Scene Explorer
Locations
AU Melbourne Perth Sydney
BR Rio de Janeiro
CA Montréal Toronto Vancouver
CO Medellín
DE Düsseldorf Hamburg
ES Madrid
FR Paris
GB Belfast Birmingham Brighton Bristol Cambridge Cardiff Coventry Glasgow Islington Leeds Liverpool London Manchester Nottingham Oxford Sheffield Surrey
IE Dublin
IS Reykjavík
JM Kingston
NL Amsterdam
NO Bergen
PR San Juan
SE Gothenburg Stockholm
US Aberdeen Athens Atlanta Austin Baltimore Berkeley Boston Brooklyn Buffalo Chapel Hill Chicago Cincinnati Clarksdale Cleveland Dallas Dayton Denver Detroit El Paso Fort Worth Fullerton Gary Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville Las Vegas Long Beach Long Island Los Angeles Los Angeles (LA) Louisville Macon Memphis Meridian Miami Minneapolis Nashville New Haven New Orleans New York Newark Oakland Oklahoma City Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland Queens Richmond Sacramento San Diego San Francisco San Jose Seattle Shreveport Springfield St. Louis Staten Island Tulsa Washington Wilmington
The Chambers Brothers
r&b, rock6.0m all-time streams (1 Nov '25)
Like their West Coast contemporaries Sly & the Family Stone, the Chambers Brothers shattered racial and musical divides to forge an incendiary fusion of funk, gospel, blues, and psychedelia which reached its apex with the perennial 1968 song "Time Has Come Today." The Chambers Brothers -- bassist George, guitarist Willie, harpist Lester, and guitarist Joe, all of whom contributed vocals -- were born and raised in Lee County, Mississippi; the products of an impoverished sharecropping family, the brothers first polished their vocal harmonies in the choir of their Baptist church until George was drafted into the army in 1952.
Following his discharge he relocated to Los Angeles, where the other Chambers Brothers soon settled as well; the foursome began performing gospel and folk throughout Southern California in 1954, but remained virtually unknown until appearing in New York City in 1965.
Following his discharge he relocated to Los Angeles, where the other Chambers Brothers soon settled as well; the foursome began performing gospel and folk throughout Southern California in 1954, but remained virtually unknown until appearing in New York City in 1965.