Since the beginning of the year, the Echo Park venue has offered $5 indie, folk and jazz shows on a nightly basis on its sweaty stage. At first glance, the spot's M.O. is not dissimilar to the now-defunct Echo Curio next door, in that both tiny spaces had cheap cover prices and four-bands-a-night marathons. (Echo Curio was shut down after legal run-ins over its BYOB policy and other permitting issues.)
Lot 1 owner Eileen Leslie says the similarities end there, however. "It's no problem for anyone to come in [for an inspection] because I'm always going to run it legally," she says, claiming that state officials unsuccessfully tried to shut her music down in August after months of smooth sailing. Judging by the crowds spilling out of the venue's doors onto Sunset Boulevard these days, the neighborhood has embraced it.
Lot 1 alumni range from rock acts Future Ghost and So Many Wizards to the experimental jazz of Brainfeeder's Austin Peralta. In fact, Lot 1 has become an incubator for upstart locals in search of a stage, like David Shane Smith, who debuted his Shampoo EP in a three-night run there. Lot 1 has allowed him to test the waters with an intimate audience.
"The general vibe behind the place seems to be that it's supportive of local artists," he says, "a place for new things to happen."
For the rest of the article by David Greenwald go to: http://blogs.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2011/09/lot_1_cafe.php
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