Welcome to this week's Friday Flashback. Each Friday in the Flashback we offer a post about some part of the past and its relationship to DC. Sometimes, we will write a new entry. Others times, we will showcase articles that previously appeared in The Prices Do DC or some other online publications. But no matter who does the writing, you can trust that you will learn something important from the Flashback.
Today, it's common to see people wearing t-shirts emblazoned with Bob Marley's instantly recognizable likeness, and the reggae classics that he recorded with the Wailers are so iconic that they're used in TV commercials.
But back on the afternoon of October 14, 1973, when the then-28-year-old singer with the dreadlocks and whispy beard and his band stepped out onto the stage at the U.S. Naval Academy's Halsey Field House, things were quite different. It's a safe bet that hardly anyone in the audience even knew who Marley and the Wailers were, or had heard their LP Catch A Fire, which Rolling Stone critic Rob Haughton had lauded as filled with "lilting tunes of hypnotic character headed by super-progressive lead guitar work, Motown variations, and cowboy nuances, all backed by the tricky Jamaican beat that serves to keep the decibel level in a moderate range.".
To continue reading this post, which 1st appeared in WETA's Boundary Stone, click here.
DC at Night
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2014
(247)
-
▼
October
(28)
- The Devil in DC
- Make Mad Scientist Dr. Moreau Part of Your Hallloween
- For Halloween, Spend a Ghoulish Night (or Day) @Th...
- Forget the Halloween Monsters, This Year's Big Fea...
- Bring Out the High Heels; DC Drag Race Is Back
- Creepy Artifacts @The Smithsonian
- RG3PO, Flattened Zoe Barnes, and More: DC-Centric ...
- Ghosts in the White House
- New Documentary Shows Snowden, Scary US Security
- Does Washington's Football Team Need a New Name?
- Getting the Most from The Prices Do DC
- The Boomer List @The Newseum
- Phantoms of the Museum
- The 25 Steps to Becoming a Real Washingtonian
- DC Wasn't Ready for Bob Marley in 1973
- Covering the Supreme Court
- From Dolley to Michelle: A Look at the First Ladie...
- Time Covers the 1960s @The National Portrait Gallery
- Tips for Experiencing Latino History @The Museum o...
- Is Reagan National Airport Becoming Too Popular?
- Was It Once Flying Saucers Over DC?
- Our Wounded Warriors Now Remembered
- There's a Big New Face on the National Mall
- Museum of the American Indian Using New Exhibit to...
- 30 Things DC Loves
- A Bite of Baseball Fandom
- What's for Lunch @Penn Commons
- The Union Station Hall's Come Alive with the Sound...
-
▼
October
(28)
Popular Posts
-
Sandra Cisneros, the author of the classic The House on Mango Street who now lives in Mexico, believes she has an ideal slogan for her new ...
-
Each week in our Saturday Supplement we re-post an entry of interest to both residents of the Washington area and visitors to DC that fi...
-
Each week in our Saturday Supplement we re-post an entry of interest to both residents of the Washington area and visitors to DC that fi...
-
From stiletto daggers and sexy witches to devilish hydras and sea serpents, there's no end of scary stuff to spook yourself and your ...
-
DC's Smithsonian museums (there are 17 of them here in the city) are among America's most visited and treasured places. But the Smi...
-
Here we are - The Prices Doing DC Most things change. And that is certainly true of the blog you are now reading. When we started The ...
-
Each week in our Saturday Supplement we re-post an entry of interest to both residents of the Washington area and visitors to DC that fi...
-
DC's Smithsonian museums (there are 17 of them here in the city) are among America's most visited and treasured places. But the Smi...
-
With a 2-5 record, Washington's National Football League team is obviously experiencing difficulties on the field. But there is an equ...
-
Laura Poitras explains her film as Dana Priest listens In early January, 2013 filmmaker Laura Poitras received an email from someone who...
No comments:
Post a Comment