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After 40 years, go-go legends Northeast Groovers still have a lot to say

After 40 years, go-go legends Northeast Groovers still have a lot to say

Washington Post27-03-2025
Last month marked the fifth anniversary of Mayor Muriel E. Bowser and the D.C. Council legislating what had already been true for years, making go-go the official music of Washington, D.C. The anniversary was celebrated by bringing together three titans of the scene — the Junkyard Band, the Backyard Band and the Northeast Groovers — to perform together for the first time in 25 years onstage at the Howard Theatre. The recognition, which also included the opening of the Go-Go Museum in Anacostia, is welcome — if long overdue — for D.C.'s go-go community.
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Thomas Sayers Ellis, Poet of ‘Percussive Prosody,' Dies at 61
Thomas Sayers Ellis, Poet of ‘Percussive Prosody,' Dies at 61

New York Times

time2 days ago

  • New York Times

Thomas Sayers Ellis, Poet of ‘Percussive Prosody,' Dies at 61

Thomas Sayers Ellis, a poet, photographer and bandleader who explored race, music, politics, academia and family in dazzling, erudite and often funkified verse — 'percussive prosody,' he once called it — and who was a founder of the Dark Room Collective, a noted community of Black poets, died on July 17 at his home in St. Petersburg, Fla. He was 61. His son, Finn Andrews, said that the cause was unknown, but that Mr. Ellis had been suffering from respiratory issues. Mr. Ellis grew up in Washington, and he was captivated by its hometown sound, go-go music — a funky, jazzy, wildly percussive form that sprung up there at the turn of the 1970s. He played drums in a few bands before starting his own, and he named his first book of poetry 'The Maverick Room' (2005), for a beloved local go-go club. In that book, he paid homage to the music and how it marked him. Mr. Ellis's high school nickname was Sticks, not just because he deployed them on the drums but also because he was skinny. In a poem with that title, he used the language of percussion to connect the violence he saw in his father, whose strength he revered as a child, with his own development as a writer: I discovered writing,How words are parts of speechWith beats and breaths of their like flams. Wham! Bam! He went on: My first attempts were filled with noise,Wild solos, violent uncontrollable page tightened like a drumResisting the clockwise twistingOf a handheld chrome key The poet and composer Janice Lowe, another Dark Room founder, said in an interview that Mr. Ellis's work was 'very much rooted in musicality, in all kinds of Black musical and linguistic traditions and in the way people play with language.' She added, 'It can fly you into the surreal, into jazz or film, or root you in something familial — whatever he was dialoguing with — but it never rests, never stays in the familiar. It always travels and transforms and transgresses.' Mr. Ellis was prone to linguistic pyrotechnics, both on and off the page. He was an omnivorous reader of the literary canon and an avid book collector, particularly of those writers not yet in the canon, notably people of color. He was also a film, poetry and music buff whose interests ranged from Gertrude Stein and French New Wave films to Bootsy Collins and George Clinton. In 1986, he was living in a Victorian house in Cambridge, Mass., with the poet Sharan Strange and others when he and Ms. Strange began putting together a library of works by Black authors of the diaspora. They housed it in a former darkroom on the third floor, and they called the collection 'The Dark Room,' a name they liked as a pun for a room full of 'Black books,' as Ms. Strange wrote in an essay for the literary magazine Mosaic in 2006. When James Baldwin died the next year, Mr. Ellis, Ms. Strange and their housemates made a pilgrimage to his funeral in New York City. It was a heady literary event — Toni Morrison, William Styron, Maya Angelou and Amiri Baraka all delivered eulogies — and it galvanized them to create a collective that would honor and support writers of color. They already had a name, the Dark Room, and, with Ms. Lowe, they began to host readings in their living room. They were electric events, with music and art installations, and everyone wanted in. Alice Walker called and asked to read. Derek Walcott, the Caribbean-born Nobel Prize winner, read, and so did Michael S. Harper, the poet laureate of Rhode Island. The collective grew to include, among many others, Kevin Young, now the poetry editor of The New Yorker, and the Pulitzer Prize winners Tracy K. Smith and Natasha Trethewey, the country's poet laureate from 2012 to 2014. Jeff Gordinier, writing in The New York Times in 2014, called the Dark Room 'a flash of literary lightning' akin to the Beat poets and the Black Arts Movement. The collective lasted, in various forms, until 1998, and the members held reunions in subsequent years. 'You need other people who think like you, maybe, who read like you, maybe, who walk and breathe like you, maybe,' Mr. Ellis told an audience in Santa Fe, N.M., in 2013 during one reunion tour. 'You think you're adding something that's needed, that you don't see. There's something about that, that never ends, no matter who you are and where you are.' In a poem that Mr. Ellis titled 'T.A.P.O.A.F.O.M. (The Awesome Power of a Fully-Operational Memory),' he wrote: Memory, Walcott says, moves this is true, your memory is a mothershipminus the disco-sadistic silverall stars need to shine. Tell the world.A positive nuisance. Da bomb. When that poem was included in 'The Best American Poetry 2001,' he had this to say about it, in an author's note: 'In the poem, I am working on my own brand of literary activism, which I call Genuine Negro Heroism. Genuine Negro Heroism (GNH) is the opposite of HNIC (Head Negro In Charge), and incorporates pee-pure modes of black freak, black folk, and black soul behavior.' Thomas Sayers Ellis was born on Oct. 5, 1963, in Washington. His mother, Jeannette (Forbes) Ellis, managed a restaurant; his father, Thomas Ellis, was a pipe mechanic. Thomas attended Dunbar High School but spent much of his time at the city's block parties and go-go clubs. His girlfriend at the time, Sandra Andrews, gave birth to his son, Finn, when he was 17 and she was 19. Mr. Ellis attended Alabama State University on a scholarship and then moved to Cambridge, where he took classes at Harvard with the poet Seamus Heaney. 'In a city where everybody acts like they've read everything,' the poet and publisher Askold Melnyczuk said of Cambridge, 'he actually had.' Mr. Melnyczuk was an early booster of Mr. Ellis's; he included his work in 'Take Three: Agni New Poets Series' (1996), which he edited. In addition to 'The Maverick Room,' Mr. Ellis was the author of the chapbook 'The Genuine Negro Hero' (2001), 'Skin Inc.: Identity Repair Poems' (2010) and 'Crank Shaped Notes' (2021), a collection of poems, essays and photos about the go-go music he loved. Mr. Ellis, who had taken photos since his go-go days, was a sharp street and portrait photographer. Mr. Ellis earned an M.F.A. from Brown University in 1995. He taught at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland and Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, N.Y., among other institutions, and earned numerous awards and fellowships, including a Guggenheim. In 2014, he and the jazz saxophonist James Brandon Lewis formed a band they called Heroes Are Gang Leaders, after a chapter in Amiri Baraka's 1967 collection of short fiction, 'Tales.' An enticing mash-up of poetry, jazz, funk and more, the group swelled to 12 members and performed with guests like Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth, the singer and poet Lydia Lunch and the jazz bassist William Parker. Mr. Ellis and Mr. Lewis often squabbled during rehearsals. Mr. Ellis had a habit of recording jam sessions and then memorizing the music, and he was annoyed when they weren't later reproduced, down to the note. 'His memory was phenomenal, and he'd get so irritated,' Mr. Lewis said in an interview. 'I'd say: 'Thomas, we're improvising. We're not supposed to be memorizing.'' In addition to his son, Mr. Andrews, Mr. Ellis is survived by a brother, James; four grandchildren; and one great-granddaughter. In early 2016, a year before the #MeToo movement took off, Mr. Ellis was a visiting professor at the Iowa Writers' Workshop when a women's literary group known as Vida published, online, a collection of anonymous accounts of what it said was sexual misconduct by Mr. Ellis. His classes were canceled, and Jia Tolentino, writing in Jezebel, reported on the Vida post and its ethics in an article headlined 'Is This the End of the Era of the Important, Inappropriate Literary Man?' The New Republic picked up the story, as fodder for a piece about the workshop's reputation for the bad behavior of its male professors. For his part, Mr. Ellis made no public comment about the incident. Soon after, he moved to St. Petersburg, and he was named the city's first photo laureate in 2023. 'Language is always changing,' Mr. Ellis told The Missoula Independent, a weekly independent newspaper in Montana, in 2009. 'Language is not finished. Language is the thing that if you stay connected to it like I do, eat it enough, carry it with you enough, it will rejuvenate you. 'I don't mean 'save you' in a religious sense, but it will save you from a certain kind of dogma or mundane, boring existence.'

Owner Gets 'Cute Fluffy Puppy'—Not Prepared for What He Turns Into
Owner Gets 'Cute Fluffy Puppy'—Not Prepared for What He Turns Into

Newsweek

time2 days ago

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Owner Gets 'Cute Fluffy Puppy'—Not Prepared for What He Turns Into

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A woman has shared how her tiny, incredibly fluffy puppy used to look—and how he's transformed as an adult dog. Jasmine Hill, from Melbourne in Australia, is the proud owner of German shepherd dog Kaiser, who she described to Newsweek as a "big gentle giant with a heart of gold." He weighs a whopping 83 pounds or 38 kilos, which she joked likely included two kilos in his long hair alone. Her TikTok account, @jasminehilll, is filled with videos of Kaiser, from when she got him as an eight-week-old puppy, to now, as a very large, but equally adorable 3-year-old dog. "German shepherds get a bad reputation but I'd like to show people the amazing breed they are," she said. "He's been around other dogs and children and is super gentle. He doesn't have an aggressive bone in his body—he's all bark when a stranger comes near our house but he wouldn't hurt a fly." Now a video showing how Kaiser has changed since she brought him home in 2022 has proved hugely popular, racking up more than 130,000 likes since being posted on July 15. The clip, set to Wham!'s "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go," begins with baby Kaiser sitting on an outdoor deck. He is extremely fluffy, and has large, floppy ears that have somehow become tangled up on his head. And while he's tiny, he already has big paws, hinting at the size he will eventually grow to. Kaiser as a puppy. Kaiser as a puppy. TikTok @jasminehill And that's exactly what happens, as when the video switches, it shows Kaiser now: a majestic young shepherd almost lion-like in his appearance, with a mane and long fur, looking enormous in the backyard he's sitting in. Hill wrote in the caption: "Cute fluffy puppy into a protective handsome man." She added: "It's the crossed-over ears for me." Many others also commented on puppy Kaiser's ears, one commenter writing: "I loved the crossed-over ears phase," another agreeing: " puppy ears!" Others were in awe to see what he had grown into, one describing him as a "regal beautiful lion," and another calling him the "most handsome boy in the world." "Why do dogs grow up so fast," one lamented, as one called him "absolutely beautiful big and little," and another declared Kaiser "grew up into a lion." And several commenters used the word "majestic" to describe him. Kaiser now, fully grown. Kaiser now, fully grown. TikTok @jasminehill Hill told Newsweek she "was, and still am, shocked to see how many people have enjoyed the transformation video of him from a puppy to an adult! But it makes me so happy people can see and appreciate his beauty. "He loves cuddles on the couch, soft squeaky toys and walks to the park. He's super protective of our home and lets us know when strangers are near!" German shepherds are known for their confidence and smarts, and make good family pets thanks to their affection towards their owners and young children, according to the American Kennel Club (AKC). GSDs can grow up to 26 inches at the shoulder and weigh up to 90 pounds, making them a handful to raise, but they reward owners with loyalty and courage, willing to put their life on the line to defend family. Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@ with some details about your best friend and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.

Celebrate go-go music at this annual event that takes over Miami this weekend
Celebrate go-go music at this annual event that takes over Miami this weekend

Miami Herald

time7 days ago

  • Miami Herald

Celebrate go-go music at this annual event that takes over Miami this weekend

The culture and sounds of Washington, D.C.'s go-go music will fill South Florida this weekend as Miami Takeover returns to Miami Beach. Now in its 17th year, the four-day event includes a comedy show at the Hard Rock Cafe in downtown Miami, pool parties, an all-white party at Urban, and two community service events. The event is expected to draw more than 2,000 people and was founded by two Florida A&M University graduates and friends, Wiley Kynard and Antwoine McCoy. The festival began in 2007 as a going away party for Kynard, who had been offered a job in his native D.C. after having worked in Miami for about 10 years, McCoy told the Miami Herald. They brought the party back again in 2008 and every year since, excluding 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. McCoy said along the way they added in a third business partner Vincent Peden. It's main event, The Art of Go-Go Culture and Art Fest, will feature a bevy of D.C. go-go performers which include the Black Passion Band, Top 5 Band, and the legendary Junkyard Band, who recently performed on Amerie's NPR Tiny Desk concert. The cornerstone event, held on Saturday, will also feature visual artists from D.C. and Miami, and will pay homage to the 50th anniversary of the go-go sound, a subgenre of funk that incorporates call and response. McCoy said showcasing go-go in Miami was a way to put the music on a national platform outside of D.C. 'We still want to also put go-go on a national platform to show that it is great music, that a lot of times it's something that has to be digested live,' McCoy said. 'You got to see the energy. You got to see the enthusiasm of not just the crowd, but also the performers as well.' McCoy, 48, said that the featured performers are established musicians in their own right and that Top5, one of the bands performing, worked for Mary J. Blige after she heard them providing back up for another band. 'One thing led to another, and she was on tour with them,' he said. 'A lot of the band members work with major artists, whether it's keyboard players, bass players, or drummers.' Beyond the parties and music, McCoy said the Takeover hosts two community service events, a beach clean up and free dental cleanings to children under 12 years old. Though he lives in D.C., McCoy feels an affinity for South Florida. 'I've been coming down to Miami and going to the beaches for as long as I can remember,' said McCoy, who was raised near the D.C. area but grew up visiting family in the Miami Gardens area during summers. The event helps visitors have a more personal experience in Miami, said McCoy. 'We wanted to show people the city through the eyes of locals who could really move around Miami.' IF YOU GO: What: The Miami Takeover When: July 24 - July 27 Where: Various locations, including Miami Beach Bandshell for The Art of Go-Go Fee: Pricing starts at $23.18 for The Art of Go-Go Info:

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