New Chris Brown concert clips are once again putting the R&B star at the center of conversation after Brown brought a woman onstage during his Minneapolis show. His performance of “Take You Down” turned into one of the night’s most talked about moments.
Footage from the show appeared to show Brown performing suggestive choreography with a fan on a mattress during the “Take You Down” portion of the concert.
The woman was on all fours on the stage mattress while Brown moved closely behind her, and the outlet reported that she appeared to participate by twerking during the routine.
The concert moment fits into a larger performance style that has become part of his live show conversation. Brown performed a similar adult themed “Take You Down” segment during the opening night of the Raymond and Brown Tour on June 26, 2026, at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver. The Denver performance involved a woman being handcuffed to an overhead fixture before being moved to a bed onstage.
For longtime fans, “Take You Down” has always lived in a more sensual lane of Brown’s catalog. The song appeared on Brown’s sophomore album, “Exclusive,” and has become a recurring centerpiece for some of his more provocative tour moments. The latest clip is not just about choreography. It is also about how far artists push intimacy onstage in an era where every move can hit social media before the lights even come back up.
The timing is also part of why this video is gaining attention. Brown was recently ordered to pay $13 million after a jury found him liable in a civil case involving former housekeeper Maria Avila and injuries she said she suffered in a dog attack on his property. Avila claimed Brown was negligent by allowing a large dog to roam his backyard, where she said she was attacked while taking out the trash.
A Los Angeles jury ruled in Avila’s favor after a two week trial, with Brown and his company Black Pyramid LLC ordered to pay her $12.9 million for negligence. Avila’s sister, Patricia Avila, received $885,000, while Avila’s husband, Oscar Olivo, received $50,000.
Avila previously testified that she was not warned about dogs being present at Brown’s Los Angeles home and told the jury, “I thought I was going to die.” TMZ reported that Brown argued in his initial response that Avila provoked the dog and caused her own injuries.
Brown testified about seeing Avila covered in blood and said, “The blood kind of freaked me out.” The singer said he was “in shock” and feared a “media circus” if his voice was heard on the 911 call or if he remained present when authorities arrived.
That legal backdrop gives the concert coverage a different kind of weight. On one side, the tour is still moving with stadium level production, viral moments, and a fan base that continues to show up. On the other side, the civil verdict has placed Brown back in headlines for reasons that extend beyond music and performance.
Some viewers may see it as part of Brown’s established stage persona. Others may see it as a moment that raises questions about boundaries in live entertainment. Either way, the viral moment has become another reminder that Brown’s career continues to exist at the intersection of spectacle, loyalty, controversy, and headline making performance.
“Take You Down” is included in the reported setlist for the 2026 R&B Tour with Usher, which places the song deep into a show built around both artists’ catalogs. For Brown, that means one of his older records is now creating one of his newest viral moments.
