“Last time he was in Barcelona, he calls me and says, ‘Do you want to have a coffee?'”
Ivan Gomez still sounds a little incredulous when reflecting on the friendship he developed with Peter Rauhofer. And no wonder: Rauhofer, the legendary Austrian-born dance music DJ/producer, was the Spaniard’s biggest and earliest musical influence.
“[He] inspired me,” Gomez says. “I remember buying his remixes as a teenager.” A transformative, Grammy-winning remixer, Rauhofer was also a preeminent figure in gay clubland — and a regular at D.C.’s Cherry — until 2013, the year he tragically died of a brain tumor at the age of 48.
More than just developing a friendship with Rauhofer, the 38-year-old Gomez is now poised to take up his mantle. In addition to prominent remix work for Cher, the Pet Shop Boys and Leann Rimes, Gomez has launched a label modeled after Rauhofer’s influential Star 69 Records. Edgier and more aggressive than the typical dance-pop mainstream, Guareber Recordings offers deeper dives into the club music sound, with minimal, provocative, often androgynous vocals. The goal, says Gomez, is to “become the favorite LGBT (and straight-friendly) label [for] every major DJ and fan around the world.”
Guareber Recordings is based in Barcelona, where Gomez was born, raised and still resides — just a few minutes from his mother, who Gomez came out to when he was 21, a year after his father died of cancer. “I told my mom at Christmas,” he says. “She started to cry for five minutes — and then it was okay.” It took her longer to accept his career as a DJ, which started when he was only 18, than to accept his sexuality. “My father said, ‘It’s okay, do what you want.’ But my mother, she thought I should look for a normal job and didn’t understand.” Now, though, she’s at least bemused by a career that, over the past decade in particular, has him spinning at parties around the globe. “She’s always calling me and asking, ‘Where are you now?'” Gomez laughs.
It’s a valid question, as his location can change daily. He’s in the U.S. and Puerto Rico over the next month, but there’s hardly any let up in his schedule until the fall. “I only have two weekends free between now and September,” he says. Gomez, who will make his Washington, D.C., debut at Cherry’s main event on Saturday night, plans to explore the nation’s capital all weekend. “If someone in Washington wants a date,” he says, “I’ll be free.”
Ivan Gomez headlines Cherry’s “Royalty” event on Saturday, April 22, starting with an opening DJ set by Kenneth Rivera at 10 p.m., at Town Danceboutique, 2009 8th St. NW. Tickets are $20, with various passes available for the full weekend of events. Call 571-308-6568 or visit cherrydc.com.
"We're expecting it to be more of a local crowd than typical, just because we have WorldPride around the corner," says Sean Morris of next weekend's Cherry -- dubbed The Cherry Element -- which is aiming for a more intimate vibe than usual.
"And since it's going to be a more local crowd," the board president of the Cherry Fund continues, "we wanted to embrace the local DJ community and give our local DJs more opportunities. So Friday, Saturday, and Sunday all have a local DJ that will be doing the opening set for the big names that we're bringing in."
DJ Jake Maxwell kicks things off Friday, April 11, at DC9 (1940 9th St. NW) along with headliner Oral Sabag. DJ Tezrah will get the party started Saturday, April 12, at BETTE (1235 W St. NE), a relatively new medium-sized space in Brentwood complex that once housed BET Studios.
Hard to believe, but WorldPride 2025 is almost upon us. It's sure to be a pride for the ages, with more -- a whole lot more -- than any before in our city's now 50-year history of Pride. Yet, denizens of D.C. and the National Capital Region have plenty of reasons to be prideful all season long, thanks to a steady and ever-flowing stream of LGBTQ and allied artists, authors, comedians, celebrities, drag acts, DJs, storytellers, and extraordinary entertainers galore.
THE ALDEN
McLean Community Center
1234 Ingleside Ave.
McLean, Va.
703-790-0123
www.mcleancenter.org
“I was talking to a couple of homosexuals down in Melbourne, and they were talking to me about listening to Kylie,” John Grant says rather gleefully, clearly relishing this anecdote from his recent tour of Australia. “And I was like, ‘She came and guested at my show at Royal Albert Hall, and came on stage during ‘Glacier.’” The Aussies’ response? “They were just looking at me like I had two heads on my shoulders. They were looking at me like a German Shepherd hearing a weird noise.
“It was really hilarious,” he continues, “because it was just as epic for me as it was for them hearing that.”
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