About Me
Born in Beaverton, Oregon and raised in Portland, Christopher began his formal music training with piano lessons at age five. Inspired by his father, former Motown drummer and Portland jazz luminary Mel Brown, Chris added both saxophone and drums to his musical palette by age eleven. After winning numerous local awards, he gained national recognition in 1995 when his jazz trio was awarded DownBeat Magazine’s "Best High School Instrumental Group." During that same year he was invited to perform with Wynton Marsalis at Portland’s Aladdin Theater.After graduating from Wilson High School, Brown enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps, where he served for four years. He used this time to build both his musical and his networking skills-beating the streets and meeting local artists wherever the Corps sent him. In 1996, while stationed in New Orleans, he became acquainted with the Marsalis family, through whom he met many top musicians in that city and beyond. Relocated after one year to Parris Island, S.C., Brown began working with bass legend Ben Tucker. During his three years with Tucker he performed with many jazz luminaries including Buddy Defranco and Terry Gibbs.Upon his release from active duty in 1999, Christopher moved to New Brunswick, N.J., where he completed both undergraduate and graduate degrees in Jazz Studies/Performance at Rutgers University. In the years since he has become a regular with large ensembles such as the George Gee Swing Big Band and the Next Legacy Jazz Orchestra, as well as an in-demand rhythm section player with a wide range of artists including Benny Golson, Ralph Bowen, Charles Fambrough, Darrell Grant, Onaje Allen Gumbs, Paul Bollenback, Ron Affif, John Stubblefield, Darren Barrett, Vincent Herring, Stanley Cowell, Conrad Herwig, Sean Jones, Frank Lacey, John Benitez, Lonnie Plaxico, Carla Cook, Rosana Vitro, Essiest Essiet, Don Braden, Mark Gross, Antonio Hart, Kenny Davis, John Gordon, John Ellis, Roy Hargrove, and Ronnie Matthews. Brown has also performed on saxophone with the Ralph Peterson Jr. Quintet. He currently holds down a post as the lead saxophonist in the N.J. Army National Guard Band, as well is a Professor of Jazz Theory at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ.In addition to music, Brown also has a burgeoning screen career. He first appeared on film as an extra in 1993’s Mr. Holland’s Opus, and now he can be seen yet again in the 2007 blockbuster film entitled American Gangster, starring Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe.