Los Angeles Times

Essential acts that can’t be missed

- calendar@latimes.com — August Brown (AB), Gerrick D. Kennedy (GK) and Mikael Wood (MW)

From Björk to Nine Inch Nails, a guide on whom to listen to at FYF Fest.

Once a scrappy undergroun­d event dedicated primarily to hard rock, the FYF Fest continues to grow in size and stature — this year expanding from two to three days and attracting a diverse bill that includes a heavy dose of adventurou­s artists. Over the course of three days at Exposition Park, FYF will host, to name a few, sonic experiment­alist Bjork, R&B risk-takers Frank Ocean and Solange, and hip-hop architects Missy Elliott and A Tribe Called Quest. Produced by Goldenvoic­e — the powerhouse behind Coachella and the new Arroyo Seco Weekend — past FYFs have drawn more than 40,000 attendees. This year’s event is also taking a large step to grow in national prominence, with select evening sets to be live-streamed via Twitter.

FRIDAY Björk | 8:50 p.m. Main Stage

Fans in Los Angeles haven’t had to wait long to see the Icelandic singer, who just performed in May at Disney Hall. (Last weekend she could also be glimpsed improbably making the rounds at Dodger Stadium during the Classic West festival.) But the Disney show featured Björk in collaborat­ion with an orchestra that sapped some of the energy from her intensely emotional music. This time she’s likely to fare better backed by Arca, the adventurou­s Venezuelan producer with whom she made 2015’s dramatic “Vulnicura.” (MW)

Survive | 10 p.m. Club Stage

This Austin, Texas-based instrument­al outfit will play FYF just days after two of its members, Kyle Dixon and Michael Stein, received an Emmy nomination for their title theme for the Netflix series “Stranger Things.” Like that lush but unsettling ditty — with its clear echoes of classic soundtrack work by Vangelis and Giorgio Moroder — the music on Survive’s 2016 album, “RR7349,” sets shapely melodies against 1980s-style synth textures that feel hopeful and dangerous at the same time. (MW)

Missy Elliott | 11:15 p.m. Main Stage

A dozen years have passed since the last time Elliott put out an album. The wait has been excruciati­ng. Why? Because Elliott’s true mastery is her wild imaginatio­n, and there are few in hip-hop as innovative and eccentric. Since arriving 20 years ago with the instant classic “Supa Dupa Fly,” Elliott has moved us with her quirky, eye-popping — and often mind-boggling — visuals, sticky hooks and exuberant beats. Watching her is a must. (GK)

Helena Hauff | 11:45 p.m. Outer Space Stage

If Nine Inch Nails doesn’t quite slake your thirst for bone-snapping electronic noise at FYF, dip over to Hauff ’s nightcap set for equally severe, tastefully soldered savagery. The German techno and acid-house producer is an analog-gear devotee, and she knows how to flog a circuit board until it begs forgivenes­s. But her end results are still otherworld­ly and danceable. (AB)

Majid Jordan | 12:25 a.m. Trees Stage

This shadowy Toronto vocal and production duo had the great luck (but difficult problem) of coming to light on what might be Drake’s best song, “Hold On, We’re Going Home.” The act’s slinky, melancholi­c R&B will forever be attached to that song, but after finally releasing a debut full length last year, Majid Jordan is on its first full tour and asserting itself as a force all its own. (AB)

SATURDAY Jonathan Richman 3:15 p.m. Club Stage

This lovably eccentric singer and songwriter is probably more familiar these days to moviegoers than to record buyers: Richman’s classic “Egyptian Reggae” is featured prominentl­y in Edgar Wright’s ultra-hyped new carchase caper, “Baby Driver,” while his latest album, “Ishkode! Ishkode!,” was released by a tiny label run out of a Cleveland record shop. Yet Richman, who typically performs his gentle folk-pop tunes accompanie­d only by a drummer, maintains a devoted cult. Expect lots of singing along here.

Princess Nokia | 5:30 p.m. Club Stage

The young New Yorker Destiny Frasqueri is completely uncompromi­sing onstage (she allegedly got into a fracas with a harassing fan at a U.K. show). But she’s also generous on record, and her mix of high-spirited rapping, velvety ’90s R&B touches and heavylidde­d trap production­s looks to only get better as she gets a wider audience. (AB)

Noname | 6:20 p.m. Trees Stage

The first introducti­on many of us received to Chicago poet and rapper Noname was courtesy of her verses on Chance the Rapper’s “Acid Rap” and her scenesteal­ing appearance with the artist on “Saturday Night Live.” Her debut mixtape, “Telefone,” is an essential listen that weaves jazzy R&B and hip-hop. Released last year, the enchanting and intimate collection waxes on relationsh­ips, family, addiction and police brutality. Like many young emcees coming out of Chicago, the city’s violence is reflected in the music, but Noname tackles loss and survival with a refreshing­ly sunny optimism. (GK)

Cap’n Jazz | 6:25 p.m. Club Stage

Part of the same Midwestern emo scene that produced the Promise Ring and American Football, Cap’n Jazz released a single album in 1995 then promptly broke up, only to see its signature approach — noisy but melodic, combative yet proudly vulnerable — adopted by a host of bands that found far more commercial success than Cap’n Jazz ever did. The group reunited for a handful of shows in 2010; now it’s back for another round. (MW)

Frank Ocean | 11 p.m. Main Stage

Days before the 2015 installmen­t of FYF was due to begin, Ocean canceled. Kanye West stepped in to replace him as fans worried the enigmatic crooner’s comeback had stalled. Last summer, after years of whispers, Ocean returned with not one but two projects: visual album “Endless” and his official album “Blonde.” Contemplat­ive, freeflowin­g and minimal, the records were almost overshadow­ed by label drama and his lack of convention­al promotion. Fans have been on edge as Ocean pulled out of a handful of festival appearance­s this year, but of late he’s been keeping his commitment­s. (GK)

SUNDAY Honey Soundsyste­m 2 p.m. Outer Space Stage

The record for longest-ever planned FYF set has been achieved, and will likely be unrepeatab­le. This San Francisco DJ and label-owning crew (whose sounds hark back to the glory days of Patrick Cowley and Sylvester’s sexed-up electrodis­co) will be manning the Outer Space stage for 10 hours on Sunday — the whole day, start to finish. You could stick it out for the whole shift and have a great time, but we suggest punctuatin­g your day with its sweaty euphoria. (AB)

Omar S. | 7 p.m. Woods Stage

It’s a rare artist who can title his album “The Best” and have it come off as a no-nonsense statement of fact. But Omar S. is one of those old-guard techno dons who wears the confidence of someone who helped invent a culture. Anyone will feel like a million bucks after a cut like “… I’ll Buy Another One!!!,” but he has a tender side too: “Heard’ Chew” has the melancholy of Motown. (AB)

Mura Masa | 7:45 pm. Trees Stage

It makes sense that Mura Masa opened his self-titled debut album with the sounds of a city bus. The young producer is a traveler and his exhilarati­ng collection of genre-melting music shows he refuses to be tied down to any one style. He tackles electronic pop, garage, hip-hop and calypso — and that’s just the first few songs on the album. From a euphoric house jam with R&B singer Nao and flirty dance grooves with Charli XCX and Bonzai, not to mention louche bangers with ASAP Rocky and Desiigner, he’s got something for every taste. (GK)

Solange | 8:25 p.m. Main Stage

Solange’s “A Seat at the Table” was more than an album. Arriving as debates on race relations and law enforcemen­t were a flashpoint in a divisive presidenti­al election, the singer’s confession­al autobiogra­phy on being black in America provided a much-needed salve. This was the first time many saw her outside of the shadow of her megastar sister Beyoncé — a shame, considerin­g Solange has been putting out eclectic records since she was a teen. She’s been selective on where she performs, opting to present at museums and festivals, and her FYF performanc­e is a full-circle moment: she first previewed the album here in 2015. (GK)

Nine Inch Nails 10:45 p.m. Main Stage

Following a three-year break from touring, Trent Reznor’s influentia­l industrial-rock band is playing live again this summer, and it’s returned to the road armed with new music. In December, Nine Inch Nails released “Not the Actual Events,” a blistering EP that suggested the frontman had been through some things since his previous disc, 2013’s relatively sensual “Hesitation Marks.” A second EP, “Add Violence,” is due Friday. (MW)

 ?? Photograph­s by, clockwise from top, Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times, Quique García EPA, Katja Ruge Werkdiscs/Ninja Tune, Josh Brasted WireImage, Santiago Felipe Getty Images, Amy Harris Invision/AP ?? THE THREE-DAY FYF Fest features an eclectic lineup that reels in experiment­al artists to more convention­al musicians. Sure to be some of the most interestin­g sets: Toronto’s Majid Jordan, clockwise from top, Destiny Frasqueri, Helena Hauff, Frank...
Photograph­s by, clockwise from top, Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times, Quique García EPA, Katja Ruge Werkdiscs/Ninja Tune, Josh Brasted WireImage, Santiago Felipe Getty Images, Amy Harris Invision/AP THE THREE-DAY FYF Fest features an eclectic lineup that reels in experiment­al artists to more convention­al musicians. Sure to be some of the most interestin­g sets: Toronto’s Majid Jordan, clockwise from top, Destiny Frasqueri, Helena Hauff, Frank...
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States