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EU featuring Sugar Bear and The Chuck Brown Band

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EU FEATURING SUGAR BEAR

Born in Red Springs, North Carolina, Gregory’s mother Ms. Ernestine Elliott moved her family to Washington, DC when he was only 2 years old and eventually settled into the Valley Green neighborhood of Southeast DC. Ms. Elliott raised her children with strong Christian values and kept them in church and school. Gregory was drawn to music at an early age.  His mother noticed his love for music and bought him a six-string guitar when he was 13 but Gregory was drawn to the bassline of music. Self-taught, he learned to play bass by watching musicians on TV.  Every day he played “Tighten Up” by Archie Bell & The Drells. He listened to other artists like James Brown and Kool & The Gang and as his tastes expanded, he discovered a love for Rock and Roll. It was also around this his after-school caretaker, Ms. Ethel Knight, gave him the name Sugar Bear, saying he started to look like the Sugar Bear on the box of Sugar Crisps he ate daily.

Sugar Bear attended Ballou High School in Southeast DC where he played football and boxed. He got together with a group of musicians and put together a band named The Rebels, who won Ballou’s best new group award. The band’s name changed from The Rebels to The Young Hustlers to Experience Unlimited (E.U.) – inspired by The Jimi Hendrix Experience “Are You Experienced”.  After opening for the legendary Chuck Brown & The Soul Searchers at the Panorama Room in Southeast DC, Bear noted “People liked us, but they wouldn’t dance so Chuck Brown pulled me to the side and said ‘Son, you have a lot of great talent, but you have to play what the people want to hear’. We stayed around and watched the set and I was amazed at the call and response! The whole place was jumping for two hours straight and that day, I learned what the Go-Go music scene was all about..” That following Monday, E.U. rehearsed and changed their entire format to a Go-Go.


In 1988, one song took E.U. from a local band to a globally known name: Da Butt, a Grammy nominated hit which reached #1 on the Billboard Black Singles Chart, and was ranked #61 on VH1's 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 80s. The music video was directed by Spike Lee. E.U. received Soul Train award for Best New Artist in 1988 and performed on the Soul Train show, as well as on the Arsenio Hall show..  A Tour with Run DMC followed, as well as a tour with Salt-N-Pepa, with whom he collaborated with on “Shake Your Thang”.  An OSU tour took the band around the world.  2 additional Billboard charting hits “Buck Wild” and “Taste of Your Love” came from their Virgin records debut album.

Sugar Bear and E.U. continued a top the DC Go-Go scene over the years that followed, building a large and loyal fan base while releasing local hits like “Umm Bop Bop”. In 2001, EU was a featured act in the Put Your Hands Up The Tribute to Chuck Brown DVD, cited as “..quite possibly the greatest live concert video/dvd I have ever seen” by Murder Dog Magazine.  In 2014 Sugar Bear was featured as lead vocal on “Pop That Trunk” on the posthumous Chuck Brown “Beautiful Life” album.  In 2016, EU performed at the opening of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. In 2019, during the #DontMuteDC campaign, DC native and movie star Regina Hall brought out Sugar Bear & E.U. and Rare Essence to perform. During the 93rd Academy Awards, actress Glenn Close shouted out Sugar Bear and danced to the song “Da Butt”.  In 2021 The Chuck Brown Foundation presented Sugar Bear with the LEGEND award.  In 2022 EU released a remake of their classic “Peace Gone Away”.

Sugar Bear is grateful for the career he has been blessed with and gives all glory and honor to God “who makes everything possible.” Still grounded in his Christian foundation, Sugar Bear believes in the biblical principle stated in Luke 6:38 “Give, and it will be given to you: good measure, pressed down, shaken together, and running over will be put into your bosom. For with the same measure that you use, it will be measured back to you.” Because of this, he gives back daily to his students at T.C. Williams High School where he serves as a dedicated Special Education instructor. With a heart for uplifting people in his life and through his music and a dedication to the music born in DC that he loves, Sugar Bear and E.U. continue to keep the dance floor packed.

 

 

CHUCK BROWN BAND

“The Godfather of Go Go,” Chuck Brown is the undisputed sole founder and creator Go-Go music, a hypnotically danceable genre deeply rooted in funk and soul that he developed in the early 70’s , and  the only form of expressive culture  to originate in the District of Columbia.  Foreshadowing many of the major popular R&B styles of the past three decades, Chuck's signature style earned him a place in American musical royalty.  This esteem was maintained by the reputation of his legendary live shows, heavy on audience participation and built around “the beat” to create an unparalleled non-stop party atmosphere.
 
While searching for a sound to call his own in the 1960s, Chuck was deeply inspired by artists like James Brown.  He latched onto the Latin percussion groove from the band he played with at the time, Los Latinos.  Combining this with his roots, his love of blues, jazz, gospel, soul, and African rhythms, Chuck began to develop his own unique sound.   Starting out playing top forty, Brown would break-it-down between songs with percussion and audience call and response, and keep the music going, and the dance floor packed.  
 
His first hit was “We the People” on the debut album of the same name in 1972.  Next came the album Salt of the Earth, with the hit “Blow Your Whistle” (sampled by Grammy winner Eve in 2007 in her hit “Tambourine”), and one of the most sampled break beats of all time from “Ashley’s Roach Clip”  (including Eric B and Rakim, LL Cool J and countless others).     In 1978, the Soul Searchers became Chuck Brown and the Soul Searchers, and Chuck’s original composition “Bustin’ Loose” took the #1 spot in Billboard, on Source/MCA Records.  The song was used in Grammy winner Nelly’s 2002 smash “Hot in Herre,” and continues to be one of the most relevant and often sampled funk songs ever written (“Bustin’ Loose” was recently featured in a national television campaign for Chips Ahoy). 
 
After substantial touring across the US, but no money to show for his success, Chuck found himself looking for inspiration.  He found it in his next hit, the Billboard charting “We Need Some Money,” which propelled him around the world again.  Brown then revisited his love of jazz and created the “Go Go Swing Medley,” introducing people around the world to classics by Duke Ellington, Johnny Mercer, and James Moody, spun in Chuck’s inimitable way.  Released independently and later on Polygram Records, Chuck Brown and the Soul Searchers once again reached an international audience through a 1985 at Holland’s North Seas Jazz Festival.  In between sets by Curtis Mayfield and James Brown, Chuck schooled everyone on the genre he created.  That same year, Chris Blackwell introduced the movie “Good to Go,” a much hyped but poor reflection of the scene.  Nonetheless other artists, such as Salt N Pepa, Kurtis Blow, and Grace Jones, began incorporating his sound in their music. Brown continued to record, perform in the US, with stints in Europe and Japan in the nineties.   
 
 After a string of live recordings, he met at the time an undiscovered, shy talent by the name of Eva Cassidy in the early nineties.  His lifelong dream of singing with a lady, springing from his love of duets by the likes of Louis Armstrong with Ella Fitzgerald and Billy Eckstine with Sarah Vaughan, came to fruition with the critically acclaimed and worldwide release of “The Other Side” by Chuck Brown and Eva Cassidy (which contained the original recording of the worldwide Eva Cassidy hit “Over the Rainbow”).  He dedicated a jazz standards album to Ms. Cassidy after her tragic loss to cancer. 
 
In 2001, he released the Billboard charting “Your Game... Live at the 9:30 Club” which was voted as one of the top 10 albums of 2001 by Billboard’s R&B Editor, Rapper Chuck D and others.  A live DVD came next, called “quite possibly the greatest live concert video/DVD I have ever seen” by Murder Dog Magazine. The same year a double remastered “Best Of” album was released.  In 2006 the National Endowment for the Arts awarded Chuck a “Lifetime Heritage Fellowship,” the Federal Government’s highest honor for folk and traditional arts, and Chuck also performed at the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame in 2006. The following year his “We’re About the Business” CD debuted as the #1 independent album and #2 R&B album  in Billboard.  The National Visionary Leadership Project recognized Chuck’s contributions in shaping American history in 2007, joining previous honorees such as Ray Charles, Quincy Jones, BB King, and Earth Kitt.
 
Chuck  recorded with artists as diverse as Thievery Corporation, Brian Culbertson , Jeff Majors and Kindred the Family Soul.  A street in Washington DC was renamed “Chuck Brown Way.” In September 2010 Brown released an ambitious three disc set “We Got This” which includes the Grammy nominated song LOVE featuring Jill Scott with Marcus Miller.  As part of the support for the new album some recent appearances include the Jimmy Fallon Show with The Roots, the Mo’Nique show, NPR’s Tiny Desk Unit, and NPR’s World Café.  The National Symphony Orchestra paid tribute to Chuck Brown in September 2011 with 2 commissioned works of orchestral arrangements and a performance on the West Lawn of the US Capitol.  Attended by an estimated 50,000 people the NSO and Chuck performed together, followed by his band in concert with guests Doug E Fresh and Sugar Bear.  Chuck Brown passed away on May 16, 2012.  Chuck Brown Memorial Park opened on August 22, 2014.  The Chuck Brown Band, who toured the world with the Godfather carries the torch and keeps the beat and legacy alive.   

EU FEATURING SUGAR BEAR

Born in Red Springs, North Carolina, Gregory’s mother Ms. Ernestine Elliott moved her family to Washington, DC when he was only 2 years old and eventually settled into the Valley Green neighborhood of Southeast DC. Ms. Elliott raised her children with strong Christian values and kept them in church and school. Gregory was drawn to music at an early age.  His mother noticed his love for music and bought him a six-string guitar when he was 13 but Gregory was drawn to the bassline of music. Self-taught, he learned to play bass by watching musicians on TV.  Every day he played “Tighten Up” by Archie Bell & The Drells. He listened to other artists like James Brown and Kool & The Gang and as his tastes expanded, he discovered a love for Rock and Roll. It was also around this his after-school caretaker, Ms. Ethel Knight, gave him the name Sugar Bear, saying he started to look like the Sugar Bear on the box of Sugar Crisps he ate daily.

Sugar Bear attended Ballou High School in Southeast DC where he played football and boxed. He got together with a group of musicians and put together a band named The Rebels, who won Ballou’s best new group award. The band’s name changed from The Rebels to The Young Hustlers to Experience Unlimited (E.U.) – inspired by The Jimi Hendrix Experience “Are You Experienced”.  After opening for the legendary Chuck Brown & The Soul Searchers at the Panorama Room in Southeast DC, Bear noted “People liked us, but they wouldn’t dance so Chuck Brown pulled me to the side and said ‘Son, you have a lot of great talent, but you have to play what the people want to hear’. We stayed around and watched the set and I was amazed at the call and response! The whole place was jumping for two hours straight and that day, I learned what the Go-Go music scene was all about..” That following Monday, E.U. rehearsed and changed their entire format to a Go-Go.


In 1988, one song took E.U. from a local band to a globally known name: Da Butt, a Grammy nominated hit which reached #1 on the Billboard Black Singles Chart, and was ranked #61 on VH1's 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 80s. The music video was directed by Spike Lee. E.U. received Soul Train award for Best New Artist in 1988 and performed on the Soul Train show, as well as on the Arsenio Hall show..  A Tour with Run DMC followed, as well as a tour with Salt-N-Pepa, with whom he collaborated with on “Shake Your Thang”.  An OSU tour took the band around the world.  2 additional Billboard charting hits “Buck Wild” and “Taste of Your Love” came from their Virgin records debut album.

Sugar Bear and E.U. continued a top the DC Go-Go scene over the years that followed, building a large and loyal fan base while releasing local hits like “Umm Bop Bop”. In 2001, EU was a featured act in the Put Your Hands Up The Tribute to Chuck Brown DVD, cited as “..quite possibly the greatest live concert video/dvd I have ever seen” by Murder Dog Magazine.  In 2014 Sugar Bear was featured as lead vocal on “Pop That Trunk” on the posthumous Chuck Brown “Beautiful Life” album.  In 2016, EU performed at the opening of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. In 2019, during the #DontMuteDC campaign, DC native and movie star Regina Hall brought out Sugar Bear & E.U. and Rare Essence to perform. During the 93rd Academy Awards, actress Glenn Close shouted out Sugar Bear and danced to the song “Da Butt”.  In 2021 The Chuck Brown Foundation presented Sugar Bear with the LEGEND award.  In 2022 EU released a remake of their classic “Peace Gone Away”.

Sugar Bear is grateful for the career he has been blessed with and gives all glory and honor to God “who makes everything possible.” Still grounded in his Christian foundation, Sugar Bear believes in the biblical principle stated in Luke 6:38 “Give, and it will be given to you: good measure, pressed down, shaken together, and running over will be put into your bosom. For with the same measure that you use, it will be measured back to you.” Because of this, he gives back daily to his students at T.C. Williams High School where he serves as a dedicated Special Education instructor. With a heart for uplifting people in his life and through his music and a dedication to the music born in DC that he loves, Sugar Bear and E.U. continue to keep the dance floor packed.

 

 

CHUCK BROWN BAND

“The Godfather of Go Go,” Chuck Brown is the undisputed sole founder and creator Go-Go music, a hypnotically danceable genre deeply rooted in funk and soul that he developed in the early 70’s , and  the only form of expressive culture  to originate in the District of Columbia.  Foreshadowing many of the major popular R&B styles of the past three decades, Chuck's signature style earned him a place in American musical royalty.  This esteem was maintained by the reputation of his legendary live shows, heavy on audience participation and built around “the beat” to create an unparalleled non-stop party atmosphere.
 
While searching for a sound to call his own in the 1960s, Chuck was deeply inspired by artists like James Brown.  He latched onto the Latin percussion groove from the band he played with at the time, Los Latinos.  Combining this with his roots, his love of blues, jazz, gospel, soul, and African rhythms, Chuck began to develop his own unique sound.   Starting out playing top forty, Brown would break-it-down between songs with percussion and audience call and response, and keep the music going, and the dance floor packed.  
 
His first hit was “We the People” on the debut album of the same name in 1972.  Next came the album Salt of the Earth, with the hit “Blow Your Whistle” (sampled by Grammy winner Eve in 2007 in her hit “Tambourine”), and one of the most sampled break beats of all time from “Ashley’s Roach Clip”  (including Eric B and Rakim, LL Cool J and countless others).     In 1978, the Soul Searchers became Chuck Brown and the Soul Searchers, and Chuck’s original composition “Bustin’ Loose” took the #1 spot in Billboard, on Source/MCA Records.  The song was used in Grammy winner Nelly’s 2002 smash “Hot in Herre,” and continues to be one of the most relevant and often sampled funk songs ever written (“Bustin’ Loose” was recently featured in a national television campaign for Chips Ahoy). 
 
After substantial touring across the US, but no money to show for his success, Chuck found himself looking for inspiration.  He found it in his next hit, the Billboard charting “We Need Some Money,” which propelled him around the world again.  Brown then revisited his love of jazz and created the “Go Go Swing Medley,” introducing people around the world to classics by Duke Ellington, Johnny Mercer, and James Moody, spun in Chuck’s inimitable way.  Released independently and later on Polygram Records, Chuck Brown and the Soul Searchers once again reached an international audience through a 1985 at Holland’s North Seas Jazz Festival.  In between sets by Curtis Mayfield and James Brown, Chuck schooled everyone on the genre he created.  That same year, Chris Blackwell introduced the movie “Good to Go,” a much hyped but poor reflection of the scene.  Nonetheless other artists, such as Salt N Pepa, Kurtis Blow, and Grace Jones, began incorporating his sound in their music. Brown continued to record, perform in the US, with stints in Europe and Japan in the nineties.   
 
 After a string of live recordings, he met at the time an undiscovered, shy talent by the name of Eva Cassidy in the early nineties.  His lifelong dream of singing with a lady, springing from his love of duets by the likes of Louis Armstrong with Ella Fitzgerald and Billy Eckstine with Sarah Vaughan, came to fruition with the critically acclaimed and worldwide release of “The Other Side” by Chuck Brown and Eva Cassidy (which contained the original recording of the worldwide Eva Cassidy hit “Over the Rainbow”).  He dedicated a jazz standards album to Ms. Cassidy after her tragic loss to cancer. 
 
In 2001, he released the Billboard charting “Your Game... Live at the 9:30 Club” which was voted as one of the top 10 albums of 2001 by Billboard’s R&B Editor, Rapper Chuck D and others.  A live DVD came next, called “quite possibly the greatest live concert video/DVD I have ever seen” by Murder Dog Magazine. The same year a double remastered “Best Of” album was released.  In 2006 the National Endowment for the Arts awarded Chuck a “Lifetime Heritage Fellowship,” the Federal Government’s highest honor for folk and traditional arts, and Chuck also performed at the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame in 2006. The following year his “We’re About the Business” CD debuted as the #1 independent album and #2 R&B album  in Billboard.  The National Visionary Leadership Project recognized Chuck’s contributions in shaping American history in 2007, joining previous honorees such as Ray Charles, Quincy Jones, BB King, and Earth Kitt.
 
Chuck  recorded with artists as diverse as Thievery Corporation, Brian Culbertson , Jeff Majors and Kindred the Family Soul.  A street in Washington DC was renamed “Chuck Brown Way.” In September 2010 Brown released an ambitious three disc set “We Got This” which includes the Grammy nominated song LOVE featuring Jill Scott with Marcus Miller.  As part of the support for the new album some recent appearances include the Jimmy Fallon Show with The Roots, the Mo’Nique show, NPR’s Tiny Desk Unit, and NPR’s World Café.  The National Symphony Orchestra paid tribute to Chuck Brown in September 2011 with 2 commissioned works of orchestral arrangements and a performance on the West Lawn of the US Capitol.  Attended by an estimated 50,000 people the NSO and Chuck performed together, followed by his band in concert with guests Doug E Fresh and Sugar Bear.  Chuck Brown passed away on May 16, 2012.  Chuck Brown Memorial Park opened on August 22, 2014.  The Chuck Brown Band, who toured the world with the Godfather carries the torch and keeps the beat and legacy alive.   

Parking
1325 G Street NW Washington, DC 20005
More about The Hamilton Live
A uniquely eclectic experience located just steps from the White House, The Hamilton has become Washington, DC’s favorite gathering place for music, art, entertainment and inventive dining. The Hamilton is designed to welcome any crowd or party in search of an exceptional way to celebrate. Clyde’s Restaurant Group (CRG) is one of the nation’s most successful and enduring restaurant companies. In 1963, the original Clyde’s opened in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, DC. The brand has expanded to include 12 properties in Northern Virginia, suburban Maryland, and the District of Columbia: Clyde’s of Georgetown, Clyde’s of Chevy Chase, Clyde’s at Mark Center, Tower Oaks Lodge, Clyde’s of Gallery Place, Clyde’s Willow Creek Farm, Old Ebbitt Grill, The Tombs, 1789 Restaurant, Fitzgerald’s, The Hamilton and The Hamilton Live. All CRG concepts, while distinctively different than the next, share the same reputation for exemplary customer service, an unforgettable atmosphere and a chef-driven menu featuring high-quality fresh ingredients. CRG closely holds a commitment to its people and the region, proudly fostering an environment of inclusivity, respect, and exceptional hospitality. For more information, please visit Clydes.com.
When & Where
Nov 30, 2024, 8:00pm to 11:00pm Timezone: EST
$30.00


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