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From Disco to Techno, He’s Seen It on Sugar Hill’s Dance Floor (nytimes.com)
30 points by mykowebhn on April 6, 2019 | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments



Sugar Hill is such an evocative name.

There are quite a few neighborhoods and towns named Sugar Hill around the country. Most of them (all of them?) perhaps named as either a descriptive or hopeful reference to the possibility of a post-emancipation "sweet life" for black Americans.

Sugar Hill Records takes its name from the Harlem Sugar Hill, rather than this article's Brooklyn-via-North-Carolina Sugar Hill.


Ah, new realization!

When I was in high school in the 80s, one of the most popular songs on the local mixed-tapes was an early rap song-- 'The Sugar Hill Gang'. I expect this is where the song got it's name.

That music still takes me back to good times.


Apparently the Sugar Hill Gang were named for a different Sugar Hill, per another comment on this article. Good eye though -- the Sugar Hill Gang were the first hip-hop act to make a record that had widespread commercial success.


Open since 1979! That’s fantastic considering the business a club is in. Major kudos to Freeman staying relevant for so long. Turning down 15 million - that’s passion :)


I actually met this guy at one of the said "techno" parties a few years ago. I was sitting at the bar and all of a sudden he just started talking to me. We chatted for a while before he mentioned he owned the joint.

A real nice guy. His philosophy was "back then, I bought real estate instead of investing in my company's stock...[but NYC is expensive AF now so good luck doing that!]"

Also, the article implicitly suggests (while still playing identity politics, as NYT just can't help), that gentrification revitalized his club.


Isn't a comment about an entity or author playing identity politics in itself identity politics as well?




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