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At Backyard Party, young musicians who survived a pandemic and firestorm are making a scene
On a recent Saturday, a group of teenage musicians took to a stage inside an unlikely place: an unassuming unit in a business park at the bottom of Lincoln Avenue in Pasadena.
This space has a stage sitting on its concrete floor with the words "Backyard Party" playfully scrawled across the bottom.
The members of a band called The Wendolls sound checked with Matt Chait at the mixing board.
One of the area’s newest all-ages venues, Backyard Party is Chait’s brainchild.
“The fires crushed garages where kids would have been playing. It burnt backyards where they would have been playing. It burnt down the schools where they would have been playing. So this is the communal backyard party. That’s specifically what we built and why we built it,” Chait said just outside the makeshift venue. The only thing that sets it apart from the nondescript units around it is a handwritten sign that says ‘No Ins and Outs.’
Chait, who was evacuated from his residence during the Eaton Fire, teamed up with Sandra Denver to manage the volunteer-run Backyard Party a few months ago. Her daughter sung lead vocals in a band called Sly, one of four bands on the lineup.
“We wanted to provide a space for all of the teen bands all around to come and play and help them create a kind of scene,” Denver said.
It’s the type of spot Denver said she wishes she had growing up in Phoenix, Arizona.
And she’s just one of several supportive parents here who are helping load in amps and guitars and bass drums.
Sixteen-year-old Jett Bizon is the drummer for Saints of Sinners, one of the bands on the bill. He said there’s another reason there are so many parents in the crowd.
“Well, nobody drives. Everybody needs a ride,” Bizon said with a chuckle.
With his long dark hair, Bizon explained that he’s already played some legendary local venues like The Whiskey a Go Go. But he said it feels like Backyard Party is becoming a much needed space for younger musicians in the area.
“We need to let out some type of energy and everybody’s putting it into music,” Bizon said. “I think it’s a great thing. Finally a scene again, it’s fun.”
As Bizon and his bandmates played their set of hard rock songs, the only people on their phones in the crowd were parents filming.
Some of the young folks taking the stage were affected by the Eaton Fire in one way or another. Some of them were evacuated. Others lost homes or saw their friends displaced.
Payton Owen was part of the crew running the door, taking tickets and dolling out snacks. She too is a musician and writes reviews of some of the concerts here.
“I think it’s amazing. I think it’s really like a point of community,” she said from behind a glass case filled with bags of popcorn and candy. “It’s a really nice opportunity for kids to really have somewhere where they can go.”
Teenager Elise Lamond agreed. She’d been following Chait around all night, learning how to set levels for the musicians, run the house lights and more.
“Most people at this age don’t have those kinds of opportunities,” she said, adding that, as a musician herself, she appreciated having free access to the venue’s music equipment, too.
Chait, who had a hand in running the now closed AAA Electra 99 venue in Anaheim and has been a musician since he was 12, said Pasadena and Altadena have a noteworthy music pedigree.
“I mean, Van Halen started in quite literal ‘backyard parties’ over on Allen. I think it lives here,” he said.
And Chait said he’s blown away by the new talent that’s come to this stage. For his part, he thinks it’s the start of a new scene that will balloon beyond Altadena and Pasadena.
“The fact that these kids who are now, let's say, 15-20 all lived through COVID and were very separated from each other. And now, in this particular neighborhood, are also separated again because of the fires. And they have supportive parents and now they have the physical place to be... All of the pieces of the puzzle are here,” Chait said.
For now, Chait said this is a labor of love. The space here is provided by Altadena Musicians, a non-profit that’s working to get instruments back in the hands of people who lost their gear in the fires. And as for ticket sales?
“It is the best part of running the venue: the end of the night, when we hand cash to these kids for playing,” Chait said.
Tonight’s bounty from a full-house? $320.
“There’s a couple of these kids, if they play one or two more times, we’re going to have to give them 1099s,” he said.
How to catch a BYP show
Backyard Party
1260 Lincoln Ave. #1300
Pasadena
For a calendar of upcoming shows, check out BYP’s website and Instagram.