With his sandpaper-coarse but sensitive baritone,
Greg Brown offers keen insights into the realities and foibles of modern life tinged with a hefty dose of common sense. He is the son of an electric guitar-playing mother and a Pentecostal preacher and was raised listening to gospel music in rural Iowa. He began singing around age 18 in New York where he ran hootenannies at Gerdes Folk City. A year later he began writing for
Buck Ram (of
Platters fame) and his production company. After that he worked with a band for a few years and eventually returned to Iowa to marry. There, he worked for the Iowa Arts Council where he performed for children, mentally challenged people and hospital patients; he also played in many Midwestern coffeehouses and clubs. From there he worked with
Garrison Keillor on the Prairie Home Companion live radio program. It was an exciting period for
Brown, who enjoyed performing with a wide variety of musicians.
Brown had founded his own record label, Red House, a few years back, and had issued the albums
44 & 66 and
Iowa Waltz, but had turned over control to
Bob Feldman to concentrate on writing and performing. He recorded his first widely available album,
In the Dark With You, in 1985 to widespread critical acclaim. The next year, he released
Songs of Innocence and Experience, comprised of
William Blake's poetry set to music and featuring
Beausoleil founder
Michael Doucet on fiddle. With his own songwriting,
Brown expresses many moods in a variety of styles and with vivid imagery. Many of his songs tell stories, both humorous and sad. In 1993, he and East Coast folk singer
Bill Morrissey teamed up to record the tradition-based
Friend of Mine. In addition to recording folk albums for adults,
Brown has also recorded an intelligent children's album,
Bathtub Blues, featuring songs he wrote in conjunction with elementary school students.
Brown's profile increased through the '90s with such acclaimed albums as
Dream Cafe (1992),
Poet Game (1994),
Further In (1996), and
Slant 6 Mind (1997).
Covenant followed three years later. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Music Guide