Two decades ago, local nightlife promoter Ed Bailey got the ball rolling, launching a weekly Saturday night Millennium party. Since then, the 9:30 Club has hosted its share of LGBTQ dance parties — from Cherry to Blowoff, from MAL Reaction Dance to Mixtape. This Saturday, Jan. 5, add one more to the club’s estimable roster: Bent.
“We’re launching Bent because D.C.’s gay community kind of needs a big platform, and 9:30 Club is the place to do it,” says Steve Lemmerman, who is overseeing the event. “You know you can be safe at 9:30 as a person in the queer community, and as just a fan of any specific kind of music. It’s a perfect opportunity to showcase our queer community to a larger audience, and have a large home for our community at the same time. That was the inspiration: to just give so much more to our queer community.”
Over the past few years, the 29-year-old Baltimore native has carved out a name for himself as “Lemz,” originally as a resident DJ at Nellie’s and more recently with Sleaze, the monthly party he started at Wonderland Ballroom with DJ Keenan Orr. Orr is also on board with Bent, along with DJ the Barber Streisand and DJ Jacq Jill in the basement Back Bar, but the party won’t just be a larger version of Sleaze.
“Sleaze focuses on dark techno and disco,” says Lemmerman. “We stick to a certain sound. Bent, musically, is going to be a lot of feel-good fun dance music. A little more free-form. A lot of indie pop. And some mainstream pop remix.”
Bent, which is intended as a quarterly event, will offer up a broad range of performers, with the first outing hosted by Pussy Noir, and featuring Bombalicious Eklaver, Donna Slash, and “a few surprises.” Lemmerman stresses that Bent will highlight the performers over the DJs. “I want the light to be on the performers, who don’t always get a stage of this magnitude,” he says.
Lemmerman, who works in the 9:30 Club box office by day, says the club’s production team has been working hard to help him make “some dreams a reality with the stage area.” They’re planning to employ “some pretty cool stage magic” to ensure that “the focus is on the actual dance floor” itself.
“I want everyone to feel like a family, and feel close to each other,” he says. “My goal is to bring together different parts of our community that don’t always interact…. Times have been so tough lately, everyone just needs an escape right now. And 9:30 is helping me provide just that.”
Bent launches Saturday, Jan. 5, at the 9:30 Club, 815 V St. NW. Doors at 10 p.m. Tickets are $15. Call 202-265-0930 or visit 930.com.
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
For true fans of live music, and the whole concert-going and festival-going experience, Spring 2025 in the DMV is shaping up to be a banner season. And for those who're also fans of queer music and of seeing LGBTQ performers live in concert? Well, we're about to experience a real embarrassment of riches in that regard. And no, not just because of all those coming to town for WorldPride 2025. In fact, the number of out artists stopping through the area both before and after Pride this year is impressive.
Melissa Etheridge is one. Bob Mould another. Also due to visit is Allison Russell, John Grant, Rahsaan Patterson, Halsey, and Lucy Dacus. Not to mention Kylie Minogue, who's got local gay hearts beating padam padam for sure. Down the road, once Pride is a wrap, it'll be Ty Herndon's turn. Also Brandy Clark's. The Indigo Girls, Pink Martini, Laura Jane Grace will all also follow suit. Oh, and Cyndi Lauper will also return to have a little more fun -- and say farewell one more time, after time.
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