newsonic loft
neighborhood: williamsburg | space type: music & parties | active: 2000–2011 | links: website
Newsonic was terrific. It was way way out at the edge of South Williamsburg, virtually unmarked, and a complete shock when you walk in. Just an absolutely vibrant space, full of découpaged furniture and great art and twinkling lights and linked televisions playing crazy video montages and a bookshelf made from a hollowed-out Coke machine. It had a lovely chill vibe and good music and just incredibly nice people.
Over the years, it was inhabited by about twenty different people, primarily musicians and artists, and they just quietly threw amazing shows and parties for over a decade. With hardly any web presence, they were totally underground, spreading the word through NonsenseNYC and a handful of party lists. Check out my interview below with Brian and Seth Misterka, who was there from the beginning.
brooklyn spaces: Tell me a bit about the
history of the space.
Seth: We found it in the back of the Village
Voice classifieds, and it was just an empty warehouse. It was
really a blank canvas; the landlord gave us totally free reign to create
whatever we wanted to. My original partners were a fellow named Massa, who was
working for Francis Ford Coppola as an assistant, and my friend
Jeremy, who worked for MTV and
played in bands, and I was working at Miramax and playing in bands. We were all musicians, and
we were all involved in either film or television, so we built the space out to
be a music venue from the start. It’s the perfect environment for music, because
our neighbor on one side is an auto mechanic, the other is a grocery store, and
below us is an office, so we can play music basically any time without bothering
anybody. There could be a raging party in here with a hundred people or more,
and from the street it’s as if nothing’s happening at all. So it’s like this
little secluded artist colony in the middle of the industrial part of Chasidic Williamsburg, this really mystical
neighborhood.
brooklyn spaces: Were you putting on shows
from the very beginning?
Seth: From the very beginning. The space
had a built-in stage from its days as a factory, so we framed it out and started
throwing shows, and they immediately were so much fun and so successful that we
just kept doing it.
Brian: In the three years I’ve been here,
I’ve never been to a party where there hasn’t been just a completely good vibe
all around. Everybody loves it here; it’s impossible not to enjoy the space. It
brings out the best in people, it really does.
Seth: It’s kind of an out-of-the-way
destination, it’s a place that you have to hear about it and then make a point
of coming to, and so because it’s not the kind of space that you’d just be
passing by, it gives it a kind of a special nature.
brooklyn spaces: So why are you guys moving
out?
Seth: The landlord just wants to shuffle
things around. It really reflects the broader change in the northern part of
Williamsburg, with its expansion of real estate and population; that’s also
happening down here. This building is going to be turned into offices. You know,
money talks and the artists walk.
brooklyn spaces: But you’ve definitely
nurtured a lot of artists through here.
Seth: Absolutely, yeah. There’s been so
many different phases of the place, and everybody has brought a different vibe.
We’ve found so many great, creative people over the years, and they’ve all
contributed different things to the space, which has allowed it to take on the
character it has. In addition to the parties, I’ve also had a recording
studio here, and I’ve recorded all sorts of bands. My band is Dynasty
Electric, and we’ve also recorded a lot of big indie bands from
the 2000s, like Battles, Parts &
Labor, Shy
Child, and El
Guapo, as well as a lot of jazz records.
Brian: Seth also recorded two records with
Brian Chase from the Yeah
Yeah Yeahs, and they’re planning on recording a third with a jazz duo
they have, Brian Chase and Seth Misterka Duo.
brooklyn spaces: How would you describe the
kinds of shows you put on?
Seth: Usually it’s a laboratory kind of
show, with four or five bands and DJs. It’s a good platform for people to play,
a good opportunity to play in a more relaxed environment and for a bigger crowd
than would just be hanging out at the clubs.
Brian: Seth makes very eclectic picks.
You’ll have a dance band, then you’ll have an indie band, then you’ll have a raga band, and then you’ll
have these old guys who play for, like, what band was it?
Seth: One time the drummer from
Saturday Night Live, his band came down.
Brian: And they had so many instruments! It
was insane. There’s always a different atmosphere, a different thing, and it’s
all connected into one night.
Seth: The thing with Newsonic—which is also
the name of my record label—the idea has always been about the spectrum
of sound, new sound, whatever it is, regardless of genre. Because I’ve been a
working musician and have that access and connections to so many great
musicians, the parties have become this secret party for musicians. Great
musicians just want to come here and play, not for the money or whatever, but
for the experience, just to be part of this energy that’s happening down here.
We’ve always kept it on the lowdown because it was kind of amazing that we were
able to throw parties for ten years without any trouble from the neighborhood or
anything, and we didn’t want to jinx our run. But now that it’s ending, we just
want to celebrate and show off the space while we have it, and to document it.
We knew something cool was happening here, so we want to capture it like a time
capsule and share it.
***
Like this? Read about more underground party spaces: Rubulad, Red Lotus Room, The Lab (Electric Warehouse), Bushwick Project for the Arts, 12-turn-13, Gemini & Scorpio loft