It Was Not...All in My Mind: A Memoir
By (Author) Maxine Brown
BookBaby
BookBaby
1st July 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
Composers and songwriters
Biography: arts and entertainment
Hardback
200
Width 146mm, Height 222mm
When twenty-five-year-old Maxine Brown stepped into a recording studio for the first time, she wasn't supposed to be there. But her manager had suddenly lost his biggest act, the sister and brother duo Inez Foxx and Charlie Foxx, (of "Mockingbird" fame) and quickly needed a new act so he wouldn't lose his money for the 30-minute recording session he had booked. Maxine had one song to sing, which she had written herself, and in one take-she took two, just in case-she cut the demo for "It's All in My Mind." This was September 1960. Topping the charts, the record launched a singing career that would span almost seventy years and the who, what, and where that were a huge part of the history of rhythm and blues and soul music: from her numerous bookings at the storied Apollo Theater in Harlem, including with Marvin Gaye; to being on the "Chitlin' Circuit" with Gladys Knight; to the Bag O' Nails in London, with the Beatles in the audience; to recording sessions at FAME studio in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, with Otis Redding, to Tokyo, Japan, with Ben E. King, singing his superhit "Stand by Me" in Japanese.
It Was Not...All in My Mind is the stirring story of one of the most gifted rhythm and blues/soul singers of the 1960s: the profound impact the upheavals of her childhood and youth would have on the rest of her life; the exhilarating highs and the devastating lows of her musical career, taking us back to where it all began: Maxine, at nine years old, sitting on the stoop in Jamaica, Queens, New York, singing three-part harmony with her sister and a friend, discovering she had a talent that matched her love for singing.
Born in Kingstree, South Carolina, in 1935, Maxine Brown went on to inspire several generations with her singular style and tone, exemplified by her chart-topping songs: "All in My Mind," "Funny," and "Oh No, Not My Baby." Throughout her career, she was represented by some of the most respected labels in the music industry, including Scepter/Wand, where she also recorded duets with soul singer Chuck Jackson, such as the hits: "Something You Got," "Hold On I'm Coming," and "Daddy's Home." In the mid-1970s, between labels, Maxine made her Broadway debut as the lead in the musical Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope. In 2014, she was inducted into the British Northern Soul's Hall of Fame. She is a recipient of the Rhythm and Blues Foundation's Pioneer Award-which honors "the contributions and excellence of legendary Rhythm & Blues artists." Maxine lives in South Carolina. It Was Not...All in My Mind is her first book.