Los Angeles Times

DJs are muted by a quiet NYE

They sit out a usually lucrative night while rogue parties threaten to lengthen recovery.

- By August Brown

On any other New Year’s Eve, L. A. club- music DJ Heidi Lawden would have had at least two gigs in L. A. or Europe. It’s the biggest night of the year for her profession; typical NYE gigs net around $ 1,500 for working DJs like herself, with up to $ 1 million for A- list pop acts like Calvin Harris or Marshmello for a Las Vegas megaclub gig. If you can hop across town ( or a border) to headline a few big parties, you can pocket a gaudy sum for a single night’s work.

“Honestly I can’t remember a year since I left school where I haven’t been prepping for some occasion,” Lawden said on New Year’s Eve, a few hours before the music world left the scourge of 2020 behind. “Last year I played in Switzerlan­d until midnight, then went to Berlin and played Panorama Bar [ at the globally acclaimed Berghain]. But right now I’m driving to take my dogs for a walk. I don’t quite know what to do with myself.”

Instead of spinning live for a packed dance f loor, Lawden and her frequent DJ partner, Masha Martinovic, pre- taped streaming sets for the L. A. indie radio station Dublab, which were broadcast into the small hours of 2021’ s f irst day ( they performed for free). Across L. A., most DJs watched the calendar f lip either bathed in the lonely screen- glow of a livestream or seething at home as packed house

parties and illegal warehouse shows mushroomed across L. A. There, thousands of partiers gathered to dance and, in all likelihood, continue spreading a brutal wave of COVID- 19.

Maybe a paycheck to perform was out there somewhere, but there was no way Lawden and Martinovic, cofounders of the local Dusk festival, would take it.

“I was offered to play in Tulum, where people think you’re immune when you step off the plane,” Lawden said. Promoters were indeed planning to roll the dice there: A planned two- week mega- rave, Zamna festival, was called off only days before its New Year’s Eve debut. A French warehouse rave with thousands of fans drew internatio­nal condemnati­on and led to violent confrontat­ions with police.

“To think your rave is so important it has to happen, it’s selfish on a whole other level,” Lawden said.

“These people are ruining it for everybody,” Martinovic added. “It’s irresponsi­ble, greedy, and frankly these people should be judged.”

Over the December holidays, L. A. became the epicenter of America’s pandemic, with a county resident dying every 10 minutes from the disease. Hospitals are resorting to drastic measures like storing patients in gift shops and confrontin­g the dark possibilit­ies of rationing care and turning away patients.

Yet on the biggest party night of the year, the pros largely stayed home, and the reckless tried to clandestin­ely cash in. LAPD officials told The Times they broke up parties of more than 2,000 people in downtown, including one with 1,000 attendees at a popular Agatha Street warehouse space. Another, on Broadway Avenue, was just steps from LAPD headquarte­rs. Countless more stirred up anger and fear from neighbors across L. A.

TikTok videos showed hundreds of teens and 20somethin­g influencer­s piled maskless into Hollywood Hills and Valley mansions and content- creator group houses, drinking and dancing and f launting their disregard for COVID- 19 safety protocols. These party houses, rented by social- media collective­s like Drip Crib and Hype House, have been cited by local authoritie­s for f lagrantly violating pandemic- era rules around gatherings.

One app, Vybe Together, was created to foster gatherings at below- radar house parties ( it was removed from app stores just hours before New Year’s Eve).

For Victor Rodriguez, the 54- year- old DJ and co- founder of the L. A. LGBT disco fixture Bears in Space, watching friends and peers in the gay nightlife world risk it all for an illicit night on the dance floor was especially unnerving.

“This is my second pandemic, and when I lived through the AIDS crisis I was going to three or four memorials a week,” Rodriguez said. “It’s so irresponsi­ble and stupid, and a really huge disservice to the scene. I’ve already lost seven people to COVID- 19.”

Rodriguez and Bears in Space pre- taped a DJ set from their beloved home base of Akbar, the Silver Lake LGBTQ club that recently won a lifeline from devoted regulars. Rodriguez spent the night with his husband in their cabin home four hours north of L. A.

As places like Akbar and the Eagle wonder if they’ll make it through to summer, Rodriguez is doing everything he can to preserve what’s left of the undergroun­d scene’s institutio­ns.

“We have such a beautiful undergroun­d scene in L. A., a big family where we all know each other,” Rodriguez said. “To have someone threaten the future of that, it’s such a shame.”

Gary Richards, founder of Hard Events and now the boss of the festival and rave cruise All My Friends, spent most of 2020 trying to burn off the anxiety of his whole company going idle.

“I’ve been going on a lot of 70- mile bike hikes listening to audiobooks,” he said. “I’ve just put in my head that I’m semiretire­d until we figure out COVID- 19.”

Large promoters were far from spared by the pandemic; Live Nation and AEG slashed salaries, laid off staff, and watched as revenue evaporated by more than 90%. There’s just not much for festival promoters to do right now.

Some tried to figure out a format. The DJ and electronic artist Deadmau5 threw a drive- in rave in San Bernardino on New Year’s Eve, and the EDM promoter Insomniac has a car- caravan festival planned at Santa Anita racetrack later this month.

But Richards went much simpler, DJ- ing from his home at 5 a. m. on a New Year’s Day livestream, a type of brain- cleansing sunrise set he’s played off and on for 30 years at clubs and festivals.

“I wish I could do more. I want to scream and punch the TV when I see what’s happening with the lack of leadership right now,” he said. “I always have a plan, and now no one does.”

As the statistics roll in from the post- Christmas, post- New Year’s wave of COVID- 19 supersprea­der parties, most working L. A. DJs are right where they were in March — holed up, hurting for income and reassuring their crowds that dance f loors will return if people do the right thing until the vaccines settle in. They already are in Australia, New Zealand and much of Asia.

Lawden and Martinovic acknowledg­ed that every text they got about an illegal New Year’s Eve party set that day back a bit, likely at the cost of lives.

Martinovic spent her New Year’s Eve at a cabin in Idyllwild. For the first ( and hopefully last) time in years, she wasn’t behind a mixing deck. But as her set of intentiona­lly exuberant house and disco streamed out to all of her friends in L. A. and around the world, they shared one sentiment: maybe next year.

“In October things felt on the right track, but none of us predicted how bad L. A. would get by New Year’s,” Martinovic said. “So we were especially glad to do this set knowing we could help give people a reason to stay home.”

 ?? LAPD ?? THIS UNDERGROUN­D party near Staples Center was broken up by the LAPD on New Year’s Eve.
LAPD THIS UNDERGROUN­D party near Staples Center was broken up by the LAPD on New Year’s Eve.
 ?? Nuspeed ?? MASHA MARTINOVIC prerecorde­d a New Year’s Eve stream for the L. A. indie radio station Dublab.
Nuspeed MASHA MARTINOVIC prerecorde­d a New Year’s Eve stream for the L. A. indie radio station Dublab.

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