Los Angeles Times

The perfect blend of artistry, seediness

- By August Brown august.brown@latimes.com

When Daft Punk won the Grammy for album of the year in 2014, there were some faces on the stage unfamiliar to young pop audiences: Paul Williams, Nile Rodgers and a number of acclaimed recording engineers among them. But house music fans were especially pleased to see one Daft Punk collaborat­or: Todd Edwards.

Edwards is an electronic music veteran whose hard-kicking house cuts have spurred club floors since the 1990s. For much of his career, he was a producer’s producer — a virtuoso of vocal sample editing, influentia­l in the U.K. undergroun­d and best known stateside for his soulful vocals on Daft Punk’s 2001 single “Face to Face.”

But after working with the duo on the “Random Access Memories” track “Fragments of Time,” on which he sang lead, his profile soared. Edwards moved to L.A. to capitalize on the new opportunit­ies and to take part in a changing L.A. club scene that has never been more vibrant.

In an interview with The Times, he discusses how winning the top Grammy changes a producer and

where L.A. nightlife is going.

You’ve been a fixture in undergroun­d dance music for years, but “Random Access Memories” raised your profile. What doors has that opened for you?

[Daft Punk] inspired me to think beyond just creating music, that it’s possible to develop a world around one’s art. They expanded into scoring and directing film. They developed a live show that inspired the next generation of electronic music producers to do the same. [“Random Access Memories”] was a return to more organic musical compositio­n, a recording process that has almost become extinct in electronic music.

I’m working on an album that focuses on my songwritin­g and my vocals, [and] scoring has been a lifelong goal that I haven’t been able to focus on until now. Being on “Random Access Memories” may have gotten me more attention, but more importantl­y, it’s been the personal doors that Daft helped me open, leaving a small comfort zone where I was stagnant.

Around the time of working on that record, you moved full time to L.A. The climate for interestin­g dance music in L.A. has changed so much in recent years. Tell me what you’ve seen happening here, and why this city is such a compelling place for you to live.

My introducti­on to the music scene in Los Angeles was in 2009, when I got to play the party A Club Called Rhonda. It reminded me of the best part of the early ’90s in N.Y.C. With further visits to Los Angeles, I got to meet other DJs and music producers who reflected the area they were living in — positive vibes, laid-back personalit­ies, hippies of electronic music. I loved it.

When I was younger, I was only familiar to the scene in N.Y.C., and that unfortunat­ely disappeare­d when the mayor cleaned it up. I know I wasn’t the only one compelled to move to Los Angeles, because soon after I was finding out that other dance music producers from the U.K., France and N.Y.C. had made their way there as well. It’s a vibe: the perfect blend of artistry and seediness.

It feels like there’s so many more places for artists like yourself to play than, say, five years ago. Do you think crowds here are growing more receptive to challengin­g material?

That’s hard for me to say since I’ve only been living here for two years. I love the fact that there are warehouse parties on one end and proper clubs at the other. There are people that love a great live show, and there are those that have very low expectatio­ns for what’s being presented onstage and are as equally as happy. Los Angeles is open to niche music.

After years of mainstream EDM ruling in America, it feels like there’s a groundswel­l of attention on more interestin­g new sounds and twists on classics. Do you tune out most of that popular attention as you write, or are you conscious of where the musical conversati­on’s going?

I am most definitely aware of what’s going on. I love intricacy and complexity. However, in more recent times, I’ve grown to look at music as not only an art form but also a communicat­ion with the audience. You must be able to speak the language or what you say will fall on deaf ears. The language in house music right now is minimalism and simplicity, an art form that I’ve been embracing.

On the other side, my ears have been opened to independen­t electronic music and pop and rock which I didn’t even realize existed. I don’t just want to make a dance album. That is my comfort zone. I’ve lived there too long.

You’ve earned such undergroun­d renown as a producer and DJ, but some of your best-known musical contributi­ons have been based around vocals. Do you have bigger ambitions as a songwriter and singer, for yourself and for others?

Thomas [Bangalter] and Guy-Man [de HomemChris­to] of Daft have encouraged and inspired me to sing more. I used to love to sing, but I was an insecure kid and I let a couple of friends teasing me affect my confidence to sing more. It wasn’t until the last couple of years that I revisited the idea of singing.

Self-confidence plays such an important role in how we develop. Fortunatel­y, I have the opportunit­y now to show what I can do. I’ve been making music for almost 20 years, and I’m just getting started.

 ?? Michael Mendoza ?? TODD EDWARDS saw his profile soar after working with Daft Punk.
Michael Mendoza TODD EDWARDS saw his profile soar after working with Daft Punk.

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