Los Angeles Times

L. A. albums make a powerful stand

- By Randall Roberts

For reasons too obvious to note, those of us with any sense spent an inordinate amount of time surrounded by four walls and consumed with well- founded dread. Time crawled. Doom-scrolling made it worse. Sometimes the only way to distinguis­h one Blursday from the next was by recalling what series or Ben & Jerry’s pint you binged on.

Los Angeles musicians, as usual, stepped up when we needed them most, f illing the sheer volume of unstructur­ed time with organized, or joyfully disorganiz­ed, noise. Best, the wide- open days and nights allowed for the kind of deep, uninterrup­ted listening that rewarded patience. Below, 10 of the best albums by Los Angeles- based artists.

1. Jyoti, “Mama You Can Bet!” ( SomeOthaSh­ip)

The third album in a jaz-zfocused series that the Grammynomi­nated artist born Georgia Anne Muldrow began under the Jyoti moniker in 2010, “Mama You Can Bet!” serves as revelatory reinforcem­ent of the native Angeleno’s vision. The daughter of session musicians, she was given the Jyoti name by spiritual- jazz legend Alice Coltrane, and “Mama You Can Bet!” is infused with a similar spirit. Muldrow treats her rhythms with a structural looseness that suggests producer J Dilla’s wobbly work. At first, the wooziness feels unpractice­d, as if she’s reaching for a sound she can’t quite capture. But as the album evolves, the beats lock into place. Then, like eyes adjusting to 3- D glasses, the full measure of her intentions

2. X, “Alphabetla­nd” ( Fat Possum)

Rock ’ n’ roll is riddled with reunited has- beens eager to tap nostalgia in exchange for one last paycheck. History shows that it’s a terrible, horrible, rotten idea. What’s never been a bad idea is X’s version of rock ’ n’ roll, which has long featured hard, distorted energy fired by the back- and- forth disharmony of Exene Cervenka and John Doe. This, the first album to feature the two alongside founding members Billy Zoom and D. J. Bonebrake in 35 years, feels not like a reunion ( which it’s not, as they’ve constantly toured as a unit) but a charged, furious continuati­on.

3. Dinner Party, “Dinner Party” ( Sounds of Crenshaw)

At the end of last year, a quartet of Grammy- nominated L. A. jazz and hip- hop players — Terrace Martin, Kamasi Washington, Robert Glasper and 9th Wonder — converged in a studio to make a contempora­ry soul- jazz record. Propelled by 9th Wonder’s beats, the unit wove themes including desire, love and betrayal into a lush seven- song cycle. The pinnacle, and one of the best songs of the year, is “Freeze Tag,” a searing indictment of racist profiling and state- sanctioned oppression.

4. William Basinski, “Lamentatio­ns” ( Musex/ Temporary Residence)

Masterful minimalist composer and tape manipulato­r Basinski’s newest work furthers a stylistic approach typified in his most famous work, 2014’ s “The Disintegra

tion Loops.” Filed in the “ambient” vertical of your favorite streaming service, the dozen tracks on “Lamentatio­ns” drift as if on the verge of becoming unmoored, with gradual, churning shifts. Grim? Yep. It’s been a grim year. But “Lamentatio­ns” doesn’t mean endless dirges. Basinski understand­s the way that tones and frequencie­s interact as they hit eardrums, and the result are compositio­ns that, listened to at proper volume, send shivering, sonically comforting beams through the body.

5. Drakeo the Ruler, “Thank You for Using GTL” ( self- released)

South L. A. rapper Drakeo the Ruler recorded his album via telephone line from the L. A. County Men’s Central Jail. Each of the 19 tracks on “... Using GTL” is a three- person collaborat­ion among a low- fidelity Drakeo using his daily phone privileges, producer Joogszn weaving in minimal rhythms and laser- gun sounds and the anonymous female voice of the inmate telephone

system GTL reminding them that the call is being recorded. Many songs end with the voice saying, “Thank you for using GTL.” Not only is the whole thing a testament to Drakeo’s skills at tapping his muse within a tortuously oppressive environmen­t, but it’s woven together to indict the American criminal justice system, and the ways in which the gears of commerce profit from essential human needs.

6. Eddie Chacon, “Pleasure, Joy and Happiness” ( Day End)

Los Angeles crooner Chacon hit peak commercial popularity a few decades ago as half of the duo Charles & Eddie (“Would I Lie to You”) but stepped away from the music business decades ago. This year Chacon reemerged at age 54 to craft a smooth vintage R& B record specific to this stage of his life. The accurately titled “Pleasure, Joy and Happiness” is all of the above. Produced by John Carroll Kirby ( Solange, Frank Ocean), it’s as intimate as a series of quietstorm Sade jams or a flock of whispered Prince ballads.

7. Blu & Exile, “Miles: Music from an Interlude Called Life” ( Dirty Science)

The third album from producer Exile and rapper Blu was eight years in the making. An expansive work that plays like a double LP and features more footnotewo­rthy references than a David Foster Wallace essay, the “Miles” of its title references both the jazz trumpeter and the measuremen­t of distance. Unlike the twominute sprints that rule Spotify’s Rap Caviar playlist, “Miles” prefers endurance to speed. At more than nine minutes, for example, centerpiec­e “Roots of Blue” is a virtual marathon, an epic poem that lyrically moves from the dawn of civilizati­on through Nubia, across the Atlantic on slave ships, through blues music and into the present.

8. Jhené Aiko, “Chilombo” ( Def Jam)

Aiko’s Grammy albumof- the- year- nominated third studio album rolls like an hourlong monologue during a midnight cruise from Ladera Heights to Sunset Boulevard — with the occasional cellphone interjecti­on from collaborat­ors. A meditative contempora­ry R& B album that explores the ins and outs of a relationsh­ip — Aiko and rapper Big Sean lead a high- profile life together — “Chilombo” is an exquisitel­y produced work that wraps her commanding voice in velveteen pianos, synths, minimalist rhythms and lots of bottom- end wobble. Her line to a lover in “None of Your Concern” could be aimed at potential listeners: “I want better for you moving forward / What’s better for you than me?”

9. Clipping, “Visions of Bodies Being Burned” ( Sub Pop)

The trio, featuring Grammy- and Tony- winning actor Daveed Diggs, best known for his role in the original production of “Hamilton,” and musical collaborat­ors William Hutson and Jonathan Snipes, has carved its own doom- laden plot in the rap landscape. Featuring startled door bangs, highpitche­d skids and squeals, rhythmic chaos typified by an obvious disinteres­t in traditiona­l snare- on- twoand- four patterns ( or any snare at all, for that matter) and lots of sinister bass, “Visions of Bodies Being Burned” is a genre- bending, challengin­g work, both musically and thematical­ly.

10. Sam Gendel, “DRM” ( Nonesuch)

Los Angeles multi- instrument­alist Gendel released two albums in 2020 for the respected New York label Nonesuch, the first being “Satin Doll,” and whatever your mood this year — scared, furious, desperate, isolated or maniacally happy — he had a curiously beguiling track for it. “DRM” features more “vocals” and “lyrics,” if you can call them that. Gendel mumbles and coos, sighs and hums, occasional­ly exhaling a Vocodered phrase. His take on Lil Nas X’s soon- to- be- standard “Old Town Road” precisely captures his viscous instrument­al approach. Across “Satin Doll,” he transforms jazz standards by Miles Davis, Charles Mingus and others into rubbery, drunken exploratio­ns. Jazz? Hiphop? Experiment­al beat music? Yes.

 ?? Photo i l l ustration by Ross May L. A. Times; photos by Allen J. Schaben L. A. Times ??
Photo i l l ustration by Ross May L. A. Times; photos by Allen J. Schaben L. A. Times
 ?? Tim Mosenfelde­r Getty I mages ?? “MAMA You Can Bet!” is the third album in a jazzfocuse­d series for the Grammy- nominated Jyoti.
Tim Mosenfelde­r Getty I mages “MAMA You Can Bet!” is the third album in a jazzfocuse­d series for the Grammy- nominated Jyoti.

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