Go Radio's "Go To Hell" official music video has been taken out of the new album "Close The Distance" and is currently available at stores and online.
GouToHell Touring to Capture People November 2 - December 4! Please check the date and get a ticket here: http: //tours.wearegoradio.com/
Early this year Brooklyn singer Empress Of released "Go to Hell" and sent a clear message to everyone suspecting her. "Everyone around me thinks I will fail, but they can go to hell." Empress Of never used her music to despise her words. Sneaky man, please tell me, "I am looking at you / I do not know my image." If you doubt people and suspect their ability to succeed, please proceed to "Go to Hell".
In my childhood, I have contacted myself in the public place many times, and if I am not wearing a skirt instead of a pants, I will be told to go to hell. Or if I listen to 'demonic music' instead of local religious radio station. For the first time, I was allowed to enter the mall for a few minutes (I must be 10 or 11 years old), two people said to be related to the "college" of the town on the mall's bench He took me. I think it broke about my purchase (I think that my record bar contains 45 including Chic, Sugar Hill Gang, Blondie) and tells why I go to hell. Sometimes friendly friends and street-headed priests distribute pamphlets called pamphlets depicting torture and death of unrepented souls. Some people use the Bible as a weapon and whip switch, and some people are not inspiration of life or partners.
The history of music technology is filled with revolutionary things that relieve people from restrictions. If you want to listen to music, the radio means you do not need live performance. Vinyl allows people to choose to play albums they own rather than being heard on the radio then. Then tape the portable personal music collection so that you can hear it anytime and anywhere. We are at the cutting edge of the digital era, and we release the historical connection between recorded music and physical media. Things are changing rapidly. Just 15 years ago, people were happy having card-sized devices to store 1000 songs. Today, countless internet connection hardware gives you instant access to tens of millions of music tracks.