Los Angeles Times

Knitting Factory buys stake in local promoter

- By August Brown august.brown@latimes.com

Spaceland Presents has long been one of the most influentia­l independen­t concert promotion firms in Los Angeles. Now they’re set to potentiall­y get a lot bigger.

The firm announced this week that Knitting Factory Entertainm­ent had acquired 49% of the L.A.-based firm, which books venues like the Echo and Regent and produces shows at the Natural History Museum, Santa Monica Pier and the Getty Center.

“You get to a point in your career where you want to figure out what’s next,” Spaceland Presents founder Mitchell Frank said in a phone interview with The Times on Thursday. “This is about resources. We’re keeping our name, we’re keeping our independen­ce, and right now it feels like the best of all worlds.”

Neither Frank nor Knitting Factory reps would give an exact figure for the investment, but Frank said he had considered a sale or investment in Spaceland Presents from several other promoters.

Spaceland and Knitting Factory have previously collaborat­ed on booking the Regent in downtown L.A. and on the upcoming Desert Daze festival in Joshua Tree. That fest is expected to draw around 2,000 fans of experiment­al rock to the Institute of Mentalphys­ics, which features architectu­re associated with Frank Lloyd Wright and his son Lloyd, as well as stark desert scenery.

“We’ve found a partner that appreciate­s our independen­t spirit and champions it,” said Phil Pirrone, the founder of Desert Daze. “I think were going to start seeing more and more niche, specifical­ly curated festivals as opposed to the big multigenre format we’ve become familiar with.”

Frank said this investment comes as Spaceland is preparing to announce up to four new festivals like Desert Daze. The event could be a preview of a new wave of up to a dozen smaller or genrespeci­fic gatherings, like the music-comedy crossover Festival Supreme, which would reshape the L.A. festival scene.

“We’re going to be very selective and focus on how we can make shows more special,” Frank said. “More handcrafte­d and handpicked. Growing [Desert Daze] from [2,000] to 5,000 people is more what we want to do than compete with Coachella.”

Knitting Factory President and Chief Executive Morgan Margolis said their prior projects laid the groundwork for a new partnershi­p, one in which each entity could keep its individual staff and brands but potentiall­y expand into new markets outside Southern California, including cities like New York, home to Knitting Factory’s flagship venue. Knitting Factory currently has around 600 employees and books close to 5,000 production­s a year.

“I definitely don’t just want this to be a SoCal partnershi­p,” Margolis said. “This is global.”

However, he added, he doesn’t intend to change much about the way that Spaceland does business.

“I’m into collaborat­ive conversati­ons, but I’m not going to be directing them in their business,” Margolis said. “Their team adds to my team.”

The move would dramatical­ly expand Knitting Factory’s reach back into L.A., where it owned a venue from 2000 to 2009. It also opens up new hospitalit­y collaborat­ions for each firm — Frank has opened several bars like El Prado and restaurant­s like Malo, while Knitting Factory owns the chain of Federal Bars in North Hollywood and Long Beach, and is a partner in the new Arrive Hotel, a 39room boutique hotel in Palm Springs.

Frank founded Spaceland as an indie-rock club in Silver Lake in the mid-1990s, and helped grow acts like Beck and Silversun Pickups into internatio­nal stars.

The Knitting Factory investment would still leave Spaceland at a much smaller scale than concert promotion firms such as AEG-owned Goldenvoic­e or Live Nation. But it could help move Spaceland from a place where, as Frank described it, “We find good bands, other people like them, and they move up” into new territory.

“We don’t think we’re going to be going up against Goldenvoic­e,” Frank said. “We’re always going to be more boots-on-the-ground. It’s in our DNA.”

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? MORGAN MARGOLIS, left, president and chief executive of Knitting Factory Entertainm­ent, visits a North Hollywood restaurant and bar he owns in 2012.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times MORGAN MARGOLIS, left, president and chief executive of Knitting Factory Entertainm­ent, visits a North Hollywood restaurant and bar he owns in 2012.

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