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MEMORY LANE – Flo Brown in Baltimore City Paper

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Jul 5th, 2010
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Memory Lane: Flo Brown Feautured in the Baltimore City Paper

Baltimore City Paper

Music

With the Flo

Poet Turned Rapper Flo Brown Brings a Tough Heart to the Beat with her Debut, Whateva Comes To Mind

By Felicia Pride

Posted 6/25/2003

Even though she calls Brick City (Newark, N.J.) home, Baltimore will always conjure treasured memories for Flo Brown. “I had my first album-release party in Baltimore, and I always look forward to coming back,” she says. “It is a very special place for me.”

The album of which she speaks is her recently and self-released 2003 debut, Whateva Comes to Mind, which was about eight years in the making. That’s a long time considering the surplus of subpar hip-hop out there that is embarrassingly inferior to Brown’s lyrical deftness. “Time was a part of it,” she says of her album’s long development. “The time was what composed it, but to me it is more important to accurately express myself.”

The result of those years of fine-tuned expression is a fearless yet poignant testament from the lips of a black woman and MC with a penchant for exposing truths and a passion for verbalizing experiences. “It’s natural, it’s second nature, [it's] habitual for me to say shit my way,” Brown says. And she says shit her way with an execution as classic and distinct as the orange Air Force Ones on her feet. Her flow will never go out of style.

That’s because platelets of hip-hop run through the blood of this poet-turned-rapper who has been called Flo for as long as she can remember. As a child, Brown was enthralled with wordplay, penning poems motivated by her childhood heroes Queen Latifah and Rakim. As she grew older, writing took on a therapeutic form, allowing her to acknowledge and accept her experiences.

She became serious about rapping on the campus of Howard University, embracing the art form like a lover. It was also at Howard that the daughter of the dust emerged. Observing the power of hip-hop as a tool for change both within herself and in her environment, she composed raps that set a precedent for her later sharp social commentary.

“A lot of the stuff I rapped about at Howard foreshadowed what was to come, the things people eventually used to attack me [with], like being black and being a woman,” Brown says. “I was seeing it then, and a lot of that [discrimination] ultimately happened to me.”

A degree in sociology has helped her analyze the habits that pervade hip-hop and the industry. “In hip-hop, I look at it as tribal,” she says. “There’s this tribe that talks about guns, and this tribe that talks about sex and women, and this tribe talking about the art of rhyming. So everybody got their own agenda, everybody is trying to bring their own noise.”

So Brown brought hers. She brought it to Lyricist Lounge. She brought it to Black Lily as an original member of the eclectic music series that started in New York and has settled at Philadelphia’s Five Spot nightclub. And she brought it on tour with the Roots. Audiences are still shocked when the petite MC hits the stage and rips with an aggressive focus, candidly reciting a line like “I’ma test y’all niggas and I wish y’all would.” Just like her forefather Rakim, she ain’t no joke.

But the self-proclaimed feminine guerrilla is a honey-scented creature who rumbles wearing pink. “Calling myself a feminine guerrilla reflects my struggle but also is me acknowledging my femininity and being proud of it,” Brown says. “It is not limiting, it is limitless.”

She doesn’t want to waste time playing the male vs. female MC game either. “MC-ing isn’t really about being male or female,” she says. “The way I look at it, it is all animalistic. Like I’m a person out here who happens to be a female, but in the jungle, nobody cares if you are a female form. If you fall prey, you fall prey. The thing people fail to realize [is] that this [MC-ing] is about wit and intelligence, and men and women equally possess that.”

And chances are you can’t utter something she hasn’t already heard battling in the belly of hip-hop. Brown’s dealings with the industry have run the gamut of broken contract promises to pressures to structure her rhymes a certain way.

So with an urgent clarity, she knew exactly what she had to do. “Putting out the album on my own label, Ghetto Abnorm, came instantly after I felt like there was so much turmoil over how I was going to get it out,” she says. “I had to look outside of myself and absorb the energy that we all possess to go after what we choose.”

The 13-track album, which she admits to listening to daily, gave Brown what most artists never achieve in their entire career–100 percent creative control. As executive producer, she explored a range of autobiographical matters, from the muse of the streets to growing pains, displaying a collection of mood rings that she has worn throughout her life. She hand-picked producers–a mix of known (Jazzy Jeff and the A Touch of Jazz squad produced four tracks) and up-and-coming knob twirlers who blessed her with tracks that complement and reflect, but never overshadow, the fundamental relationship between an MC and her beats.

Brown wrote every word she spits on the album and displays the ability to assemble an entire song creatively, not just lyrical verses. “I learned writing hooks from being in the studio and people saying, ‘She can rhyme and all, but she doesn’t have hooks and she doesn’t have songs,’” she says. “So I went home and was like, ‘I’ll show them a hook.’ Some people start off writing complete songs, but me, I developed. I came from writing poems to writing songs. Now I feel the music, interpret what the beat is saying, construct it, and it develops.”

Yet Brown falls, without a doubt, into the lyricist subcategory. The precision that she has demonstrated guesting on albums such as Jazzy Jeff’s The Magnificent, the soundtrack to The Hurricane, and, most recently, Kindred’s Surrender to Love were mental appetizers compared to her full-length lyrical food for thought. On “Concrete” she effortlessly spits:

I’m nonconventional
but it’s all intentional
that’s why I’m sent to you
an unconvicted criminal
I lack essential minerals
a outlandish
outta hand heathen
that love to leave ‘em grieving
especially when they creeping
the real never sinking
my feeling never weaken
the phony always peeking
the concrete never sleeping

The release of Whateva Comes to Mind has also made Brown a businesswoman, grinding to get the album its due exposure. “My drive to do music fuels my involvement in the business side of things,” she explains. “I guess it is an example of how one passion can lead to another. You definitely have to have a separation because you’re not an artist when you walk into record stores, setting up interviews, or mailing out CDs.” The album is stocked in some independent record stores and sold on her Web site, but the satisfying struggle continues.

“I follow the music,” she says about her lifelong pilgrimage for an art form that, to her, breathes life. “Don’t even question it. When you question it, you fuck it up. You just got to trust.”

MEMORY LANE: Flo Brown featured in Volkswagen Driver Magazine

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Jun 23rd, 2010
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Memory Lane: Flo Brown in Volkswagen Driver Magazine

Flo Brown and Whateva Comes To Mind were featured in Volume 42 of the Spring/Summer 2004 issue of Volkswagen Driver Magazine.  The piece was written by Flo.

*Click photo to read story.

MEMORY LANE-Flo Brown in XXL Magazine

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May 31st, 2010
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Memory Lane: Flo Brown in XXL

Flo Brown and Whateva Comes To Mind were featured in XXL Magazine’s September 2003 issue.

The piece was written by Alexandra Phanor

Photography by Aliya Naumoff

*Shout out to Howard University*

Whateva Comes To Mind, Album Review

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Apr 28th, 2010
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Whateva Comes To Mind

Flo Brown: Whateva Comes to Mind
By J.Victoria Sanders
1 March 2004

Unless they have a schtick, angry black women with microphones tend to fade into obscurity. Lady of Rage, for example, had a lot of heart and made afro puffs on a grown ass woman seem fly. Boss was similar: her reputation as a former homeless drug dealer made it okay for her to rock a bandana and all black and spew expletives, even if she only had one hit single. You couldn’t mess with Yo-Yo either, who always looked mad, but she was too damn pretty to keep it gangsta for long, at least on the surface.

At first glance, Flo Brown seems like she might inspire the cognitive dissonance Yo-Yo did.

But the long curly locks and girlish smirk on the inside jacket of her independently released debut album, Whateva Comes to Mind are misleading. Brown, who hails from Newark, New Jersey, looks like a fresh-faced Brick City babe with sweet metaphors and delicate verbs slipping off her tongue.

She rhymes from her gut, like if she can’t tell you what’s on her mind right now, she’s damn well going to tell somebody soon. As she rhymes on “Ghetto Abnorm (Whateva Comes to Mind)”: “I’m a lady / But I got a nigga in me”.

To be honest, as a person who rarely likes independent releases, I expected a string of arrogant and overly-intellectual rants over spare beats. But Whateva Comes to Mind is refreshing as a slice of life album, complete with portraits and critiques of the streets, reflections of a woman’s experience in the ‘hood—a black woman and yeah, sometimes an angry black woman.

What Brown has going for her that other pissed off female emcees usually don’t is versatility. Her raps are poetic windows on a grimy world, but they’re confessions and testimonies, too, and she’s not afraid to be vulnerable.

It takes practice to walk that line, and before releasing Whateva Comes to Mind , Brown had plenty: she’s been rocking stages since her days at Howard University and has toured with the likes of the Roots, performed with R&B duo Kindred the Family Soul, and spit on DJ Jazzy Jeff’s The Magnificent (the latter also produced a few tracks on her album), and otherwise paid rhyming dues.

The result is an album that reveals a poetic style, which is at its most effective when Brown lets her Brick City roots show.

On “Ghetto Abnorm (Whateva Comes to Mind)”, featuring Scratch, she delivers an earnest manifesto: “I rhyme for the niggas that dwell in the streets / Rhyme for ghetto bitches / Spit verses for the weak”, and defines herself as “The Brick City vagabond predestined to shine”. Her delivery here is assertive and peppered with a little vulgarity: but she switches up on “Smile for Me”, a laid-back and nostalgic song.

She’s at her best when she combines her aggression as a “feminine guerilla” with a touch of sensitivity, as she does on “Callin’ Me”, an exploration of self-medicating emotional pain and her search for mental freedom. The hook explains her purpose, which is essentially to be honest with herself through her work: “I wish I could clear your mind / Set you free / Give you fantasy like you see on TV / Keep you medicated in a dream / But I can’t / ‘Cause the truth calls me / So I speak”.

If there’s an imbalance on this album, it’s that every song doesn’t complement Brown’s otherwise sharp style. “It’s a Wrap” is the standard sorry-ass-man track, and as such, comes off as mediocre—it sounds like a track Eve abandoned. But that’s a rare, disappointing few minutes on an album layered with potential and thought-provoking passion. Pretty locks or no, pissed off or sweet, Flo Brown has a unique talent that probably won’t disappear anytime soon.

Pop Matters

BLACK LILY

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Apr 19th, 2010
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Flo Brown Black Lily

Flo Brown was one of the original members of Black Lily from the years of 1999 to 2000.

Black Lily was a live showcase series that featured female performers in NYC and Philadelphia.

Peep this cover story on Black Lily featured in The Philadelphia Weekly.

The piece was written by Raymond Taylor.

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