '70s urban into a '90s context. More successful was their
second attempt under the moniker Sleepy's Theme. Released on micro-indie Bang Ii in 1998, The Vinyl Room added a sleek and pimped-out
new chapter to the funk and soul storybook that previously had been written by such loose-limbed, mood-driven stalwarts as Isaac
Hayes, Barry White, Curtis Mayfield, the Isley Brothers, the Commodores, Earth, Wind & Fire, and the Gap Band. Among the finest soul
albums of the year, The Vinyl Room. #DF 4 Eva!! #FoReVeRFLy Thank god 4 "Pat, Ray x Rico"@sleepybrownatl @dungeoneze
@ricowadeONPATL .
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