Seattle

Freakout Festival ends as Seattle nonprofit shifts focus

It's not entirely a goodbye, but it is the end of an era.

One of Seattle's most distinct music festivals, Freakout Festival, will not return this fall. In the interest of preservation, organizers of the nonprofit fest are shifting resources to produce a series of one-off shows at Seattle clubs instead.

Over the last 13-plus years, Freakout sprouted from Capitol Hill house parties that Acid Tongue singer/guitarist Guy Keltner and his friends used to throw to a full-blown Ballard takeover, filling the neighborhood stages with a singular mix of local and international bands - even spilling over into Fremont clubs in recent years. In that time, Freakout launched an offshoot record label, a sibling spring festival and became a bona fide nonprofit organization championing underground music and border-defying cultural exchange.

So, in the grand scheme of things, what's one more evolution for the DIY music lovers already accustomed to reinvention?

"We've achieved a lot over the years with (Freakout), and we're very proud of what it is and what it represents," said Skyler Locatelli, Freakout's executive director. "I think we're being honest with ourselves, too, that now in its nonprofit format, we have to really look at sustainability as a long-term evolution of the organization."

According to Locatelli, Freakout was coming off a "really great year for the festival" in 2025 - one which notably did not end in "a big financial debt crisis or anything." Still, the (grant) writing was on the wall for the fest known for its psychedelic overtones, garage-rocking abandon and a strong, organically built pipeline to bands from Mexico and Latin America that became a Freakout hallmark.

Since going nonprofit in 2023, roughly 50% of the festival's operating expenses were covered by grant funding, the other half coming through ticket sales. Given the nature of organizing a four-day event that fills nine stages with roughly 90 acts - many requiring increasingly hard-to-obtain visas - planning the next festival essentially begins as soon as the last one ends.

That timeline doesn't exactly line up with the uncertain world of grant applications - especially when such funding wells are drying up - amounting to a philanthropic trust fall that's not the most fiscally responsible way to run an organization that plans to stick around awhile.

"We have no guarantee of funding" at that point, said Locatelli, who daylights as a business development associate at KEXP. "You can't really set a budget for producing a six-figure-expensive event without knowing where your funding is going to lie."

Broadly speaking, the cultural grant landscape has gotten shakier (or at least less fertile) in recent years, said Freakout's board president Sarah Rathbone. While there are several factors at play, Rathbone said, part of it is a trickle-down effect of less federal dollars flowing to states - and in turn, county and city agencies - resulting in "a scarcity mindset."

"Down the line, everybody's reducing their budgets, and that does have an impact on community organizations like ours," Rathbone said.

Rather than crossing their fingers or raising ticket prices (a risky proposition that runs counter to their ethos), the Freakout crew will throw six to eight "Freakout Presents" shows this year at Seattle partner clubs - the first of which brings Mexico City indie-pop duo Valgur in for a free Vera Project gig on May 28.

Part of the reoriented mission is to keep the shows accessibly priced, either entirely free or capping a portion of tickets at $10 or less. The move is made possible in part by a three-year King County 4Culture grant Freakout secured "before the tightening of the purse started," Rathbone said.

Beyond the switch to stand-alone shows, Freakout has recently teamed up with La Bestia Radio out of Mexico City to serve as "the new marketing and media arm of Freakout," producing content and promoting artists through Freakout's social media channels and newsletter. "We're taking away the festival at the moment, but we're adding in so much more to ultimately create bigger impact for the artists," Locatelli said. That's the goal."

Internally, the decision to discontinue the festival to chart a more sustainable course carried mixed emotions. In terms of sheer size, Freakout was much smaller than Seattle's major legacy fests like Bumbershoot and Northwest Folklife and wasn't the essential Seattle rite-of-passage event like the forever-young Capitol Hill Block Party.

Rather, Freakout was a distinctly Seattle experience - a product of and torchlight for the city's ruggedly independent underground and a DIY cultural bridge to like-minded artists from around the world. And it should continue to be, even in a different form.

"It was hard. It is hard," Rathbone said. "We had a couple months of gnashing of teeth, but once we committed to a reformat, I think everyone's been settling in, getting excited about what that opens up. It's really hard to let go of things. But you've got to let go sometimes to move forward."

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