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Denver Fest is year again, and in short three years is
a real contender in Denver’s series of music festivals.
Tuyet Nguyen, who makes up 50% of the
production team along with Emily Francis,
took some time to give us the scoop on how Denver Fest
came to be.
Kaffeine Buzz: So who are the people behind Denver Fest?
Tuyet Nguyen: I've been a music journalist (writing
for the Westword, plus other smaller publications) for
the past few years. Before that I've on-and-off booked
and promoted shows. I got started when I was about 17,
booking punk bands at DIY spaces and venues. I ran a
warehouse venue for about a year, booking all kinds
of smaller touring bands and parties. I got into publication
writing my first year of college and have been doing
that since then. (On a side note, I'm actually launching
a magazine this October.)
Emily grew up in Richmond and went to art school there.
She left her last year to move to Chicago and to tour
with bands. She moved to Colorado with a group of other
transplants (the guys in Git Some
actually) and shortly thereafter starting tour managing
Planes Mistaken for Stars (a band that she had know
previously for years from booking shows for them in
Richmond). She currently spends most of the year tour
managing various local and national bands.
KB: This is the third year for Denver Fest.
How did it originally get started and what was the driving
force behind its inception?
TN: Emily Francis moved here from Chicago a few years
ago and we met through mutual friends. We were both
very motivated and involved in the music scene, so at
the time it was a natural partnership. Both of us had
past experience with booking and promoting shows. I
had run a warehouse venue some years back called Garageland
and she had toured with bands like Planes Mistaken for
Stars and done basement shows in her hometown of Richmond.
I had always wanted to book a festival and approached
her with the idea. It was pretty casual at first. But
then we started talking about it and things started
to get serious pretty quickly. That was three years
ago and it's grown from a small three-day-one-venue
show to this current beast.
KB: How as the production of an event like
this changed since then?
TN: We're much more organized this year than in past
years (but still not organized enough!) This is also
the first year that we have sponsors, which is something
that is entirely new to me. And honestly dealing with
all these big bands and coporate booking agents is also
completely mindboggling, as it's not something that
I've ever really dealt with before. It's still a two-woman
operation, but now the scale is so much bigger than
when it started that it's definitely becoming more of
a "production" than just some one-off show.
KB: How do you feel Denver's music pool has
evolved in the last few years?
TN: I've been kicking around the scene for a long time
now. It's hard to say if it's really "evolved"
however. To me, it fluctuates. Some years are better
for local music than others. Those are the summers when
everyone is playing in a band and there's good shows
every other night and the whole community is really
working together to create something positive. But some
summers, it's just not there. Sometimes there aren't
enough all ages venues to go around or there aren't
enough local promoters interested in booking quality
shows or there's just a lack of good, new bands.
What I'm trying to say is that local music is only
as good as the people involved--the scene itself can't
"evolve" on its own.
KB: You also have national acts integrated
into the line up. Has this always been the case or is
this something new?
TN: It's always been a mix of locals and nationals.
The point of Denver Fest is to bring attention to Denver
by highlighting all these small burgeoning scenes surrounding
us geographically. All of us in this "no coast
tour circle" visit each other's cities constantly
on tour.
Denver is situated between the two coasts and for cities
like Wichita, Fargo, Reno, and so on, Denver is almost
always a stop. Even just traveling from one coast to
the other, you have to go through Denver.
And so we've made a lot of friends along the way and
we just wanted to bring everyone together, and Denver
seemed like a great central location.
KB: What was the difference in the event's response
between the first and second year, and what are your
expectations for this year?
TN: With every year, it definitely gets bigger numbers-wise.
More bands, more people, more venues. But every year
the response feels the same--just amplified--because
the bands and fans are always stoked to come out. It's
a like a big hang-out fest every year and the vibe is
just super positive.
KB: Is this something you want to keep rolling
for years to come?
TN: I guess we'll have to see how this year's fest
goes!
www.dfesthq.com
-Kim Owens, August 31, 2007
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| Pics of Denver
Fest - Saturday, September 2 - Crestfallen, Christy
Front Drive - Marquis - Denver |
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