"'L.A. was more free then,' Arabian says. 'There wasn’t too much trouble with gangs or the police. The parties were just parties, and everyone was a part of it—the electro kids, the mods, the punks, the new wave kids. You had every race and every crew, and there were two to three inches of sweat on the floors, with a mist in the air. It was nasty, and it was all about dancing.'"
Chris Martins in the LA Weekly checks in with 1980s Los Angeles hip-hop pioneer Arabian Prince.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
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