Los Angeles Times

L.A.-area artists to catch at the festival

- By Randall Roberts You might not know randall.roberts@latimes.com Twitter: @liledit

Of the dozens of national and internatio­nal acts performing at this year’s Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival are many who create their work in Southern California.

Ranging from Soundcloud rappers and solo crooners to retro surf bands and jumbo jazz ensembles, the roster of area musicians illuminate­s the range of area talent journeying to the desert.

Here are 10 tracks by L.A.-based artists, many of whom have just issued new songs, who will be performing across two weekends in Indio. Cuco, “CR-V” (self-released). The new song from Hawthorne’s rising soul-wave singer is an ode to a car. Unlike Prince’s “Little Red Corvette,” Frank Ocean’s “White Ferrari” or Rush’s “Red Barchetta,” however, our hero celebrates a less fancy ride: the humble Honda CR-V. Weaving modest lyrics through a catchy, wobbly synth melody, Cuco boasts as though he’s King of the Losers, seeming to revel in his decidedly square ride. Sudan Archives, “Nont for Sale” (Stones Throw). For her part, the artist who records as Sudan Archives plucks out her own beguiling melody on a violin for her new song, “Nont for Sale.” Born Brittney Denise Parks, the multiinstr­umentalist draws inspiratio­n from northeast African tunings when composing for violin, and echoes of those vibes drift through her new beat-based song, the first since her 2017 debut EP. Moses Sumney, “Doomed” (Jagjaguar). With an immediatel­y identifiab­le voice and a muse that resists easy solutions, Sumney’s gentle, layered soul music has earned deserved acclaim. “Doomed,” from his 2017 debut album, “Aromantici­sm,” typifies his approach. The Regrettes, “A Teenager in Love” (Warner Bros.). For their new cover of a song made famous by Dion and the Belmonts, teenage guitar band the Regrettes opted to open slowly. As lead Regrette Lydia Night sings the first verse, the song rolls within a soulful groove, but when she and the band hit the second line of the chorus, though, all hell breaks loose. The band hits the accelerato­r and turns up the volume as she bemoans her lovelorn fate. Blackbear, “Thunder” (BL/ Blackbear). his name, but pop fans know his work: The L.A.-based, Floridabor­n producer and songwriter has contribute­d to songs by Justin Bieber, G-Eazy and Linkin Park. “Thunder” is the first track from his forthcomin­g album “Love,” and is a mostly instrument­al work that mixes a gentle piano loop with a trap-style rhythm, sibilant high-hats and a mid-range hum that mimics a vibrating phone. The Buttertone­s, “Baby C4” (Innovative Leisure). A frantic, sax-screaming burner that mixes post-punk, rockabilly and garage rock, the just-released song from the Hollywood-born Buttertone­s accomplish­es in two-plus minutes what many bands can’t do over a whole album: offer evidence of both musical range and the imaginatio­n to carve a unique sound from those skills. Oh Sees, “Cooling Tower” (Castle Face). The Eagle Rock psychrocke­rs are one of the best live bands on the planet, and last year’s “Orc” captured that energy. One highlight? “Cooling Tower,” a double-drummed trip-out in which a cosmic synth line trades a melodic conversati­on with a hollow-toned guitar. Kamasi Washington, “Fists of Fury” (Shoto Mas/Young Turks). The title track from Washington’s forthcomin­g album runs nearly 10 minutes and opens with brass and a deep conga and shaker rhythm. When the choir comes in, the work takes flight. Just beyond the sixminute mark and after a series of eloquent solos, the music pauses for a brief measure as if to take a breath. Resuming with a relentless percussive groove and a bed of strings, two of those chorus of voices declare, and then repeat, “Our time as victims is over. We will no longer ask for justice. Instead, we will take our retributio­n.” Doubters, beware. Banes World, “You Say I’m in Love” (616455 Records). A woozy, lo-fidelity ballad from young Long Beach singer and songwriter Shane Blanchard, who records as Banes World, “You Say I’m in Love” draws on a pre-rock-n-roll doo-wop vibe in which aggression takes a backseat to romance. Kelela, “Altadena” (Warp). The experiment­al R&B artist born Kelela Mizanekris­tos has divided her time between Los Angeles and London, but for these purposes we’re claiming her as our own. The song, taken from her album “Take Me Apart,” is called “Altadena,” after all, and though it doesn’t mention the township by name, it’s easy to geolocate it: “Nothing to be sad or down / There's a place for everyone.” Where else could that be but Altadena?

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? SINGER CUCO PERFORMS at the El Rey Theatre in February. He has a self-released song about the humble Honda CR-V.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times SINGER CUCO PERFORMS at the El Rey Theatre in February. He has a self-released song about the humble Honda CR-V.

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