Leo drove to the address. It was a condemned funeral home.
“That’s what makes her real,” he replied. Searching for- Bust It Down Connie Perignon in-...
He called old club promoters in Baltimore, DC, Philly. A man named Junebug remembered “a girl with champagne-colored hair” who showed up to an open mic in 2002, dropped a DAT tape, performed one song, and vanished. “She wore a corsage,” Junebug said. “Roses. Fake ones.” Leo drove to the address
He’d bought a trunk of “unplayable” records from a storage locker auction in Newark. Most were water-warped disco. But at the bottom, a 12-inch dubplate—heavy, like a gravestone. No track name. No catalog number. Just handwritten in faded silver Sharpie: Bust It Down—Connie Perignon Side A (Only) The first bar hit. A kick drum like a door slam. Then a sample—some 70s Brazilian flute, reversed and pitched down until it wept. Then her voice. He called old club promoters in Baltimore, DC, Philly