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Smokestack Lightnin' Home Page -- The Blues Profile Page
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"My father lost everything before he found his faith," says Brooks. "Then, for the next 35 years, he spread the word and tended to people who were needy. Around Regent Park and in the Jane-Finch area they called him the Bread Man because he'd distribute day-old loaves from one of the big bakeries. He used to make my brother (now a missionary in Liberia) and sister stand on Coke boxes and recite memorized passages from the scriptures. He was a fixture around Toronto, he used to stand on street corners with a bullhorn spreading the word of Jesus. After years of struggle in the Rock n' Roll trenches of Toronto, Nashville and Los Angeles, addiction to alcohol, speed and heroin, as well as a monstrous spiritual and physical breakdown in the mid-1980s and a life-changing rehabilitation at Toronto's Donwood Institute, Brooks has emerged as a new star in contemporary Gospel music. "In 30 years in this business," says Brooks' bass player, Dennis Pinhorn, "I've never met anyone like him. He's incredibly hard-working and considerate. His songs light a fire. I'm no Christian, but Danny's an original. He walks the walk". "I'm not here to preach to anybody," insists Brooks, who, since 1991, has played for prison inmates all over the province, telling stories of his spiritual turnaround. "I volunteer," he explains. "In the Bible, it says: To whom much is given, much is required. Having spent time in jail myself —six months of a 15-month sentence for robbing a gas station and several break-ins —I figure it's the least I can do. "Besides, I'm doing what I've been doing all along, what any songwriter does —putting my own experience into musical form. I'm not crusading. But I'm not hiding, either. From God, and the ideas and feelings that are important to me. As as songwriter, I've learned there's a great power in music. I can do things with the gifts I've been given that may make people's lives a little better, give them some hope". -by Greg Quill/ TORONTO STAR
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