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Richard "Rabbit" Brown

Artist

Richard "Rabbit" Brown

Last updated: 9 hours ago

A New Orleans songster who lived in the city's roughest section and composed songs about several of its most notorious murders, Richard Rabbit Brown was born in 1880, probably in rural Louisiana. It's not known when he turned up in New Orleans, but after arriving he migrated to the portion of Jane's Alley (later home to <a href="spotify:artist:19eLuQmk9aCobbVDHc6eek">Louis Armstrong</a>) known as the Battlefield (even the police force often refused to enter to stop disputes). Two of his most popular songs were "The Downfall of the Lion" (concerning the shotgun murder of the police chief on Basin Street) and "Gyp the Blood" (about a New York gangster who sparked a near-riot, and the closing of Storyville as it was known, by killing a bar owner). Brown sang on streetcorners and nightclubs, and earned extra money as a singing boatman. He recorded six sides for Victor in 1927, including the story songs "Mystery of the Dunbar's Child" and "Sinking of the Titanic." Little else is known about the rest of his life, though it is known that he died in 1937. Five of his recordings were included on the Document collection The Greatest Songsters: Complete Works (1927-1929), along with tracks by <a href="spotify:artist:1FdwVX3yL8ITuRnTZxetsA">Mississippi John Hurt</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:2RImTOoB68L9ZXliQCX7oX">Hambone Willie Newbern</a>. ~ John Bush, Rovi

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