285 kent ave
space type: music venue | neighborhood: williamsburg | active since: 2010–2014 | links: twitter
Update, January 2014:
No one expected 285 Kent to last forever, and news of its closing was just released. It’s not worth making any grand claims about the death of DIY or the condo-ification of Williamsburg; all those things have been said, and countered, and re-said, and re-countered. Whatever—the scene moves on, new venues will spring up, and the hyper-rich will galavant along the waterfront and probably not even know what went on there before they came.
285 Kent closing is kind of a big deal, though, even if only as a high-profile sign of the times. The space has been memorialized in some terrific oral histories over the last few weeks, from Animal New York to Village Voice to Fader, not to mention the one on Noisey made up of a pastiche of Yelp comments. They’re all worth a read if you want to get a little nostalgic.
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Original post, November 2013:
One of the hubs of North Brooklyn’s DIY music scene, 285 Kent is an all-ages venue for cutting-edge music across genres. On the Williamsburg waterfront, across the street from the about-to-be-demolished Domino Sugar Factory, 285 Kent neighbors several other underground stalwarts like Glasslands, Death By Audio, Ran Tea House, and Cameo Gallery.
The space has seen several incarnations; in the mid-2000s it was Paris/London/West Nile, focusing on progressive electronic music, and before that it was Bohemian Grove (not the Bohemian Grove in Bushwick), hosting progressive raves. PLWN was started by the Shinkoyo Collective, an ever-expanding group of artists and musicians who were also behind the original Silent Barn and many more spaces across the country. Along with other Brooklyn DIY promoters, the space has been run at various times by Todd P., Babycastles, and John “Rambo.” These days 285 Kent’s booking and curation is handled by Ric Leichtung, who is also cofounder of Ad Hoc, a quarterly zine and network of taste-making music blogs.
This is the obvious point at which to mention the awful hyper-gentrification of Williamsburg, and the fact that no matter how beloved 285 Kent and other similar DIY institutions are, it’s hard not to be cynical about the likelihood that they will last much longer where they are. I guess the least pessimistic thing to say is this: go see shows at 285 Kent, as often as you can; get exposed to excellent, cutting-edge music and support the last gasp of underground Williamsburg before all that’s left is horribly shiny luxury glass condos and preposterously upscale bars for bankers.
But first check out my Q&A with Ric & Kait, who oversees daily operations.
brooklyn spaces: Is it a tremendous amount
                                        of work to run a space like this?
                                        Ric: Yes, definitely. When I first started
                                        working here I was also writing for Pitchfork and Altered Zones, and it really snowballed. When you start
                                        something it’s difficult, and usually the more you work at it the easier things
                                        get. But 285 just keep getting higher and higher profile bands more and more
                                        often, and I couldn’t do it all myself. I needed a partner, and I was really
                                        lucky Kait came along.
                                        Kait: He was starting his days at 9am
                                        writing, and then running a show until 4am. For months and months.
                                        Ric: Yeah, but now it’s amazing. Kait’s the
                                        backbone.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: If you had to be a bit
                                        reductive, what would you say is the musical personality of 285 Kent?
                                        Ric: We basically do whatever we think is
                                        culturally relevant right now. We do a lot of buzz-y, hype-y shows, but we also
                                        do a lot of hardcore shows and progressive dance and experimental music
                                        nights.
                                        Kait: There’s such a crazy variety. I can
                                        show up on Tuesday and work a rap show, Wednesday a local indie band, Thursday a
                                        rave, Friday a hardcore show. And it’s always really cutting-edge, underground
                                        stuff.
                                        Ric: The goal is to create a space where
                                        there’s a lot of exchanging of ideas and cross-pollination. Lately a lot of punk
                                        and hardcore kids have been coming to the dance parties, which you really don’t
                                        see anywhere else.
                                        brooklyn spaces: Do they dance?
                                        Kait: Yeah! They just totally love
                                        music.
                                        Ric: But then we also recently had a string
                                        of a really great hardcore shows. We hosted this festival our friend Adam Weitz
                                        put together, New
                                            York’s Alright, and it was very comprehensive, everything that is next
                                        level in that community.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: Didn’t you guys do a
                                        big show here for CMJ?
                                        Ric: Yeah we hosted the Pitchfork showcase, which was really special. But it was
                                        unofficial; we didn’t have any CMJ shows here this year because we’ve chosen not
                                        to participate in the festival.
                                        brooklyn spaces: Is that something you want
                                        to talk about?
                                        Kait: I think it’s something we should
                                        explain. My personal point of view—not affiliated with Ad Hoc or 285—is that
                                        buying a badge and not being guaranteed entry to a show? That kind of sucks. I
                                        think if you really want to see a band, you should pay the cover and support the
                                        artist. We don’t make a profit from the door. We cover our PA and staff, and the
                                        rest goes to the band.
                                        Ric: In my opinion, the real issue with CMJ
                                        and other citywide festivals is that money only goes to the top-tier artists.
                                        Bands that should be getting $500 to $1,000 a show, they’ll be low-balled into
                                        playing for really cheap, in exchange for publicity or the opportunity to play
                                        with a really big band. The best things that were going on during CMJ this year
                                        were our Pitchfork showcase, the Arcade Fire warehouse show, and the Fader Fort, and none of that was official CMJ. It’s
                                        bullshit. They don’t pull their weight, that’s why we choose not to work with
                                        them.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: Okay, tell me about a
                                        particularly fun or crazy show you’ve had here.
                                        Kait: One of my favorite nights was the Mutual Dreaming
                                            Future Times party. The promoter Aurora brought in this huge
                                        army-surplus parachute, and we hung it up inside, suspended by the pipes in the
                                        ceiling. It took hours to set up, but the place looked really, really cool. Then
                                        it turned out that there was a blizzard that night, but we still opened up
                                        because why not? And people came and were kind of stuck here, so we just partied
                                        all night, everybody in this giant parachute, in our own little bubble. It was
                                        amazing.
                                        Ric: One of my favorites was Dreams 3.0. It
                                        was just a super forward-thinking lineup, with Pictureplane, Grimes, and Arca,
                                        who’s now producing for Kanye West. We’d done a show with this guy Arab Music a
                                        few months before, and he had such a good time that he just came back for no
                                        fucking reason to this already bonkers party, and he brought A$AP Rocky with
                                        him too. It was insane. The show went all night, Grimes didn’t go on
                                        until 3am. That’s probably the show we’ll be remembered for; it was just
                                        everything that was really really sick at that moment, in 2011, all at once. But
                                        we still do really cool stuff now, in 2013!
                                    
brooklyn spaces: In some ways you bear a
                                        real responsibility, as one of the people driving this scene; you have to not
                                        know just what music is important now, but what will be important tomorrow and
                                        next month. Is that a lot of pressure? Or is it just really exciting?
                                        Ric: I think it’s really exciting.
                                        Kait: It’s scary sometimes, too. Sometimes
                                        I wonder, “Am I totally off on this?” But then: nope. We just do what we think
                                        is cool.
                                        Ric: There’s this guy DJ Rashad who we really
                                        love, we started booking him a couple of years ago and no one would ever really
                                        come to the shows. And then all of a sudden people start listening to his album,
                                        and suddenly he’s the #1 electronic album from Spin, he gets a top-10
                                        on New York Times last year, all this sudden acknowledgment. That felt
                                        really good. Or one thing I really love about this space is that I feel like
                                        we’re bringing dance and electronic music to the DIY punk-rock demographic. I
                                        wasn’t really interested in that kind of music before, but then I had some kind
                                        of epiphany and I realized this stuff is amazing and progressive in so many
                                        ways. I would say it’s kind of a weird secret agenda of ours to make dance music
                                        cool again.
                                    
brooklyn spaces: I think when a booker is at
                                        the forefront of some genres, there is often an assumption that you’ll know
                                        what’s at the forefront of all the genres.
                                        Ric: That’s what we hope.
                                        Kait: Yeah, it’s pretty cool. On the
                                        weekends especially, we get people who have no idea what to expect, they just
                                        walk up and check out the show. We get people dressed up like they’re going
                                        clubbing wander into a noise show. And they’ll stay!
                                    
brooklyn spaces: I wonder how much longer
                                        that juxtaposition will be possible, with the way Williamsburg is going. I know
                                        it’s a bit played-out to talk about the death of this neighborhood, but being
                                        right here, with the Domino Sugar Factory about to get torn down across the
                                        street, how do you guys feel about it all?
                                        Kait: I think it’s kind of cool, actually.
                                        I’ve had many conversations with Todd about this, because he did lay the
                                        groundwork for the DIY music scene in this area in the last decade. He’ll get
                                        really philosophical about it, very nihilistic. But I feel like all of this is
                                        bringing back that fuck-all attitude, which makes it really easy for us to just
                                        do what we want, you know? We have no idea what’s going to happen in two months,
                                        so let’s just make this place as cool and as fun as we can for as long as we
                                        can. It’s empowering. We’re laughing in the face of progress or whatever.
                                        Ric: It’s true. It does sort of feel like
                                        there’s a death clock, but it’s okay.
                                        Kait: Yeah, it’s like, fuck it. Fuck your
                                        death clock. Because it’s not like we’re just going to stop, even if we do lose
                                        this space. I can’t imagine Ric not booking shows, and I can’t imagine not
                                        working in a space like this. I’m here all the time and it’s just where I want
                                        to be. Sometimes it smells bad, sometimes shit breaks, but the staff is amazing,
                                        everybody works really hard to keep it all together.
                                        Ric: It’s like a little family—not to sound
                                        too trite. And we’re planning other things all the time. We’re putting on a show
                                        in a church in LA with Julianna Barwick and Mark McGuire
                                        from Emeralds. And there’s going to be some pretty crazy stuff during New Year’s
                                        Eve—stay tuned for that.
                                        Kait: Oh, I don’t even know about that. Is
                                        it DJ Rashad?
                                        Ric: Maybe. It’ll be good.
                                    
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Like this? Read about more DIY music spaces: Fort Useless, Death By Audio, Shea Stadium, Silent Barn, Monster Island, Bushwick Music Studio, Newsonic










