By Mikkel Hyldebrandt
When, how, and where did you start DJing?
I started DJing in San Francisco in 2000. I didn’t have a lot of records at first; I’d spend almost all my DJ money on records for the first few years till I got a collection going. Those years were incredible, making things up as I went along, learning to mix and curate and promote. I lived and DJed in SF for about 12 years.
Where can people catch you playing?
I have a monthly party in Portland called Lez Do It, as well as a weekly radio show. It’s 107.1 on the Portland FM dial, but you can stream it anywhere on xray.fm, go to xray.fm/shows/silky-top. I also play a lot in SF and all over the country.
How would you describe your musical style?
I play mostly house music, with some techno and disco. My ultimate goal is to weave a magic carpet for us all to ride on together.
You have been part of the Deep South parties numerous times, and this time you are headlining the party – what is it about Deep South that keeps you coming back?
Deep South is such a special party; the crowd is amazing. Such a wild, loving energy on the dancefloor. Plus I have a crush on the hot person who runs the party.
Why do you think a queer underground party is so important right now?
CATHARSIS, togetherness. It’s important to have safer spaces where queers can escape the dystopian nightmare together for a bit, be our beautiful selves, have each other’s backs, cruise, and dance it out.
What can people expect when you spin at Deep South, July 21 at the Music Room?
Expect a great set from Vicki Powell. Expect an excellent sound system, great people, and a sexy energetic vibe. Expect to sweat.
Anything you’d like to add?
I’m excited to be back in Atlanta. I can’t wait to see all the cuties!
Follow Chelsea Starr on soundcloud.com/Chelsea-starr and Instagram @thechelseastarr.
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Deep South with Chelsea Starr (opening set by Vicki Powell) is on Saturday July 21 at the Music Room. The event is password-protected. Deep South events have zero tolerance for homophobia, transphobia, racism, misogyny, sexism, classism.