Maurice Brown
Biography
Squadron leader Maurice Peter Brown (1919–2011) was a World War II Royal Air Force fighter pilot during the Battle of Britain. Brown joined the RAF in 1938, and promoted to the rank of flying officer in October 1940. During the Battle of Britain, Brown flew Spitfires with No. 611 Squadron RAF and No. 41 Squadron RAF. During the battle he claimed 3 and 1 shared destroyed, and one shared 'probable'. Following the Battle of Britain, Brown was a flying instructor at No. 61 OTU Operational Training Unit and Cranwell Flying Training School. He was promoted to flight lieutenant in January 1944 and subsequently to the rank of squadron leader. He was awarded the Air Force Cross in December 1945. He was released from the RAF in November 1945, retaining the rank of squadron leader. In 2004, Brown wrote Honour Restored about the Battle of Britain and his exploits and those of his fellow pilots. Brown was a member of the Battle of Britain Historical Society and unveiled a plaque at Stockport Grammar School to commemorate two Battle of Britain pilots who attended the school. Brown died on 20 January 2011.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Inner City Blues
1971

Distracted
2026

The Verve Years (1950-51)
1976

Play It Again, Erroll!
1975

Better Git It In Your Soul
1971

Who Can I Turn To
1964

Mingus Dynasty
1960

Nostalgia In Times Square / The Immortal 1959 Sessions
1979

Beach Samba
1967

Warm Wave
1964

The August Child
1964

Golden Piano Hits
1961

Witchcraft
1959

Sings Ballads Of The Sad Cafe
1959
Credited work
519 releases · 83 albums · active 1950–2026
- Performance · 608
- Other credits · 17
- Production · 3
Studios: Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey · A&R Studios · Bell Sound Studios · CBS Studios, New York
Frequent collaborators
- Charlie Parker
- Charles Mingus
- Hugo Montenegro
- Hugo Montenegro And Orchestra
- Various
- Richard Hayman
- Sarah Vaughan
- Astrud Gilberto
