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The fact that there’s so many hidden gems, it’s wild to think that we don’t have a platform where everyone is learning from one another, learning from industry professionals, and expanding up on that here, locally. We’re dead center, why not have everyone from every other area come here? We want to build up the artists now, and the artists to come. “It’s wild to think that the largest live entertainment company is based in this city, and state, yet nothing major with hip-hop happens in this state. “Specifically in the music industry, who you know is so important,” Fisher says.
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O’Sullivan met Fisher while they were both attending the Detroit Institute for Music education. Kelsey O’Sullivan, founder of The Knock and HappyMess Productions, at November’s The Knock event. So then we could get really creative, and give space for artists who maybe don’t have the biggest pull and need a little bit of a platform to stand on,” O’Sullivan says. We wanted to build the brand so much that people would buy tickets, not based on the lineup, but based on the event. SoFar Sounds was kind of the inspiration for it. “I wanted to create an intimate hip-hop house party. Along with co-producer Eryk Fisher and a packed roster of artists and sponsors, O’Sullivan is hosting the Knock’s second event on Saturday, January 8th at Get Busy Living Studios. The Nebraska native, who moved to Colorado thirteen years ago, used that time off to conceptualize the Knock. When COVID first hit, O’Sullivan was working as a tour manager for a DJ in Denver.
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Because the passion is there, and that changes everything.” “The Knock caught me off guard when everything came together, but I’ve never felt more comfortable in the chaos and uncertainty. Any opportunity that I had, I said yes to,” she says. Live music is where I really wanted to work, so I took an internship here in Denver, and that’s what I’ve been doing for about the past four years. “At about three years sober, I decided I had a second chance at life and really wanted to figure out what I actually wanted to do. For O’Sullivan, producing the Knock through her LLC, HappyMess Productions, was the culmination of years of working hard and dreaming big. On a Saturday night at River Bar and Gallery, big names in Denver’s hip-hop scene rubbed elbows with up-and-coming artists, audience members and performers mingled in a couch-filled lounge, and Denver’s hip-hop community came together in an unprecedented way. In November of 2021, Kelsey O’Sullivan brought a new kind of party to Denver: a hip-hop showcase with a house party vibe called the Knock.