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Fontaine Brown
Blues / Rock / Americana

"Doug Brown"

California
United States

Profile Views:  3844




Last Login:  7/23/2008
View My: Pics | Videos

   Contacting Fontaine Brown

 MySpace URL: 
  http://www.myspace.com/fontainebrown  

   Fontaine Brown: General Info
Member Since3/10/2007
Band Members
Sounds LikeDoug Brown and The Omens, Southwind, Dugg Brown, Fast Fontaine
Record LabelManatee
Type of LabelIndie




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   About Fontaine Brown
“I can't tell you where the Fence Line is,” says Fontaine Brown, “but it's a real place, and if you've ever been there you know it. And if you make it back you can definitely tell some Tales. Some Tales from the Fence Line. Am I being just vague enough?” Just so. Brown’s Tales from the Fenceline showcases the voice of an artist with stories of cutting his first single at Chess Studios in Chicago in 1962, of producing his own and Bob Seger’s ’60s-punk 45s in Detroit, of an apprenticeship under Motown songwriting great Mickey Stevenson, of playing in Southwind—a band headed for an Apple Records contract until Apple dissolved, so instead produced by industry stalwart Tommy LiPuma—and after all that, not before, of a five-year, wandering bar-band tour he describes as his “man with no fixed address period.” Run that experience through a 200-plus song catalog tapped by the likes of Dave Edmunds, Percy Sledge, John Mayall, Dave Alvin, Joe Louis Walker, Emmylou Harris—and sampled by Gorillaz—and the sum total is an artist who has earned his ideas of what’s important yet retained the artist’s preference for letting his music speak for itself. Produced by Don Dixon, noted for his work with REM, the Smithereens, Marti Jones, and others, and with a redoubtable studio band of Dixon, Jim Brock, Mitch Easter, and Peter Holsapple supporting Brown’s vocals, guitar, and blues harp, and with backing vocals by Kelley Ryan, Tales from the Fenceline emerged as a bracing concoction in which roadhouse-R&B rhythms run up seamlessly against mandolin runs or electric sitar. Three songs were layered from Brown’s own home-studio demos. The rest rolled out in basically three days’ time at the Fidelitorium in North Carolina. “Don, he’s a great engineer,” Brown says, “he’s a great bass player, and you go in there, and it’s like a train leaving the station. You’d better be on it. And those musicians, I never have enjoyed myself more. The only thing I hated was that it was over so fast.” Playing the role of “guiding light,” as Brown describes it, was his longtime friend Dan Bourgoise, the founder and recently retired chief of the indie publishing firm Bug Music. Brown and Bourgoise came up together in the 1960s Detroit rock & roll scene, and later, after both had moved to California, they co-produced The Further Adventures of Charles Westover, a Sgt. Pepper–era album by their Detroit buddy Del Shannon, of “Runaway” fame. “When Dan decided he was going to retire from Bug,” Brown recalls, “he said, ‘You know, that was always one of the most fun things that I did in my life, is when we did that album with Del. And I would like to get back together and do an album with you, and you record all these songs of yours that other people have been recording, and let’s have a ball.’ ” Born in 1942 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Douglas Fontaine Brown took to the road at the age of two weeks when his father “got the wanderlust” and bought a trailer. “We took off, and for the next seven years we just criss-crossed the country,” Brown says. “He would stop in a place that he liked, and he’d get himself a job.” Back in Ann Arbor by age nineteen, and fanatical about the rock & roll generation of Elvis Presley, Little Richard, and Fats Domino, Brown was making music with friends when one of them told him that Ollie McLaughlin, a local DJ who had managed Del Shannon, was looking for talent. Brown wrote a song, McLaughlin liked it, and next thing he knew, Brown was recording his debut single for the Chess Records companion imprint Checker. “That was called ‘Blue Night.’ And that was also my first song that I’d ever written, and first time I’d ever sung into a microphone or anything,” Brown says. “It was just a fluke.” He next formed Doug Brown & the Omens and started to make a name on the local club and frat-party circuit. While working as the house act at the Norwest, a lounge attached to a bowling alley on the outskirts of Detroit, Brown met Bourgoise, himself a precocious, nineteen-year-old artist manager and record store owner who, despite such credentials, needed a fake ID to get into the Norwest. The two became fast friends, and after Brown introduced Bourgoise to Shannon, the three went in on a short-lived song-publishing deal, with Shannon using his access to Dick Clark touring acts to pitch tunes written and sung by Brown and another new friend, Bob Seger. But enjoying the club scene so much, Brown gave little thought to recording, he says, until he met Dave Leone and Punch Andrews, partners in a legendary Detroit teen club called the Hideout and its companion record label, Hideout Records. Doug Brown & the Omens cut the Hideout single “TGIF”—in honor of the club’s Friday night promotions—with Brown shouting those ’60s-combo words to live by: “Gimme that guitar!” Meanwhile, Seger joined the Omens, and Brown would produce several Seger sides for Hideout, including Seger’s raucous debut, “East Side Story,” and his “Heavy Music,” “which I think is a great record,” Brown says. “I still get a thrill out of hearing it.” Through a Bourgoise connection, Bernie Yeszin, formerly the art director at Motown, Brown met Mickey Stevenson, whose writing and production credits include no less than “Dancing in the Streets.” Wanting to start his own label, Stevenson mentored Brown in the ways of hit production, and when he did start that label, Venture, Brown joined him in California. For Brown’s first Venture project, Stevenson assigned him to cut the tracks for the Righteous Brothers’ Souled Out album. But despite such production work, of which he remains proud, Brown decided he was “not really cut out to work at a record company.” So after producing a Venture album by the group Southwind, he simply joined the band, which missed the shot at Apple but did get to record two albums for Blue Thumb. Says Brown, “We had a record called ‘Ready to Ride,’ which did OK, got some notice, and a song called ‘The Heat Down in the Alley,’ which we recorded live at the Fillmore, which got quite a bit of airplay. And that kept us going for a while. But then we did our sort of a classic band meltdown.” What followed next was the “man with no fixed address period.” “I got in this band, and we got a van, and we basically gave up our apartments and houses, and we went on the road for five years. It was one of those playing little crappy clubs, and just making enough to keep going. But that was really what I wanted to be doing, was playing in a band.” Brown took one more shot at a record deal, a 1981 EMI release as Fast Fontaine. “After that record didn’t make it, and I’d been out on the road again a lot, Dan said, ‘Well, why don’t you try the songwriter thing. I’ve got the publishing company, and lots of writers that you can work with.’ “And I thought, ‘You know, it might be good to have an address for a while.’ So I moved down to Laguna Beach, and I built myself a little home studio, started writing songs, and I could get just enough covers to keep me going. And so that’s what I did for the next, oh, God, twenty years. Just writing those songs.” When it came time to record Tales from the Fenceline, the biggest obstacle was how to winnow the album down to a cohesive twelve songs from the 200-plus in Fontaine’s catalog. But Bourgoise and Dixon helped with their own perspectives. “From the second that I stepped on the plane with Dan, we started creating this mood,” Brown says. In the end, Tales from the Fenceline came together, as Bourgoise describes it, “just like the way we used to listen to AM radio, where things flowed together in a good way. When it’s bluesy, it’s just bluesy as it can get, but at the same time there are elements that are just a real pop treat.” Of course, Brown had certain favorites to include. “Like ‘Detroit Saturday,’ I just really wanted that song. I wanted to have a little sermonette for my old stomping grounds. Something where I could really testify and—you know, it’s like a little love note from me to my old buddy Bob Seger,” Brown laughs. Another favorite is the moody “Lost in the Sensation.” “I just wanted to have that on there,” he says. “It’s a certain feeling in there—it’s a love song, and I just wanted to say, ‘This is for me. I like this. This should be on there. If you’re gonna have ‘Fenceline,’ then you gotta have ‘Lost in the Sensation,’ too.” Both Brown and Bourgoise emphasize more than anything the spirit of the sessions themselves, the studio camaraderie that worked its way into the music. “It was about three days, and we’d cut a couple songs, and then we’d all go out and have dinner,” Brown says. “And we’d have a long, long dinner, and then we’d go back and cut a couple more. It was just a beautiful way to work. I mean, I think that the dinner was as important as the sessions, because we would sit there, and we just really got to know each other. We got a good feeling going. “We didn’t talk about the arrangements so much as we talked about the feeling of the song, what is the emotion of this song. And then everybody would just give it their best, and bang, it would be over, darn it. I can’t wait to do it again. It was a high point of my life.”

   Fontaine Brown's Friend Space (Top 20)
Fontaine Brown has 245 friends.
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Fontaine Brown's Friends Comments
Displaying 36 of 36 comments  ( View All | Add Comment )
Del Shannon





Jul 20 2008 9:55 PM

Sending love from above...

ROCK ON!
Carlean





Jul 1 2008 3:42 PM

'Fenceline' has not been out of my CD player since I downloaded it!! IT ROCKS!!!
Paul





May 22 2008 7:39 AM

Great Album!
And nice to have you in my friends list too!
Keep on doin' what you kept on doin' !
Carlos Jones & The PLUS Band





May 20 2008 8:32 AM

Hey my Brother! Thanks for linking up. Love your sounds man. I had a great show with Don recently.
All the best to ya!
Carlean





May 19 2008 9:02 AM

You only do it with the best!
Thanks for making me a friend.
Funkboy





May 19 2008 5:34 AM

any friend of dixon's is a friend of mine!

your pal,
ivan
Buddy Zapata





Apr 29 2008 9:23 AM

That's one hell of a record!
Nancy K. Dillon





Mar 18 2008 12:54 PM

Hola Mr Brown: Just thought I'd make contact & say 'hello'. I'm a friend of Gary Johnson who had me in tow for one of the Fast Fontaine recording sessions in LA back in the day.... I recall it was some great music & wild times...

All the best with your new project.

Nancy K
Del Shannon





Jan 18 2008 2:04 AM

Fontaine!

ROCK ON!!!
keith





Jan 12 2008 11:11 AM

Blown Away At Long Last....

"Heat Down in the Alley" is up for all to hear...... One of the GREATEST Rock Songs Ever!!!!!

"Aint No Brakeman" Sounds Fantastic..

Keep on Rockin!!!!
Jim Pulte





Jan 12 2008 8:15 AM

I've had the distinct pleasure of hearing the NEW Fontaine Brown Record. It'll be available
to everyone soon!! This is pure Fontaine the way I remember him from the Omens band with Bob Evans and Bob Seger LIVE AT THE ROOSTERTAIL, DETROIT (LATE 1960's) and with early Southwind later in California. He's still got it!! It's been worth the wait.
Betty Jo





Jan 3 2008 8:23 AM

The CD you just sent, is g r e a t. love it. Hope to see you soon
Betty Jo
keith





Dec 20 2007 3:34 PM

Fontaine: The album is great and well worth the wait.. I Love it.... You have truly made a album that sounds like the Best of Fontaine Brown!!!!

KUDOS 5 Stars my Friend

Keith
Steve Ripley





Dec 21 2007 9:08 PM

That's a nice record, Fontaine. Thanks for sharing. Merry Christmas!
Steve Ripley





Dec 14 2007 3:35 AM

Hey from Oklahoma.
JAMUL tribute





Jul 21 2007 12:58 AM

Thanks for accepting!

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

It's f*ng great!

.
keith





Jun 1 2007 11:02 PM

Fontaine

Looking forward to hearing the album... I hope you answer the question with this album that Rolling Stone magazine asked a while back... Your long time fans will know what the question is ...

BOL

Keith
Michael McRae





May 30 2007 2:42 PM

Great music, Fontaine! I'm so glad to run into you here...what a nice surprise!
judy





May 27 2007 6:46 AM

this is really cool. keep up the good work and the music is great.
judy





May 23 2007 5:57 AM

hey dough, this is really a cool site. i really enjoy the music.
t w howell





May 15 2007 5:15 PM

Fontaine...it's a pleasure to hook up with ya here..thanks for the invite..i look forward to getting out to California and crossing paths with ya..meanwhile the records sound nice!!!...be good..soon...twh
BILLY BAND





May 15 2007 5:07 PM

Fountaine Brown has a new fan! BILLY BAND is impressed!!
Coral





May 15 2007 4:05 PM

That's blues alright!!


You cats keep it cool now... ;o)

Coral
Lucky Mutha





May 15 2007 1:30 PM

Thanx for the friends request!
Cool tunes! Keep 'em coming...
RAMATAM tribute





May 3 2007 2:05 AM

Thanks from the rock'n roll tombs for the add request!!
BACKYARD EPICS





May 2 2007 6:51 AM

Thanks for helping us discover your sound!
Rachel





Apr 29 2007 11:52 AM

Hello there Doug Brown,
Thanks for the friend request. I love the music!!
Have a great day,
Rachel
Christine Collister





Apr 10 2007 1:27 PM

Hello!

Christine Collister here saying thanks for looking at my page and making me
one of your friends.
The Washoe Project





Apr 8 2007 2:12 PM

You are the Eggman!



Happy Easter!

Johnny
Dickens' Store





Apr 2 2007 1:32 PM

Thanks for the request.
Pat
astroPuppees





Mar 27 2007 10:29 AM

Fontaine. You HAVE seen the book on my keyboard in my studio....Right? It's called "Cowboy Danny". Now you know my inspiration. Love the new stuff. Can't wait to see you! XOX, Kelley
Mike Tele -Stude Von Caster - KI6MOE





Mar 20 2007 11:34 AM

..
Johnny





Mar 17 2007 3:40 PM

Fast Fontaine,

You know what song I want to hear....are we getting 'Closer...'?

Happy St. Patty's Day!

Johnny
Todd West





Mar 17 2007 10:25 AM

Stay Cool!
Jim McGrath *Percussionist*