The Mercury News

Mobile music festival brings entertainm­ent to your door

‘We found a way to unlock a safe gathering with plenty of space to feature live music,’ organizer says

- Bal Aizarro COLUMNIST

How do you stage a music festival in the COVID-19 era that adheres to Santa Clara County’s public health guidelines while also being fun? Chris Esparza, who owns the event company Giant Creative, might have found the right answer with PorchFest, which filled San Jose’s Naglee Park neighborho­od with music Saturday.

Esparza put a spin on the traditiona­l “front porch” festival, where crowds of music lovers roamed to different houses presenting bands. Instead of the audience, it was the music that moved — four bands played 25-minute sets on flatbed trucks that traveled through the neighborho­od to eight curbside “stages.” Some residents wearing masks watched from lawn chairs on their front lawns, and others listened from windows inside their houses.

“We found a way to unlock a safe gathering with plenty of space to feature live music and have a little bit of social time together — all wrapped up in a new reality,” said Esparza, who lives in Naglee Park and presented the idea to the Campus Community Associatio­n, the neighborho­od associatio­n.

It wasn’t a simple operation by any means, though. To stay within the rules, bands weren’t allowed to have vocalists, horns or woodwinds

— so there were a lot of guitars, drums and keyboards, with music leaning toward light jazz. The bands that performed were the Jazz Mechanics, M-Tet, the New Acoustic Collective and the Wally Schnalle Quartet.

Residents and smallbusin­ess owners sponsored the stages, helping to pay the bands as well as cover costs for the trucks and equipment. More than two dozen volunteers acted as drivers and stage managers, making sure audiences were following the rules. Afterward, neighbors gushed with gratitude in emails about the event, with one writing that it was “so refreshing to hear live music and see my neighbors after being cooped up for five months.”

After this initial success, Esparza said he could envision the PorchFest spreading to other areas with enough backing and the right plan. “There would have to be a little customizat­ion for every neighborho­od, and that’s the way it should be,” he said.

‘HEINLENVIL­LE’ WINS OUT >> In the late innings of a

marathon meeting Tuesday night, the San Jose City Council voted unanimousl­y to name a park proposed for a new Japantown developmen­t to honor John Heinlen, the 19th-century German immigrant who provided land on the site for a Chinatown known as Heinlenvil­le.

It was pretty clear from the start of the council discussion that Heinlenvil­le Park was going to win out over Sakura Park, the recommenda­tion of the San Jose Parks Commission. Both Mayor Sam Liccardo and Councilman Raul Peralez said they had talked to Japantown residents about the issue, which had drawn a huge wave of support for Heinlenvil­le Park — city staff members’ original recommenda­tion.

Councilwom­an Maya Esparza correctly pointed out, however, that the resident-led Parks Commission shouldn’t be raked over the coals for their recommenda­tion.

“They based their decision on the best available informatio­n and community input they had at that time,” she said, noting that the outpouring of support for Heinlenvil­le Park came after their decision.

In the end, though, the community made its voice heard and the council listened. That’s how the system should work, and it’s refreshing when it actually does.

THANKS FOR THE MEMORY >> We took the family out for an excursion to Alviso Marina County Park recently, and on the drive back I pointed out Vahl’s, the venerable restaurant that has stood watch on El Dorado Street since 1941.

Santa Clara resident Ed Garcia must have been picking up my brain waves because not long after, he emailed me with a memory about Amelia Vahl, the restaurant’s co-founder who famously had a policy of refusing credit cards — it was cash or checks only.

Garcia recalls writing a check after eating there with his wife on one occasion, but he was surprised to discover that weeks and then months went by without the check being cashed.

“Almost a year later, the check cleared. She must have left it in the apron she was wearing,” Garcia mused. Even though Vahl died in 2004 at age 98, Garcia says, “I can still see her in her apron waiting on people.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY SAL PIZARRO — STAFF ?? The New Acousitc Collective plays during the PorchFest in San Jose on Saturday.
PHOTOS BY SAL PIZARRO — STAFF The New Acousitc Collective plays during the PorchFest in San Jose on Saturday.
 ??  ?? Residents of South 17th Street in San Jose watch the band M-Tet play at the PorchFest on Saturday.
Residents of South 17th Street in San Jose watch the band M-Tet play at the PorchFest on Saturday.
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