Los Angeles Times

Alluring song, rebel album

- By Randall Roberts randall.roberts@latimes.com

Rhye “Taste” (Loma Vista)

The new song by a pair of L.A.based expats shimmers like candleligh­t reflected through a three-carat diamond. With a natural glow that belies its meticulous­ly crafted nature, “Taste” is the newest tease from Danish producer Robin Hannibal and Canadian-inL.A. vocalist Milosh’s eagerly anticipate­d second album.

In the summer, the duo issued a pair of new songs, “Please” and “Summer Days,” which marked Rhye’s first new music since the 2013 release of its debut album, “Woman.” That record channeled the quiet-storm textures of singersong­writer Sade and soul singer Roberta Flack for a new generation.

A breakout success, it’s likely responsibl­e for scoring countless makeout sessions. “Taste” should score some romancing too. Set in extreme close-up, Milosh sings of being in a dream state — “not awake” and “not alone” — and imagining a lover’s gaze.

The midtempo track thumps with heartbeat rhythm as Milosh’s androgynou­s, breathy contralto moves to the chorus, a come-on if there ever was one: “One more time for my taste,” he sings. “See me fall from your eyes to your waist.” The video for the song couldn’t be simpler: a black-and-white still of a woman’s back, shot from the waist up.

How alluring is “Taste”? As one Vevo viewer put it in a comment, “I thought I have no soul. Then I found Rhye.” The band’s new record is slated to come out in early 2018.

Gun Outf it “Out of Range” (Paradise of Bachelors)

Near the conclusion of the oblique release notes to this Los Angeles-based country rock band’s new album comes a kind of statement of intent. “Trust not: the self satisfied / the self / the satisfied / every other,” it reads. “But honor the dead and the dying in song.”

Born in Olympia, Wash., Gun Outfit’s founding members Carrie Keith and Dylan Sharp relocated south a few years ago but have had a long connection to the scene through its early releases for L.A. punk band No Age’s label Post Present Medium. Which isn’t to say they’ve become ingrained in the Southern California scene; rather, until recently the band has kept a relatively low profile.

Now a five-piece also featuring Henry Barnes (Amps for Christ, Man Is the Bastard), the band’s fifth album both honors the ideals of classic country rock and rages against it with a freewheeli­ng ref lex to push at the genre’s edges.

Dueling vocalists Keith and Sharp swap lines and verses to offer varying perspectiv­es and do so with a punk-ish indifferen­ce to perfect pitch. Crisp, twangy tones wrestle with seeping noise and feedback in the distance.

Those expecting typical country themes — heartbreak, drinking, sin, depression and whatnot — can find them, but the band’s footnotes confirm a bookish bunch who reference figures including writers Wallace Stevens, Philip K. Dick and Ovid (and his telling of the Orpheus myth), the Dutch Renaissanc­e artist Pieter Bruegel the Elder and others.

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