Brown fascinated other artists.
Larry Rivers, for instance, made an audio-recording of an interview with him. Classical composer
David Amram often watched Brown perform in Washington Square Park, where Brown was known to recite the poetry of
Edgar Allan Poe,
William Shakespeare, and
Walt Whitman, and also to elaborate on each of their works. In an interview in 2015, Amram said, "One of the reasons Brown could recite Whitman, among all the other stuff he did, was because he was such a good improviser, so when he was reciting anything …. or making some of the stuff up, that way of riffing or improvising on a classic was all part of the same process." Scholars of African American folklore and folk music have placed Brown's poetry within the African-American tradition known as
toasting.
Abiodun Oyewole, of the
Last Poets, places Brown's poetry within that tradition as well, but has also suggested that Brown's work crossed a racial divide. Brown frequently performed and later recorded a poem called "Doriella du Fontaine";
The Last Poets recorded a version of the same toast with
Jimi Hendrix in 1969. Oyewole, a scholar of poetry as well as a performer, has noted Brown's legacy as a bridge figure between white and black art forms, and especially between Beat poetry and rap music. "It's a hand in the glove if you look at it," Oyewole told
The New Yorker Radio Hour. "I mean with Big Brown and
Ginsberg, and all the Beat Poets down in the Village, it's alive and well today in more ways than one. I mean these guys represent something that we are trying to capture now. We've got a whole generation of young people who are living, breathing, and dying with the word." The photographer
LeRoy Henderson, who photographed Brown in Washington Square Park in the 1960s, later recalled his poetry as public performance. "This guy Brown, Big Brown, he would be out there reciting his poetry, and he was really quite vocal, and quite—and big guy. Huge guy. And so that picture of him, with him looming in the foreground like that, with that expression on his face, and with his finger pointing in the air, that was...he was good for those gestures!" == Woodstock and arrest ==