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The Slickee Boys
The Slickee Boys
Washington, D.C. area punk-psychedelic-garage rock band
1
The Teen Idles
The Teen Idles
band
2
Black Market Baby
Black Market Baby
3
State of Alert
State of Alert
band
4
Ian MacKaye
Ian MacKaye
American singer and record label owner
5
Minor Threat
Minor Threat
American hardcore punk band
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Government Issue
Government Issue
band
7
Joe Lally
Joe Lally
American musician
8
Fugazi
Fugazi
American Hardcore Punk Band
9
Youth Brigade
Youth Brigade
punk rock band from Washington, D.C.
10
Rites of Spring
Rites of Spring
American post-hardcore band
11
The Faith
The Faith
band
12
Energy
Energy
US band
13
Gallows
Gallows
band
14
Christina Billotte
Christina Billotte
American musician
15
The Pietasters
The Pietasters
band
16
Soulside
Soulside
17
Screeching Weasel
Screeching Weasel
American punk rock band
18
Void
Void
American band
19
Dave Hause
Dave Hause
American musician
20
Against Me!
Against Me!
American punk rock band
21
Bad Brains
Bad Brains
American rock band
22
Arms Aloft
Arms Aloft
band
Skip Groff
American record producer and DJ (1948-2019)

Skip Groff

Intro
American record producer and DJ (1948-2019)

Frank "Skip" Groff (November 20, 1948 – February 18, 2019) was an American record producer, DJ, and owner of Yesterday and Today record store (also known as Y&T) in Rockville, Maryland, at the center of much of Washington D.C.'s punk and alternative music scenes.

Groff was born in Waltham, Massachusetts and moved to Suitland, Maryland, as a child.

Groff operated the independent record label Limp Records from 1978 to 1982. Called "a respected guru" of the DC punk and indie music scene, Groff was a radio DJ for WINX, WAVA, and WPGC, and did promotional work for RCA, before opening Yesterday and Today in 1977. Groff was credited with helping Dischord Records get started, and his record store was an early retail outlet for their titles.

The store, which was named for the Beatles album Yesterday and Today, accumulated over a million 45s. It was frequently the site of record signings and performances by local and visiting bands (such as The Damned), and became a hangout for local musicians and music fans. Howard Wuelfing of the Slickee Boys, Nurses, and Half Japanese was the store's first employee. When the band Minor Threat broke up, its frontman Ian MacKaye worked at the store for five years. Other employees at Yesterday and Today included: Kim Kane of the Slickee Boys, Bert Queiroz and Danny Ingram of Youth Brigade, Brendan Canty and Guy Picciotto of Rites of Spring and Fugazi, Sharon Cheslow of Chalk Circle, Tommy Keene and Ted Niceley of The Razz, Shirley Sexton (later married to Stiff Little Fingers' Jake Burns), Amanda MacKaye who ran Slowdime Records, and Archie Moore and Jim Spellman of Velocity Girl. Groff met future wife and co-owner Kelly when she was a customer at Yesterday and Today, and their daughter Kirsty was named after British pop star Kirsty MacColl. The store closed in 2002.

Groff produced albums for many of the DC area's punk bands including the Slickee Boys, Razz, Bad Brains, Teen Idles, S.O.A., Dark, Nurses, Youth Brigade, Black Market Baby, Velvet Monkeys, and Minor Threat.

He died at Maryland's MedStar Montgomery Medical Center at the age of 70.