This article is about the British guitarist. For the American blues guitarist, see Kenny Brown (guitarist). For the American multi-instrumentalist, see Bundy K. Brown.
Ken Brown
Background information
Born
(1940-08-20)20 August 1940 Enfield, Middlesex, England
Ken Brown was a member of the Les Stewart Quartet with Les Stewart, George Harrison, and Geoff Skinner.[3]Mona Best opened The Casbah Coffee Club on 29 August 1959, and Brown arranged for the quartet to be its resident band. When Brown missed rehearsals to help decorate The Casbah, Stewart refused to play.[4] Brown and Harrison recruited John Lennon and Paul McCartney at short notice to help them fulfil the residency, and used the name of The Quarrymen.[4] They played a series of seven Saturday night engagements in The Casbah for 15 shillings each per night, starting on 29 August to October 1959, featuring Brown, Lennon, McCartney and Harrison, but without a drummer, and only one microphone connected to the club's small PA system.[5][6] The opening night performance was attended by about 300 local teenagers, but as the cellar had no air-conditioning and people were dancing, the temperature rose to a level where it became hard to breathe.[7]
Brown injured his leg on 10 October and it was agreed that he could not play, so he rested upstairs while the three future Beatles, Lennon, Harrison, and McCartney played the gig.[1] Mona Best still divided the group's £3 fee (equivalent to £100 in 2024)[8] equally between the four of them. An argument ensued that meant Brown lost his place in the group.
Ken Brown formed the Blackjacks with Pete Best (the son of Mona Best) on drums and 'Chas' Newby.[1] The group played at the Casbah until Pete Best was invited to join the Beatles just before their first 1960 trip to Hamburg in Germany. The Blackjacks disbanded and Brown moved to London. Brown never established himself as a professional musician.
Brown wrote an autobiography of his experiences initially called My Life and subsequently retitled Some Other Guy![1][9] The approximately 38,000-word manuscript never found a market and remains unpublished.[10]
Brown suffered from emphysema and died at his home in Essex aged 69. His body was discovered on 14 June 2010; police determined that he had died about five days earlier.[11]
^Ken Brown, "Some Other Guy!". Archived from the original on 25 July 2008. Retrieved 27 June 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)