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FOO FIGHTERS: SONIC HIGHWAYS
Air Date: Friday, October 24, 2014
Time Slot: 11:00 PM-12:00 AM EST on HBO
Episode Title: (#02/102) "Washington, D.C."
[NOTE: The following article is a press release issued by the aforementioned network and/or company. Any errors, typos, etc. are attributed to the original author. The release is reproduced solely for the dissemination of the enclosed information.]

Episode #2: "Washington, D.C."

Debut: FRIDAY, OCT. 24 (11:00 p.m.-midnight)

Other HBO playdates: Oct. 24 (1:00 a.m.), 25 (3:30 p.m., 11:00 p.m.), 26 (2:00 a.m.), 27 (midnight), 28 (10:00 p.m., 12:30 a.m.) and 30 (2:45 p.m., midnight)

HBO2 playdates: Oct. 25 (8:00 p.m.), 28 (11:00 p.m.) and 29 (2:15 a.m.)

A transient town where few are born and raised, Washington, D.C. is in many ways a city of extremes. Starland Vocal Band, Marvin Gaye, Duke Ellington, Nils Lofgren, Chuck Brown, Henry Rollins, Fugazi and Trouble Funk all hail from D.C. In the early '70s, the music style go-go originated here, and has remained a local craze ever since. Dave Grohl sits down with Trouble Funk's Big Tony Fisher to talk about go-go, and explores its origins with Chuck Brown, the genre's undisputed godfather. He also chats with Don Zientara, owner of Inner Ear Studio, which the Virginia-raised Grohl says "produced the entire soundtrack of my youth," as well as with members of the punk band Bad Brains and Ian MacKaye of Teen Idles, Minor Threat and Fugazi, who all recorded at Inner Ear over the decades.

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