I was listening to one of the staff members at White Oak Music & Arts as he told me about a ska show that broke capacity and a restroom sink.
That was mayhem compared to Wake Up, SFV, which floated upwards of 100 occupants shuffling between main stage and the lobby. On Sunday, the almost-nondescript music store, nestled with mechanic shops and powered by the will of 818, was host to a plethora of bands that not only called attention to the Valley’s diversity, but more importantly its spirit. From 5 p.m. onwards, neighborhood youth shared cigarettes and sipped on tallboys as homespun vendors displayed their arts and crafts with decorum, beaming with a confidence and sincerity rarely felt in Los Angeles.
And I moved with the crowd through the different phases that claimed my musical adolescence — the genres that waxed and waned in popularity, but never lost their tenacity. From Tone in Georgia‘s well-groomed freakouts to The Aeons‘ feel-good maximalism, 100 Once‘s acapella cover of Evanescence and R!OT‘s dextrous remix of Shia LaBouef. The Unending Thread‘s toe-tapping emo-soul and those cathartic shivers of COEX, down to the fog-heavy end of the Fever The Ghost‘s glitched-out mecha fantasy. Every band brought their all, and the spirited youth gave back tenfold.
Happy anniversary, White Oak Music & Arts. And thank you for wake-up call, Cesar Alas. – Ryan Mo