1,764,599 research outputs found
Photograph of Wilbur "Skip" Redwine
Head shot of Wilbur "Skip" Redwine, known professionally as Skip Redwine. Date uncertain but likely from the 1960s
Skip Groff, circa late 1990s
A photograph circa the late 1990s of Skip Groff, the owner of Yesterday & Today Records, a record store in Rockville, Maryland that was central to the rock and punk music scenes in the Washington, D.C. area from 1977 to 2002. Groff also produced numerous recordings (Pentagram, Minor Threat) and operated a record label, Limp Records, that issued early recordings from notable groups and musicians like Bad Brains, Tommy Keene, and the Slickee Boys
Charles "Skip" Pitts, 2004
This is an interview with Charles "Skip" Pitts conducted by Jacob Rabinbach. Charles Pitts was an American soul and blues guitarist. He is best known for his distinctive "wah-wah" style, prominently featured on Isaac Hayes' title track from the 1971 movie Shaft. He is widely considered to have been one of the architects of soul, R&B and funk guitar
Tom Skip Wilson Interview, 2011
This is an interview with Thomas “Skip” Wilson. Skip has worked for the mill since 14 years old and been doing it full time since graduating college. Milling is no longer the main focus of the facility and instead they are now focused on a customer oriented business. They have a good relationship with the Park but have an innate fear of “big government.” As a protection against this they opened up another facility not within the park in case they buy out the land. All-in-all Wilson has spent his entire life doing what he does and he enjoys it. He has good memories of living in the Cuyahoga Valley and of the Wilson Feed Mill
Skip Groff, official WINX staff photograph, circa early 1970s
Photograph circa the early 1970s of Skip Groff, a disc jockey at WINX-AM in Rockville, Maryland. Groff was later the owner of Yesterday & Today Records, a record store in Rockville that was central to the rock and punk music scenes in the Washington, D.C. area from 1977 to 2002
Tom Skip Wilson Interview, 2011
This is an interview with Thomas “Skip” Wilson. Skip has worked for the mill since 14 years old and been doing it full time since graduating college. Milling is no longer the main focus of the facility and instead they are now focused on a customer oriented business. They have a good relationship with the Park but have an innate fear of “big government.” As a protection against this they opened up another facility not within the park in case they buy out the land. All-in-all Wilson has spent his entire life doing what he does and he enjoys it. He has good memories of living in the Cuyahoga Valley and of the Wilson Feed Mill
Wilbur "Skip" Redwine with other theater people
Skip Redwine at the piano, with Jo Ann Worley, David Merrick, and another unidentified man in a suit, backstage, likely at Hello Dolly! for which Worley was Carol Channing's original standby for the character Dolly. Date uncertain but likely from the 1960s
Skip Groff, circa 1980
A photograph of Skip Groff, the owner of Yesterday & Today Records, a record store in Rockville, Maryland that was central to the rock and punk music scenes in the Washington, D.C. area from 1977 to 2002. The photograph was taken when Groff was on a trip to the United Kingdom to buy records that he would take back to Yesterday & Today to sell. Groff is wearing a t-shirt that features the logo for the Slickee Boys, an important early punk band from Washington, D.C
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