Los Angeles Times

Putting live beat to the digital

- By August Brown august.brown@latimes.com

There was a lot to like in the young electronic­a artist Nicolas Jaar’s much-hyped, soldout set at the Echoplex on Monday. The languorous pacing, the just-danceable tides of bass and kick drum, the digital hiss that made his samples feel as if they were being sauteed — all were real pleasures.

But maybe the best part was something more fundamenta­l. It was the way he approached the perennial problems of computer-based dance music: how to make it interestin­g to watch and how to perform it like a musician.

Each of those problems has its own solution. For artists whose sets are largely confined to “the box” (or laptop), it’s easy to slap up a giant LED screen and lighting rigs. Artists such as Deadmau5, Rusko and L.A. hero Nosaj Thing have done really interestin­g work in making their sets mixed-media experience­s. And because onstage electronic­s are often opaque as to which device is making which sound, it’s pretty easy for dance bands playing to an in-ear metronome and MIDI clock to add drums, guitars and synths while keeping the backing tracks discrete.

Jaar didn’t do either. His three-piece — a guitarist, a saxophonis­t and Jaar himself behind a bank of gadgetry — looked like a minimalist rock outfit, all shrouded in blue and red light and nodding along to the tracks’ ebb and flow. But the long-form instrument­al jams and gentle tweaks of tracks from his solo debut, “Space Is Only Noise,” and two mixtapes from his label Clown & Sunset underlined that this was every bit live.

Jaar gets a lot of jazz references in reviews, which aren’t really warranted save for the sly Ethiopique­s-inspired saxophones that add a lost-to-time sadness to his tracks. But Monday night’s set did feel like a jazz-derived melding of wonkish chops and pure physicalit­y. One couldn’t see which program Jaar used to control his samples, but it didn’t feel as though much of anything had been pre-programmed or played to a click track.

The threesome riffed off one another like a seasoned trio. The guitarist upped stakes with echo-laced funk licks, and the saxophonis­t cooled the mood with long, wan single notes, while Jaar cued bits of filleted ambience and percussive patter into coherent songs. It wasn’t a laptop set repurposed for a live performanc­e, and it wasn’t a sonically limited live band; it was something else, with a ton of genre-shattering promise.

Jaar seems to have an allergy to the obvious bass-drop moments that so dominate today’s dance music, and the band played off that hesitation perfectly. When he did get around to a four-on-the-floor beat, it felt as good and tangible as a first kiss returned.

 ?? Carlo Allegri
Associated Press ?? NICOLAS JAAR makes electronic­a musical at gig.
Carlo Allegri Associated Press NICOLAS JAAR makes electronic­a musical at gig.

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