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Go go

 

Go go

Alternate meanings: See Go go (disambiguation)

Go go is a live performance music that features continuous, complex, heavy rhythm arrangements focused through two thematic patterns, and variations on those two parts, performed on multiple congas, tumbadoras, and Roto-toms, interspersed with timbale and cowbell parts, driven by heavy-footed drumming and punctuated by crowd "call-and-response." Go-go music developed in the mid-to-late 1970s on the foundation of the Washington, D.C area's longstanding music scene. While some of these bands have seen varying degrees of success nationally and worldwide, Washington remains the preeminent source to and audience of go-go music.

While its musical classification, influences and origins are debated, Chuck Brown (b. 1934) is regarded as the fundamental force behind the creation of go-go music.

History


Brown, a fixture on the Washington music scene with "Chuck Brown & the Soul Searchers," (We the People, Ashley's Roachclip) inspired other local bands in the mid-1970s to incorporate go-go music more and more into their standard live shows as his success grew. This included the funk-driven "Trouble Funk" and the rock-influenced "E.U," who became the most popular bands on the go-go music scene by the end of the 70s. Brown's 1979 hit single Bustin' Loose was the culmination of go-go music's early success. Trouble Funk briefly signed with New Jersey's Sugar Hill Records, where they released the minor hit Pump Me Up. E.U. scored a national hit when they performed their song "Da Butt" in the motion picture "School Daze" in 1988.

The next generation of go-go featured "The Junk Yard Band" and "Rare Essence," two enduring bands that gained popularity after go-go had become established. The Junk Yard Band began as a group of children as young as nine years old, that performed music on a hodge-podge of discarded items fashioned into musical instruments. They signed and toured with New York's Def Jam Records, where they released 12-inch single The Word. Rare Essence, who was mentored musically as youths by Chuck Brown, signed briefly with Mercury Records, but both bands' prominence were primarily established in and around Washington and the mid-atlantic area.

Many of these bands still perform today, along with successive generations of bands like "Backyard Band" and others.

Popular Go-Go Bands (and songs)

1st Generation

  • Chuck Brown (Bustin Loose, That'll Work, Money)
  • EU (Da Butt, EU Freeze, Future Funk)
  • Trouble Funk (Pump Me Up, Drop the Bomb, E Flat Boogie)

    2nd Generation

  • Rare Essence (Lock It, Work the Walls, Body Moves)
  • Junk Yard Band (Sardines, Rough it Off, Go Hard)

    3rd Generation

  • Backyard Band (91 Dope Jam, Skillet)
  • Northeast Groovers (The Rumble, Off the Muscle)

    Examples of Other Bands of the Past and Present


    Ayre Rayde, D.C. Scorpio, Fat Rodney, Iceberg Slim, Class Band, Little Benny & the Masters, Mass Extension, Northwest Youngins, OP Tribe, Pump Blenders, Proper Utensils, Pure Elegance, Petworth, Raw Image, Redds & the Boys, TCB, UCB

    External links

  • Take Me Out to the Go-Go -- Premiere site about the DC scene
  • All Music Guide -- Explore by Genre: Go-Go

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    This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available
    under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
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    © 2008 Chamas Enterprises Inc.