Pedro Night, Walter Alvarado, and DJ JCU3, who’s performed at Adobo events. Photograph courtesy of subjects.
Pedro Night and Walter Alvarado met in church as 11-year-olds in Gaithersburg, then stayed friends as they grew up and got involved with the music scene. Alvarado, whose roots are Salvadoran, organized popular parties as a student at Towson University. Night, who is of Nicaraguan descent, worked as a DJ and did marketing for dance-music events. But in 2016, Night was fired from that marketing gig, and he started to get serious about an idea he’d been playing around with: a series of events featuring a distinctly multicultural mix of sounds. It would include plenty of Latin music, along with tunes from the US, Africa, and the Caribbean.
That blend was inspired by the way he and Alvarado discovered new music together as kids in the burbs. “We were jumping around from genre to genre, region to region, from continent to continent,” Night recalls of middle-school parties he attended. “It was all completely natural.”
Night had a feeling he was on to something, so he mentioned the idea to Marcus Dowling, a music writer he’d gotten to know. Dowling loved the concept and wanted to get involved. He suggested expanding it to include older Latin genres. Alvarado soon joined the team, and Adobo was born. Its first event took place in 2018 at Villain & Saint in Bethesda.
Since then, Adobo has staged packed parties around the District, quickly growing into one of the area’s most exciting hubs of cultural cross-pollination. It has taken over venues such as Karma, Big Chief, and the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage. Attend one of the group’s events—the next one is planned for May 1 at the Bullpen in Navy Yard—and you’ll be part of a notably diverse crowd dancing to a head-spinning variety of genres: Latin music such as reggaeton, bachata, cumbia, dembow, and merengue, along with hip-hop, go-go, R&B, dancehall, soca, Afrobeats, and more.
Adobo isn’t just about partying—it also organizes fundraisers: A recent online effort benefited at-risk and undocumented families in Prince George’s and Montgomery counties. And its events are meant to be friendly spaces for Washingtonians who don’t always feel welcome at some other clubs. Night and Alvarado point to an incident they witnessed at a DC Latin-music venue years ago where several of their Black friends were refused admission. For Adobo, the whole idea is to bring together groups who otherwise might not socialize at a party. “The key to our success,” says Night, “is that diversity.”
This article appears in the March 2022 issue of Washingtonian.
Why Adobo Is the Multicultural Dance Party DC Needs Right Now
Fans love its music mix: reggaeton, bachata, dembow, go-go, soca, Afrobeats, and tons more.
Pedro Night and Walter Alvarado met in church as 11-year-olds in Gaithersburg, then stayed friends as they grew up and got involved with the music scene. Alvarado, whose roots are Salvadoran, organized popular parties as a student at Towson University. Night, who is of Nicaraguan descent, worked as a DJ and did marketing for dance-music events. But in 2016, Night was fired from that marketing gig, and he started to get serious about an idea he’d been playing around with: a series of events featuring a distinctly multicultural mix of sounds. It would include plenty of Latin music, along with tunes from the US, Africa, and the Caribbean.
That blend was inspired by the way he and Alvarado discovered new music together as kids in the burbs. “We were jumping around from genre to genre, region to region, from continent to continent,” Night recalls of middle-school parties he attended. “It was all completely natural.”
Night had a feeling he was on to something, so he mentioned the idea to Marcus Dowling, a music writer he’d gotten to know. Dowling loved the concept and wanted to get involved. He suggested expanding it to include older Latin genres. Alvarado soon joined the team, and Adobo was born. Its first event took place in 2018 at Villain & Saint in Bethesda.
Since then, Adobo has staged packed parties around the District, quickly growing into one of the area’s most exciting hubs of cultural cross-pollination. It has taken over venues such as Karma, Big Chief, and the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage. Attend one of the group’s events—the next one is planned for May 1 at the Bullpen in Navy Yard—and you’ll be part of a notably diverse crowd dancing to a head-spinning variety of genres: Latin music such as reggaeton, bachata, cumbia, dembow, and merengue, along with hip-hop, go-go, R&B, dancehall, soca, Afrobeats, and more.
Adobo isn’t just about partying—it also organizes fundraisers: A recent online effort benefited at-risk and undocumented families in Prince George’s and Montgomery counties. And its events are meant to be friendly spaces for Washingtonians who don’t always feel welcome at some other clubs. Night and Alvarado point to an incident they witnessed at a DC Latin-music venue years ago where several of their Black friends were refused admission. For Adobo, the whole idea is to bring together groups who otherwise might not socialize at a party. “The key to our success,” says Night, “is that diversity.”
This article appears in the March 2022 issue of Washingtonian.
Most Popular in News & Politics
See a Spotted Lanternfly? Here’s What to Do.
Meet DC’s 2025 Tech Titans
What Happens After We Die? These UVA Researchers Are Investigating It.
GOP Candidate Quits Virginia Race After Losing Federal Contracting Job, Trump Plans Crackdown on Left Following Kirk’s Death, and Theatre Week Starts Thursday
USDA Spent $16,400 on Banners to Honor Trump and Lincoln
Washingtonian Magazine
September Issue: Style Setters
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
Why Can You Swim in the Seine but Not the Potomac River?
This DC Woman Might Owe You Money
Why a Lost DC Novel Is Getting New Attention
These Confusing Bands Aren’t Actually From DC
More from News & Politics
How to Pick a Good Title-and-Settlement Company in the DC Area
Weird Press Conference Ends Trump’s Vacation From Offering Medical Advice, Kimmel Goes Back to Work Tonight, and DC Man Arrested for Shining Laser Pointer at Marine One
Why Can You Swim in the Seine but Not the Potomac River?
Nominations Are Now Open for 500 Most Influential People List
Trump and Musk Reunite, Administration Will Claim Link Between Tylenol and Autism, and Foo Fighters Play Surprise Show in DC
This DC Woman Might Owe You Money
A New Exhibition Near the White House Takes a High-Tech Approach to a Fundamental Question: What Is the American Dream?
Want to See What Could Be Ovechkin’s Last Game in DC? It’s Going to Cost You.