Arts & Entertainment
PhaseFest roars on this weekend
Indie queer music festival to feature MEN, People at Parties, Tayisha Busay, Glitter Lust et. al.


The queer band MEN, which evolved from a DJ/production/remix team, play PhaseFest again this weekend. The indie music fest kicked off Thursday and runs through the weekend. (Photo courtesy of PhaseFest)
The fifth annual PhaseFest Queer Arts and Music Festival continues this weekend at Phase 1 (525 8th St., S.E.) with a line-up of local and international performers, crafters and artisans featuring their work and more starting at 7:30 p.m. and going until almost 2 a.m.
“We’re expecting it to be super packed every night,” says Angela Lombardi, manager of PhaseFest and Phase 1, adding that they are expecting anywhere from 700 to 800 people over the three days. “We’re really encouraging people to come out early.”
According to the festival’s website, PhaseFest is dedicated to the development, exposure and interaction of queer and queer-allied musicians and artists.
Tonight, there will be performances by MEN, People at Parties, the electronic dance bands Tayisha Busay and Glitter Lust, the duos Rad Pony and Lost Bois, and G.U.T.S.
MEN, who headlined Saturday night at last year’s festival, started as a DJ/production/remix team of Le Tigre members JD Samson and Johanna Fateman. Now the group consists primarily of Samson, Michael O’Neill and Ginger Brooks Takahasi with Fateman and Emily Roysdon contributing.
“They rocked it out last year,” says Lombardi. “So people are … stoked about having them back.”
The drag troupe, D.C. Kings, will also perform a mini-show starting around 10:30 p.m.
The festival ends Saturday night with a performance by the queer, all-female band Sick of Sarah, as well as Hunter Valentine, Allison Weiss, Mitten, Melissa Li and the Barely Theirs, Clinical Trials and Michelle Raymond.
This is Sick of Sarah’s first time performing at PhaseFest.
“They’re a smoking hot group of rockers and they’re just going to blow everyone’s minds,” says Lombardi of the band.
For quite a few acts, this isn’t their first time at PhaseFest.
“We’ve got some Phasefest regulars coming back,” Lombardi says.
Admission is $20 each night for Friday and Saturday. A festival pass is also available for $45. All attendees must be 21 or older.
For more information and to purchase tickets, visit phasefest.com.
Books
A boy-meets-boy, family-mess story with heat
New book offers a stunning, satisfying love story

‘When the Harvest Comes’
By Denne Michele Norris
c.2025, Random House
$28/304 pages
Happy is the bride the sun shines on.
Of all the clichés that exist about weddings, that’s the one that seems to make you smile the most. Just invoking good weather and bright sunshine feels like a cosmic blessing on the newlyweds and their future. It’s a happy omen for bride and groom or, as in the new book “When the Harvest Comes” by Denne Michele Norris, for groom and groom.

Davis Freeman never thought he could love or be loved like this.
He was wildly, wholeheartedly, mind-and-soul smitten with Everett Caldwell, and life was everything that Davis ever wanted. He was a successful symphony musician in New York. They had an apartment they enjoyed and friends they cherished. Now it was their wedding day, a day Davis had planned with the man he adored, the details almost down to the stitches in their attire. He’d even purchased a gorgeous wedding gown that he’d never risk wearing.
He knew that Everett’s family loved him a lot, but Davis didn’t dare tickle the fates with a white dress on their big day. Everett’s dad, just like Davis’s own father, had considerable reservations about his son marrying another man – although Everett’s father seemed to have come to terms with his son’s bisexuality. Davis’s father, whom Davis called the Reverend, never would. Years ago, father and son had a falling-out that destroyed any chance of peace between Davis and his dad; in fact, the door slammed shut to any reconciliation.
But Davis tried not to think about that. Not on his wedding day. Not, unbeknownst to him, as the Reverend was rushing toward the wedding venue, uninvited but not unrepentant. Not when there was an accident and the Reverend was killed, miles away and during the nuptials.
Davis didn’t know that, of course, as he was marrying the love of his life. Neither did Everett, who had familial problems of his own, including homophobic family members who tried (but failed) to pretend otherwise.
Happy is the groom the sun shines on. But when the storm comes, it can be impossible to remain sunny.
What can be said about “When the Harvest Comes?” It’s a romance with a bit of ghost-pepper-like heat that’s not there for the mere sake of titillation. It’s filled with drama, intrigue, hate, characters you want to just slap, and some in bad need of a hug.
In short, this book is quite stunning.
Author Denne Michele Norris offers a love story that’s everything you want in this genre, including partners you genuinely want to get to know, in situations that are real. This is done by putting readers inside the characters’ minds, letting Davis and Everett themselves explain why they acted as they did, mistakes and all. Don’t be surprised if you have to read the last few pages twice to best enjoy how things end. You won’t be sorry.
If you want a complicated, boy-meets-boy, family-mess kind of book with occasional heat, “When the Harvest Comes” is your book. Truly, this novel shines.
The Blade may receive commissions from qualifying purchases made via this post.

The Victory Fund held its National Champagne Brunch at the Ritz-Carlton on Sunday, April 27. Speakers included Tim Gunn, Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), Gov. Wes Moore (D-Md.), Rep. Sarah McBride (D-Del.), Rep. Chris Pappas (D-N.H.) and Rep. Mark Takano (D-Calif.).
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)

















Music & Concerts
Tom Goss returns with ‘Bear Friends Furever Tour’
Out singer/songwriter to perform at Red Bear Brewing Co.

Singer Tom Goss will bring his “Bear Friends Furever Tour” to D.C. on Sunday, June 8 at 8 p.m. at Red Bear Brewing Co.
Among the songs he will perform will be “Bear Soup,” the fourth installment in his beloved bear song anthology series. Following fan favorites like “Bears,” “Round in All the Right Places,” and “Nerdy Bear,” this high-energy, bass-thumping banger celebrates body positivity, joyful indulgence, and the vibrant spirit of the bear subculture.
For more details, visit Tom Goss’s website.
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