How to Remember Donna Summer and Chuck Brown: Dance!

In his column at the Washington Post, Eugene Robinson reflects on this week's loss of Donna Summer, the Queen of Disco, and Chuck Brown, the Godfather of Go-Go. He also offers advice on paying homage to them: Get up and dance!The soundtrack of my youth is fading. That’s hardly an original observation, but self-indulgence is…

In his column at the Washington Post, Eugene Robinson reflects on this week's loss of Donna Summer, the Queen of Disco, and Chuck Brown, the Godfather of Go-Go. He also offers advice on paying homage to them: Get up and dance!

The soundtrack of my youth is fading. That’s hardly an original observation, but self-indulgence is a columnist’s inalienable right and music has unique power to summon unbidden waves of nostalgia. I’ll spend the rest of the day listening to the β€œQueen of Disco” and the β€œGodfather of Go-Go,” and saying goodbye …

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Donna Summer, who died Thursday, was the undisputed monarch of a musical genre that I tried my best to hate. Disco had none of the spontaneity and rough edges of rock β€˜n’ roll, none of the rawness and authenticity of rhythm and blues, and yet it emerged from those sources like some sort of genetic anomaly …

On Wednesday, we lost another seminal figure in popular music, the guitarist and bandleader Chuck Brown …

Here in Washington, however, Brown was known simply as the Godfather. He is credited as the inventor of the unique local sound known as go-go, a brand of syncopated funk distinguished by the central role given to percussion β€” congas, cowbells, rototoms, wooden boxes, plastic buckets, anything that goes bang or boom when you hit it. It’s hard to describe what distinguishes a go-go beat, but you know one if you hear one. It’s almost as if the drums are singing the melody and everything else is just along for the ride …

There is only one way to celebrate the legacy of these two legends: Get up and dance

Read more at the Washington Post.

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