Many of the musicians I have discussed, given that the 1960s had actually emphasized the background of West Altadena as the territory of the Black Center course in the region. In fact, a generation has been given to many black families from generation to generation. Martine Syms, 36, is from Mariposa Road and matures in a dead end, with all families knowing each other. She left in 2005, but she usually returns home until January this year when her mom and dad, two siblings and two nephews lived. Like almost all the houses you are on the road, she claimed: “It’s a failure.”
Syms told me that she recently spoke with Mosher Hall about “the despair of the future and the past”, i.e. abandoning her background and viable future. “This is an example of tradition, but if I had a child they would certainly never see the house I was with you,” she claimed.
Mosher Hall reacts to feelings. She discusses how to comfort herself when she encounters past difficulties in her life: “’The future seems challenging, but I have my past for now, and I currently have this structure.” Or, if it looked bad before, you’re similar to “I have a future.” Due to the loss of her home and community, she says, the past and the future “slide at the same time.”