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Tag: go-go

  • Go-Go Museum & Cafe starts ‘Sustaining the Beat’ campaign – WTOP News

    A campaign was launched to ensure the sustainability of the Go-Go Museum & Cafe, located in D.C.’s Anacostia neighborhood, with a goal of $500,000.

    The Go-Go Museum & Cafe is located in D.C.’s Anacostia neighborhood.
    (WTOP/Jimmy Alexander)

    WTOP/Jimmy Alexander

    Go-Go Museum & Cafe
    The museum, which features 16 exhibits, including AI holograms, celebrates the homegrown sound of D.C.
    (WTOP/Jimmy Alexander)

    WTOP/Jimmy Alexander

    Go-Go Museum & Cafe
    There’s also the 29-foot mobile museum, which is a bus featuring mini exhibits.
    (WTOP/Jimmy Alexander)

    WTOP/Jimmy Alexander

    Less than nine months ago, the Go-Go Museum & Cafe in D.C.’s Anacostia neighborhood opened its doors.

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    Go-Go Museum & Cafe starts the ‘Sustaining the Beat’ campaign

    The museum, which features 16 exhibits, including AI holograms, not only celebrates the homegrown sound of D.C., it hosts free events for the community and helps keep Go-Go music alive with area school children, and tourists from around the world. There’s also the 29-foot mobile museum, which is a bus featuring mini exhibits.

    An issue that Ronald Moten, founder and president of the Go-Go Museum, did not see happening was the District getting a billion dollars cut from its budget.

    Moten said the first to lose funds are places like the Go-Go Museum.

    “So we have to count on our community and people with a heart for the arts to support us a little more,” said Moten.

    On Saturday, the museum hosted a fundraiser called, ‘The Juke Joint: Put It In The Pocket.’

    The event was hosted by comedian, VJ and actor Joe Clair and featured live music, including performers Raheen DeVaughn, The Crank Crusaders, Backyard Band, Tre from beloved Go-Go band UCB, Yella P and Ms. Kim Michelle.

    Plus, the event launched the ‘Sustaining the Beat’ campaign to ensure sustainability of the Go-Go Museum & Cafe, with a goal of $500,000.

    In the beginning, the museum was open two days a week, but due to demand they moved to six days a week. Now it needs to raise enough money so the employees can be paid, and to continue hosting educational and community-focused programs.

    If you want to help, Moten said you can visit the museum’s website and buy some merchandise or come for a visit.

    “You can come and enjoy yourself in the museum, and that helps as well, because this music really is part of the blood, the soul of this city,” said Moten.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Jimmy Alexander

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  • Rare Essence headlines Summer Soul Music Festival in La Plata on Labor Day weekend – WTOP News

    Rare Essence headlines Summer Soul Music Festival in La Plata on Labor Day weekend – WTOP News

    The beloved D.C. go-go band Rare Essence headlines the third annual Summer Soul Music Festival at the Charles County Fairgrounds in La Plata, Maryland.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Rare Essence at the Summer Soul Music Fest (Part 1)

    Dancing on the eve of Labor Day means you can party without having to worry about work the next day!

    Rare Essence performs live at U Street Music Hall. (Courtesy U Street Music Hall)

    The beloved D.C. go-go band Rare Essence headlines the third annual Summer Soul Music Festival at the Charles County Fairgrounds in La Plata, Maryland, on Sunday from noon to 8 p.m.

    WTOP caught up with founding member Andre “Whiteboy” Johnson as Rare Essence leads a lineup that includes Northeast Groovers, DCVybe, The Kim Michelle Experience and All-Star Experience, as well as DJ Frisco and DJ Biggs.

    “For decades now, we’ve always done a big show on Labor Day Sunday,” Johnson told WTOP. “This is the very first time that we’ve done this festival and this venue, so this is going to be a really big deal here. We used to play in that area a lot back in the ’80s and ’90s, some of the venues aren’t there anymore, but the people that live in that area, they travel up to D.C. and Prince George’s County sometimes, but we’re glad to be going to them this time.”

    Johnson met his future bandmates as kids at St. Thomas More Academy in Southeast D.C., including Quentin “Footz” Davidson, Michael “Funky Ned” Neal and John “Big Horn” Jones. How did he get his nickname?

    “I used to listen to a lot of pop music, which was rock music at the time, so a lot of Led Zeppelin, Aerosmith, Kansas, The Eagles, all of those groups, and all the music was guitar-driven. I’m a guitar player, so I would learn those songs and play those songs at band practice,” Johnson said. “They started teasing me saying, ‘You’re playing all that white music, we’re gonna call you ‘Whiteboy.’”

    Rare Essence officially formed as a band in 1976, playing all the clubs in the D.C. area and moving to bigger venues, such as the Washington Coliseum, the Capitals Center and the D.C. Armory.

    “They were just gigs to us. We had no idea because we were young. We just knew we were playing in a big place today, we didn’t realize the magnitude of what we were doing at that time,” Johnson said.

    While E.U.’s hit song “Da Butt” went nationwide thanks to Spike Lee’s classic film “School Daze” (1988), Rare Essence’s song “Lock It” similarly went nationwide thanks to the soundtrack of Kevin Hooks’ comedy flick “Strictly Business” (1991) starring D.C. native Tommy Davidson and future Oscar winner Halle Berry.

    “That was great,” Johnson said. “The record already had really good buzz on the East Coast and we were signed to Uptown Records, who Andre Harrell was one of the producers of that movie. He said, ‘I want to put one of the songs in that movie,’ so we were like, ‘Yeah, great, that’s fine.’ After he put it in, that’s what made it really national.”

    After many live albums, the band’s first studio album was “Work the Walls” (1992), including a hit title track that came to be with help from a cement bench along the side wall of The Celebrity Hall, later known as The Black Hole.

    “When we were playing a lot of the women would jump up on there and start dancing facing the wall, so that’s actually where the idea came from. We’re watching them and screaming, ‘Work the walls! Work the walls!’ — and it turned into a song,” Johnson said.

    Their second album, “So What You Want?” (1995), was partially recorded at The Eastside Club in D.C., where they used to play every Wednesday night.

    “The Eastside just had a vibe to it. Every time we walked in there on a Wednesday night until 3 in the morning, they jam packed in there and everybody was just all the way amped up. Plus it had a really good sound to it, the ceilings weren’t real high, there was a lot of wood, so that’s why we figured it would be a good spot for a live set,” Johnson said.

    That same year, they joined the holiday go-go compilation album “Let’s Go-Go Christmas” (1995), doing for D.C. what Kurtis Blow’s “Christmas Rappin’” did for Harlem and Run-D.M.C.’s “Christmas in Hollis” did for Queens.

    “The great thing about that is every Christmas since the release of that song and that album, they play those songs on the radio, so it’s great to even be part of the Christmas holiday,” Johnson said.

    Evolving from “Body Snatchers” (1996) to “We Go On and On” (1998), their music continued to reflect the times as the song “Overnight Scenario” delivered lyrics that influenced Jay-Z’s “Do It Again” released the next year.

    Meanwhile, their album “RE-2000” (1999) featured Redman on “We Push” and their album “Turn It Up” (2016) featured collaborations with DJ Kool and Raheem DeVaughn.

    “We are going along with what’s current, we’ve always been able to do that,” Johnson said. “We’re from the ’70s, but you can’t sound like you’re from the ’70s in the ’90s, so we were able to morph into a ’90s sound, a 2000s sound. Even today, we make sure that we keep the band sounding current while still being able to do the classics.”

    Today, Rare Essence has carved a spot on the proverbial Mount Rushmore of D.C. go-go bands, including the Chuck Brown Band, Trouble Funk and Experience Unlimited (WTOP has gratefully interviewed them all).

    “It’s absolutely an honor to be a part of the first generation of go-go,” Johnson said. “We’re all following Chuck Brown’s lead. Again, at the time, we had no idea that it was gonna turn into what it turned into. We were just out there having a good time playing from clubs to school gyms to rec centers and out at the parks. We were just having a good time performing and this all morphed into a genre and it just kept us going decade after decade.”

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Rare Essence at the Summer Soul Music Fest (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation on the podcast below:

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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  • National Landing hosts ‘Fridays at the Fountain’ for final time of the summer in Crystal City – WTOP News

    National Landing hosts ‘Fridays at the Fountain’ for final time of the summer in Crystal City – WTOP News

    National Landing hosts this summer’s final “Fridays at the Fountain” from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Friday at the Water Park in Crystal City, Virginia.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Fridays at the Fountain in Crystal City (Part 1)

    Are you looking for a fun and relaxing way to unwind in the evening after a hard week at work?

    National Landing hosts this summer’s final “Fridays at the Fountain” from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Friday at the Water Park at 1601 Crystal Drive in Crystal City, Virginia.

    “‘Fridays at the Fountain’ is a long-standing tradition in National Landing, but we’re coming up on our one-year anniversary this fall of a re-imagined Water Park,” National Landing BID president and executive director Tracy Sayegh Gabriel told WTOP.

    “The re-imagined Water Park opened in October of 2023. It had always been a wonderful community park space, but the new Water Park has a dozen eateries, a great landscape, it’s really an oasis in a city setting.”

    The event has featured a variety of genres so far this summer, including jazz and funk with Clarence Ward III & Dat Feel Good, salsa with Max Rosado and the 7th Street Band, blues with Carly Harvey, R&B with Deidra Love, Latin funk with Bongo District, bluegrass with Moose Jaw Bluegrass, and the soul and R&B stylings of Bryan Lee.

    This Friday’s final summer event features D.C. go-go band Mambo Sauce, aptly named after the city’s own beloved condiment, performing two live sets with a brief intermission as a DJ keeps the music going in between.

    “Bring a blanket or a chair,” Gabriel said. “This is an event for all ages to enjoy great live music and fabulous food.”

    Indeed, if you work up an appetite dancing, you can also grab a bite from the unique outdoor food hall.

    “We have nearly a dozen eateries, most of which are outdoor concessions,” Gabriel said. “Water Park features Brij Coffee, Bubbie’s Plant Burgers, Cracked Eggery, Crush Pizza, Dolci Gelati, Falafel Inc., PhoWheels, Queen Mother’s Kitchen, Tiki Thai and Water Bar, [which is] perched on top of Water Park’s fountain.”

    After the event, feel free to visit the other cool restaurants and entertainment options nearby.

    “Water Park is in the heart of National Landing along Crystal Drive in a stretch that is fast-transforming with some of the most exciting businesses in the DMV,” Gabriel said. “We’ve got an Alamo Cinema Drafthouse, as well as Mah-Ze-Dahr, great tacos at Tacombi, we also have a very new concept by Peter Chang that’s NiHao. … Of course, if you need ice cream we’ve got Van Leeuwen that just opened up around the corner from Water Park.”

    The Water Park is located just a block from the Crystal City Metro station.

    Find more information here.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Fridays at the Fountain in Crystal City (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation here.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Jason Fraley

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  • DC go-go legend and EU frontman Sugar Bear celebrating 50th birthday with shows in Tysons, Bethesda – WTOP News

    DC go-go legend and EU frontman Sugar Bear celebrating 50th birthday with shows in Tysons, Bethesda – WTOP News

    The EU frontman celebrates at Capital One Hall in Tysons, Virginia this Friday, July 12, before a big “Birthday Bash” at Bethesda Theater in Bethesda, Maryland on July 26 and 27.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Sugar Bear in Virginia and Maryland (Part 1)

    To paraphrase Experience Unlimited’s biggest go-go hit, “Sugar Bear’s got a big old birthday, oh yeah!”

    DC Go Go legend Sugar Bear performs at Bladensburg Waterfront Park Thursday for PG County residents at a free concert to address gun violence and remember victims. (Gigi Barnett/WTOP)

    The EU frontman celebrates at Capital One Hall in Tysons, Virginia this Friday, July 12, before a big “Birthday Bash” at Bethesda Theater in Bethesda, Maryland on July 26 and 27.

    “This is my great 50,” Sugar Bear told WTOP. “Let’s have a party, reminisce, bring your cell phones, we’ll take pictures after the show, we’re selling EU gear, some shirts, so come on. … It’s a little rock ‘n roll, of course a majority go-go music, we always throw in a couple (covers), but mainly it’s all EU from the beginning to now.”

    Born in North Carolina in 1974, Gregory Elliott moved with his parents to D.C. when he was just 2 years old, settling on Dix Street in Northeast D.C. before moving to Valley Green Public Housing in Congress Heights.

    “That’s where Sugar Bear was born,” Sugar Bear said. “I came up with R&B, The Temptations, Earth Wind & Fire, James Brown, Mandrill, but when I got to Ballou High School, I was a rock head with Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath. It was a whole new era of Grand Funk Railroad, Aerosmith, you name it. … I just love rock ‘n roll.”

    In 1975, he formed Experience Unlimited with his classmates at Ballou High School in Southeast D.C.

    “We won the talent show and got to open up for Chuck Brown,” Sugar Bear said. “Every band wanted to play The Panorama Room. … We got in but didn’t do too good; we were playing rock music and they wanted to hear party music. … Chuck pulled me aside and said, ‘Son, you’ve got talent, but you’ve gotta play what people want to hear.’ That’s all I needed, that was my light switch. That was a Friday night and the next Monday we were playing go-go.”

    In 1988, EU blew up on the soundtrack of Spike Lee’s sophomore film “School Daze” (1988) as the Grammy-nominated single “Da Butt” topped the R&B charts and reached No. 35 on the overall Billboard Hot 100.

    “That came from Spike Lee’s vision and Marcus Miller, one of the greatest bass players I’ve ever seen in my life,” Sugar Bear said. “I sung my little hooks like, ‘Shirley got a big old butt, Irene got a big old butt,’ stuff like that, and I even played a little bass on it. … Ever since ‘Bustin’ Loose,’ there was nothing people knew about go-go music, so when ‘Da Butt’ came out it was like, ‘Wow, this stuff is hot!’ It opened up the floodgates for our culture.”

    After “Da Butt,” EU signed with Virgin Records for the album “Livin’ Large” (1989), featuring a pair of Top 10 hits on the R&B charts with “Buck Wild” and “Taste of Your Love.” They also recorded a hit collab with Salt-N-Pepa on “Shake Your Thang,” sampling both The Isley Brothers’ “It’s Your Thing” and James Brown’s “Funky President.”

    “We were blessed with that and it kept EU’s name getting bigger and bigger around the globe,” Sugar Bear said.

    In 2021, “Da Butt” gained new life when actress Glenn Close danced to it live on the Oscars telecast.

    “I was watching the Lakers (and) my phone started ringing back to back, all these texts: ‘Turn to Channel 7, the Oscars, Glenn Close is performing ‘Da Butt!’ I said, ‘What?’ So I did and caught it in time, amazing,” Sugar Bear said. “We were coming out of the corona pandemic. … Everybody was going through mental breakdowns, all the deaths. I think (‘Da Butt’ at the Oscars) was a bright moment in our history because it made everybody feel good again.”

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Sugar Bear in Virginia and Maryland (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation on the podcast below:

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Jason Fraley

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  • Godfather of Go-Go’s son leads Chuck Brown Band at Maryland concert to ring in Father’s Day, Juneteenth – WTOP News

    Godfather of Go-Go’s son leads Chuck Brown Band at Maryland concert to ring in Father’s Day, Juneteenth – WTOP News

    This Saturday, the Chuck Brown Band headlines a special concert at Watkins Regional Park in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, from 12 to 5 p.m. on lineup that includes Trouble Funk, the Luther Relives Tribute and the Brencore All Stars, along with an array of art exhibits, food trucks and activities.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Chuck Brown Band at Watkins Regional Park (Part 1)

    It’s time to “bust loose” and ring in both Father’s Day and Juneteenth with some go-go music!

    Wiley Brown performs with the Chuck Brown Band. (VSDavis)

    This Saturday, the Chuck Brown Band headlines a special concert at Watkins Regional Park in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. on a lineup that includes Trouble Funk, the Luther Relives Tribute and the Brencore All Stars, along with an array of art exhibits, food trucks and activities.

    WTOP caught up with Wiley Brown, who took over as lead singer for his late father, “The Godfather of Go-Go.”

    “We’re definitely looking forward to having a good old time outside in the sun and getting our party on for sure,” Brown told WTOP. “This will be my first time performing at Watkins Park with the band. I know my father probably did it years ago plenty of times, but this will be my first time. … We’re definitely looking forward to bringing the people some good summertime vibes. … There’s no better way than with the Chuck Brown Band!”

    Born in North Carolina in 1936, Chuck Brown moved to D.C. at age six. By age 15, he was living in the streets before spending time in prison for a deadly beating incident that he always claimed to be self-defense. After paying his debt to society, Brown would go on to pioneer go-go music to create the city’s signature sound.

    “He was always singing with my grandmother in the church since he was 7,” Brown said. “The pivotal moment for him was when he was 24, during the time he was incarcerated, he learned how to play the guitar. Once he got out, there was no looking back. He began performing in people’s backyards, then he was able to perform in clubs. … After being with the Earls of Rhythm and Los Latinos, he had the insight and the drive to create his own band.”

    That band was, of course, The Soul Searchers, whose first album “We the People” (1972) had a hit title track. They followed up with the successful second album “Salt of the Earth” (1974) with hits like “Blow Your Whistle” and “Ashley’s Roachclip,” which has been sampled by Eric B. & Rakim, Slick Rick, Run-DMC, Milli Vanilli and EMF.

    Still, it was their third album “Bustin’ Loose” (1979) that became iconic with its catchy title track that topped the R&B charts for over a dozen weeks and has since been sampled by the likes of Nelly in “Hot in Herre.”

    “When he put it out, he knew that he had something, but he didn’t know that it would take off the way it did; it took off all over the world,” Brown said. “To this day, we have people in Japan still contacting my manager and family letting us know how much they love the music. When ‘Bustin’ Loose’ hit, that really set the tone for go-go music and plenty of bands ended up popping up all over the city following my father’s foundation that he laid.”

    In 1984, they dropped another hit “We Need Some Money,” sampled by Kid ‘n Play and Wreckx-n-Effect.

    “He wrote it in less than 10 minutes because he needed some money; it’s the fastest song he ever wrote,” Brown said. “A lot of music artists have these moments when you’re feeling something, you’ve gotta hurry up and get it out because there’s nothing like capturing something in the moment. … There’s a chant when we perform it where he said, ‘Masterclass, Visa, American Express, I ain’t got nothin’ against no credit cards, but the cash is the best.’”

    Shortly after, Wiley was born in 1989, admitting it was unique growing up watching strangers praise his dad.

    “It took me until about 6 years old to understand what type of impact my father had,” Brown said. “We’d get stopped at a red light, people yelling out the car: ‘Hey, Chuck!’ … He’d get out of the car and the next thing you know, there’s a whole mob of people, honking horns. … He remembered a point in time that the only people wanting to take a picture of him were the police and he said, ‘Now the police want to take a picture with me!’”

    While he began rapping at his father’s concerts at a young age, Wiley’s dream was to become a professional football player, proving to be a standout at Thomas Stone High School in Waldorf, Maryland, before playing at Duquesne and Virginia Tech.

    While Wiley was balling out on the gridiron, his father was delivering late-in-life hits like “Block Party” (featuring DJ Kool) in 2007 and “LOVE” (featuring Jill Scott and Marcus Miller) in 2010.

    After Chuck Brown sadly died in 2012, Wiley joined the Chuck Brown Band full-time in 2016.

    “Being in the band started with Chuck Brown Mondays when I might come in and do a song or two, but then my dad came to me one day in a dream saying, ‘What you gonna do, son? If you gonna do something, don’t play around with it, go full force,’” Brown said. “It’s funny for some (bandmates) who have seen me grow up over the years like, ‘Man, I remember when you were a little shorty, a little guy coming to band rehearsals and look at you now!’”

    Today, his father’s name still graces signs reading “Chuck Brown Way” along 7th Street between T Street and Florida Avenue in Northwest D.C. If you live in that general area, head just over the D.C.-Maryland border to Prince George’s County to enjoy this weekend’s concert at Watkins Regional Park.

    Just as his father’s fans chanted, “Wind me up, Chuck,” today’s fans have a similar request:

    Wind us up, Wiley!

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews Chuck Brown Band at Watkins Regional Park (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation on the podcast below:

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Jason Fraley

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