The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Desert Hearts beating again

Music festival returns to new location — Lake Perris

- By Richard Guzman riguzman@scng.com

The Desert Hearts Festival started with a big party in the middle of nowhere on a patch of desert that had no address, no electricit­y and no other comforts that music festivalgo­ers would expect today.

Yet from those humble but adventurou­s beginnings, the event evolved into a popular yearly festival with a following of passionate techno and house music fans who will once again dance the weekend away with 72 hours of nonstop music Thursday through May 2.

More than four dozen DJS and artists will perform before an expected crowd of 6,500 people at the festival’s new and bigger home at Lake Perris State Recreation Area.

“We’ve grown this thing completely organicall­y, completely independen­tly, doing it our way the entire time, and it’s become this universall­y loved festival for so many people, and we’re so grateful to be back,” said Mikey Lion, one of the four DJS who started the festival in 2012.

The other founders are Matt Marabella, David Leon and Lee Reynolds.

This will be the largest lineup for the festival, which returns after a three-year break due to the pandemic. Onstage will be well-known names in the dance music scene, including DJ Harvey, Super Flu, Omar-s and Carl Craig.

“It’s really our most eclectic lineup we’ve ever had. We really wanted to hit the entire aspect of the house and techno genres while still making it accessible for a lot of people,” Lion said.

DESERT HEARTS FESTIVAL

Where:

Tickets:

Informatio­n:

Desert drive

By contrast, at least in terms of actually getting there, the first festival in 2012 was anything but easily accessible.

After throwing a few parties in San Diego, where Lion and the rest of the founders lived, they decided to go a little bigger and launch an actual festival.

They found an isolated place in the desert and brought in all they needed, including a generator, which broke at one point; a rented sound system, because theirs went missing at the beginning of the festival; food and water; and two porta-potties.

To get there, people had to use coordinate­s and GPS to navigate dirt roads in order to find the place.

“It was 40 bucks to get in and we literally had no box office. If we saw a car pull up we would run out to the car and collect 40 bucks,” Lion said.

About 200 people showed up three-day weekend party.

“Everything that could have gone wrong went wrong and we still came out on top, and that first sunrise on Sunday was the moment of triumph, of glory, of just the for the most amazing experience ever,” Lion said.

Steady growth

Since its inception, Desert Hearts has grown and moved to new locations, including its most consistent home, at Los Coyotes Indian Reservatio­n, where the event had been held since 2014. The coronaviru­s pandemic scuttled any plans for the event in 2020 and 2021.

The festival also has branched out into a record label and a DJ collective under the Desert Hearts name that has put on about 600 shows all over the world, from the U.S. to Australia, Brazil, Germany and the United Arab Emirates.

And the new venue signifies yet another milestone in their growth, Lion said.

“It’s this unbelievab­le camping location. Tons of grass camping, tons of car camping. There’s all kinds of amenities we’ve never had before like fixed bathrooms and showers and access to water. Before, we literally had to bring every single thing, so now we’re using an establishe­d venue,” he said.

Lake Perris State Recreation Area, which is between Perris and Moreno Valley

in Riverside County, has hosted many festivals, including Desert Daze and Same Same But Different.

For the first time, Desert Hearts will have two stages: one next to the lake, where people can even swim during the daytime partying, and one in a grassy area for nighttime music. But music will play on only one stage at a time.

People also can expect to see familiar Desert Hearts features including art installati­ons and fashion shows, plus new things like a speakeasy named Tonight’s Tavern, where there will be comedy and spoken word performanc­es.

And while the festival continues to grow, Lion said even those who were there from the beginning can still expect to experience everything that made Desert Hearts enjoyable.

“The thing that really separates Desert Hearts from the rest of the festivals is the vibe. The vibe is just something that is so tangible you can cut it with a knife. It’s this love bubble that’s so powerful that when you’re in it and you’re on the dance floor you are just absorbed by this collective consciousn­ess,” Lion said.

 ?? PHOTO BY ERIC ALLEN ?? When: Festival lineup starts at noon Friday and goes nonstop until noon May 2. Preparty starts at noon Thursday.
Lake Perris State Recreation Area, 17801 Lake Perris Drive, Perris
$399for festival admission. Camping is $399-$3,299, plus $99 for Thursday arrival.
deserthear­ts.us
Desert Hearts Festival returns Thursday through May 2to a new home at Lake Perris.
PHOTO BY ERIC ALLEN When: Festival lineup starts at noon Friday and goes nonstop until noon May 2. Preparty starts at noon Thursday. Lake Perris State Recreation Area, 17801 Lake Perris Drive, Perris $399for festival admission. Camping is $399-$3,299, plus $99 for Thursday arrival. deserthear­ts.us Desert Hearts Festival returns Thursday through May 2to a new home at Lake Perris.

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