The '70s influence evident throughout the discography of Patrick Sleepy Brown likely has something to do with Brown's father, Jimmy Brown, the lead vocalist and saxophonist of funk band Brick. Due to his father's vocation, the Savannah-born and Atlanta-raised Sleepy Brown grew up behind the stage and bumped shoulders with the likes of Barry White, Cameo, Commodores, and Parliament. Early on, he was fascinated with music and often carried around an old four-track machine and small keyboard everywhere he went. That earnestness appealed to fledgling musicians Rico Wade and Ray Murray when they met Brown around 1990. Brown's funk upbringing added an integral element to the sound the trio -- known as Organized Noize -- honed in their makeshift studio in the basement of Wade's mother's house. Dubbed the Dungeon, the space birthed the Dungeon Family, featuring Organized Noize, OutKast, and Goodie Mob, among others. Brown, a talented keyboardist and advocate for live instrumentation, developed into a savvy multi-instrumentalist and mastered various synthesizers and electric pianos, while his inclination for using samplers and drum machines kept him rooted in hip-hop. At the same time, he became an asset as a vocalist, heard on the hook of OutKast's 1993 debut single "Player's Ball," a number 37 pop hit.
After Organized Noize became reliable hitmakers, Brown occasionally indulged his funk fixation by leading retro-funk/hip-hop-themed side projects. Society of Soul, a group that also featured Rico Wade and Ray Murray among its membership, issued Brainchild on LaFace in 1995 and touched the R&B/hip-hop singles chart with "E.M.B.R.A.C.E (Da Da Dah Dah)." Three years later, Brown was leading Sleepy's Theme, who released a self-titled album and charted with the Organized Noize production "Still Smokin'." During this period, Brown earned his first Grammy nomination as co-writer and co-producer of TLC's number one pop hit "Waterfalls," which was up for Record of the Year. He was also partly responsible for En Vogue's number two hit "Don't Let Go (Love)" and got the opportunity to work on Curtis Mayfield's final album, New World Order.
Brown and Organized Noize racked up more accolades in the early 2000s. Still closely affiliated with OutKast, they earned their second Grammy nomination when Stankonia was up for Album of the Year in 2001. Brown himself was increasingly visible, singing on the Top 40 Stankonia single "So Fresh, So Clean," Ludacris' number 22 pop hit "Saturday (Oooh! Ooooh!)," and "The Way You Move," a chart-topper off OutKast's 2003 double album Speakerboxxx/The Love Below. OutKast returned the favor with a featured appearance on Brown's own "I Can't Wait," a Top 40 hit recorded for the Barbershop 2 soundtrack.
The stage was set for Brown to release his solo debut album, For the Grown and Sexy, when DreamWorks, the label to which he was signed, was absorbed into Interscope. Brown and Interscope did not see eye to eye on the direction of the album, prompting Brown to leave the label and sign with Big Boi's Purple Ribbon Records in 2005. He put together some new songs for Mr. Brown, an LP that arrived in October 2006 and entered the Billboard 200 at number 53 (number six R&B/hip-hop). Brown's Organized Noize partners contributed heavily, while the Neptunes chipped in for the single "Margarita." All along, and throughout the next decade, Brown continued to write and produce for numerous artists, including OutKast, Janelle Monáe, Big K.R.I.T., and especially Big Boi. Shortly after Brown led off the Future-presented Superfly soundtrack, he and Big Boi started releasing collaborative singles leading to the 2021 release of The Big Sleepover. ~ Andy Kellman & Cyril Cordor, Rovi