Brooks was born in Amherstburg, Canada in 1886. His father was a preacher, and Brooks taught himself music on their church's pump organ.[5] His family moved to Detroit, Michigan, in 1901[6] and that was where Brooks first made a name for himself in music and comedy.[5] While he never learned to read music, his works were highly sought after for their brash style, which contrasted the previous restrictive styles of Victorian era music. Towards the end of his life, his style of music had lost popularity.[6]
Career
Brooks sang, played piano, and performed on the vaudeville circuit (notably, as a Bert Williamsimitator) as well as having a successful songwriting career.[5] His first hit song was "Some of These Days", which he was able to get to headliner Sophie Tucker in 1909.[7] Tucker adopted it as her theme song, and performed it regularly for the next 55 years.
He starred in several 1920s musical[8]comedies. He appeared in the cast of Lew Leslie's Plantation Revue, which was opened in 1922.[7] After the sudden death of his partner Florence Mills in 1927, he stopped appearing in stage shows and pursued a nightclub act. He had a radio show on the CBS network in the 1930s, and he is also credited as a contributor to the music featured in the 1932 film Harlem Is Heaven. In the 1940s he became a regular in Ken Murray's "Blackouts", a long-running salute to burlesque that played in both New York and Los Angeles, California.
Brooks sang and provided piano accompaniments on records with vocalists Ethel Waters and Sara Martin.[7]
^ abParker, Bernard S. (2007). World War I Sheet Music - Volume 2. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc. pp. 608, 644. ISBN978-0-7864-2799-4.