Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. I am 46yo and grew up in Arlington and have worked in DC since college. I never heard people talk about go go nor would I have been able to describe it either - so I don't think you are crazy for asking
white bubble for sure.
Anonymous wrote:OP. I am 46yo and grew up in Arlington and have worked in DC since college. I never heard people talk about go go nor would I have been able to describe it either - so I don't think you are crazy for asking
Anonymous wrote:Was Mossis Day & the Time considered Go-Go?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that the music is and should be a celebrated part of the culture. I don't think that blasting the music to the street from a mobile phone store qualifies as 'culture'. Two different things.
I guess you have to take “culture” where you can get it in D.C.
Wow Becky calm the heck down and read this article
https://slate.com/culture/2019/04/go-go-music-gentrification-washington-d-c.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that the music is and should be a celebrated part of the culture. I don't think that blasting the music to the street from a mobile phone store qualifies as 'culture'. Two different things.
I guess you have to take “culture” where you can get it in D.C.
Wow Becky calm the heck down and read this article
https://slate.com/culture/2019/04/go-go-music-gentrification-washington-d-c.html
You probably run your mouth off about how everyone is racist, but you use “Becky”.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that the music is and should be a celebrated part of the culture. I don't think that blasting the music to the street from a mobile phone store qualifies as 'culture'. Two different things.
I guess you have to take “culture” where you can get it in D.C.
Wow Becky calm the heck down and read this article
https://slate.com/culture/2019/04/go-go-music-gentrification-washington-d-c.html
Anonymous wrote:E.U. (Experience Unlimited) Was more mainstream as far as go go bands. 20 years ago anyway. Da Butt was played everywhere - from Spike Lee's movie School Daze. And they backed up Salt n Pepa on Shake Your Thang.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that the music is and should be a celebrated part of the culture. I don't think that blasting the music to the street from a mobile phone store qualifies as 'culture'. Two different things.
I guess you have to take “culture” where you can get it in D.C.
Why ask this in such a rude manner in consideration of the recent news headlines?Anonymous wrote:I'm clearly not in the cool crowd. Someone please explain this to me. Is this just a "DC trying to find some culture" thing? Or is this a real claim to fame?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that the music is and should be a celebrated part of the culture. I don't think that blasting the music to the street from a mobile phone store qualifies as 'culture'. Two different things.
I guess you have to take “culture” where you can get it in D.C.