***Wednesday Nights At The Maverick Room!***
A couple of Wednesdays ago the place to go-go was the Maverick Room at Fourth Street and Rhode Island Avenue NE, where a mirrored ball threw little darts ... View More***Wednesday Nights At The Maverick Room!***
A couple of Wednesdays ago the place to go-go was the Maverick Room at Fourth Street and Rhode Island Avenue NE, where a mirrored ball threw little darts of light onto worn red carpet and folding chairs. The boys were clustered in the center of the room, bobbing and weaving to the beat, while the girls stood in groups on the sidelines, showing new steps to each other.
"You ain't got to dance with anybody," said Elroy Chambers, a lanky 19-year-old from Seat Pleasant, one of about 900 teen-agers crammed into the Maverick Room. He adjusted his straw hat and smiled: "Everybody's here just grooving."
Click link below to read full story!
https://oldschoolgogo.com/index.php/photo/202/a-story-about-the-washington-coliseum-august-23-1982/
A couple of Wednesdays ago the place to go-go was the Maverick Room at Fourth Street and Rhode Island Avenue NE, where a mirrored ball threw little darts of light onto worn red carpet and folding chai... View MoreA couple of Wednesdays ago the place to go-go was the Maverick Room at Fourth Street and Rhode Island Avenue NE, where a mirrored ball threw little darts of light onto worn red carpet and folding chairs. The boys were clustered in the center of the room, bobbing and weaving to the beat, while the girls stood in groups on the sidelines, showing new steps to each other.
"You ain't got to dance with anybody," said Elroy Chambers, a lanky 19-year-old from Seat Pleasant, one of about 900 teen-agers crammed into the Maverick Room. He adjusted his straw hat and smiled: "Everybody's here just grooving."
Click link below to read full story!
https://oldschoolgogo.com/index.php/photo/202/a-story-about-the-washington-coliseum-august-23-1982/
Mrs. Mack, who was known in the go-go community as "Miss Sis," was the grandmother of two former Rare Essence band members, James Thomas (who performs as Jas. Funk) and the late Quentin "Footz" Davids... View MoreMrs. Mack, who was known in the go-go community as "Miss Sis," was the grandmother of two former Rare Essence band members, James Thomas (who performs as Jas. Funk) and the late Quentin "Footz" Davidson. She was unofficially considered the godmother of the entire band and, by extension, the local go-go scene for much of the last two decades.
Rare Essence, the most successful and enduring of area go-go acts, got its start during the mid-1970s in the basement of the Mack home in the Congress Heights neighborhood of Anacostia. At that time, Mrs. Mack was working as an elevator operator for the U.S. Postal Service. She and her husband, Nathaniel E. Mack, purchased the band's instruments with their savings. After retiring from the Postal Service in 1984, she worked full time as the band's treasurer and co-manager.
Click link below to read full story!
https://oldschoolgogo.com/index.php/photo/208/a-tribute-to-mrs-mack-manager-of-re-a-legend-godmother-of-gogo/
The music stopped as the mayor made her way across the stage, past bongo drums and keyboards, timbales and amps.
But Muriel E. Bowser wasn’t ready to let the beat die just yet.
“When I say ‘go-... View MoreThe music stopped as the mayor made her way across the stage, past bongo drums and keyboards, timbales and amps.
But Muriel E. Bowser wasn’t ready to let the beat die just yet.
“When I say ‘go-go,’ †the mayor called to the crowd, “you say, ‘is D.C.’ â€
Hundreds of Washingtonians whooped and cheered, their phones raised high to capture a bit of history.
Bowser (D) had come to Southwest Washington, to an old church turned arts venue, to sign legislation enshrining go-go, the District’s homegrown music genre, as the official sound of the nation’s capital. She handed out the pens that she used to musicians, activists and the daughter of the late Chuck Brown, the godfather of go-go, who helped create the sound and gave the music its name.
Click link below to read full story!
https://oldschoolgogo.com/index.php/photo/album/74/gogo-is-signed-into-law-as-the-official-music-of-d-c/
Janet Purnell waits in line at the celebratory signing. “I've been here for 30 years and loved the music when I first heard it,†Purnell said. “I love Chuck Brown.â€
By Marissa J. Lang
Feb. 19, 2020 at 6:35 p.m. EST
...
Hey, what's happening? Let me start by introducing myself. My name is Sherman, and I grew up in Washington D.C. and P.G. County, MD listening to GoGo ...
MATTIE LEE MACK, GODMOTHER OF LOCAL GO-GO SCENE, DIES AT 81
By Alona Wartofsky July 31, 1998
Mattie Lee Mack, 81, a longtime fixture on the local go-go music scene, died of a blood clot in her lung J... View MoreMATTIE LEE MACK, GODMOTHER OF LOCAL GO-GO SCENE, DIES AT 81
By Alona Wartofsky July 31, 1998
Mattie Lee Mack, 81, a longtime fixture on the local go-go music scene, died of a blood clot in her lung July 25 at Providence Hospital.
Mrs. Mack, who was known in the go-go community as "Miss Sis," was the grandmother of two former Rare Essence band members, James Thomas (who performs as Jas. Funk) and the late Quentin "Footz" Davidson. She was unofficially considered the godmother of the entire band and, by extension, the local go-go scene for much of the last two decades.
Rare Essence, the most successful and enduring of area go-go acts, got its start during the mid-1970s in the basement of the Mack home in the Congress Heights neighborhood of Anacostia. At that time, Mrs. Mack was working as an elevator operator for the U.S. Postal Service. She and her husband, Nathaniel E. Mack, purchased the band's instruments with their savings. After retiring from the Postal Service in 1984, she worked full time as the band's treasurer and co-manager.
Chuck Brown, the go-go pioneer who produced Rare Essence's first record, said Mrs. Mack had an enormous impact on the group. "She pushed that band and carried that band, and she was always behind them to make sure everything was right," Brown said. Without her, he said, "I don't think the band would have been as solid, or had that longevity and the success."
For years, it seemed that whenever Rare Essence played, Mrs. Mack and her daughter, Annie Mack Thomas, would greet concertgoers in the box office as admissions were collected. Mrs. Mack would sing out the ticket price like a carnival barker. She greeted hundreds of fans by name.
"She was like a mother figure," said James Thomas. "She would congratulate people coming in if they told her something positive, and scold them if they came in with something negative. She would get on the girls who came in without enough clothing on, and get on people that she knew were abusing drugs or drinking too much."
When Rare Essence played larger shows in hotel ballrooms or at Capital Centre, Mrs. Mack would often dress head to toe in red and white, the band's official colors. Since its founding, Rare Essence has appeared throughout the Washington area, often playing as many as five nights a week. Recently, the band released its seventh album, "We Go On and On."
Mrs. Mack was born in Wrens, Ga., in 1917. She moved to Washington in 1936.
She was a longtime member of St. Thomas More Catholic Church in Southeast Washington, where she served as an usher.
Her first husband, K.C. Boyd, died in 1947. Her second husband, Nathaniel Mack, died in 1983.
Survivors include her daughter, Annie Mack Thomas of Clinton; five stepdaughters, Irene Morgan of Atlanta, Helen Mayeris of Augusta, Ga., Jean Payton of Silver Spring, Katie Owens of Upper Marlboro and Mary Hickerson of Casa Grande, Ariz.; two stepsons, Frank Boyd of Richmond and Grant Boyd of Wrens; three grandchildren; eight great-grandchildren; and four great-great-grandchildren.
Washington Post Archives
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1998/07/31/mattie-lee-mack-godmother-of-local-go-go-scene-dies-at-81/c5c48eff-8835-41b1-a8cc-87739a1b3fef/
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