Los Angeles Times

GREAT TIME TO LISTEN IN L.A.

- By Randall Roberts 4. Mustard’s Instagram never sleeps. Style tips, advice, marketing pitches, pep talks, backstage

An Instagram search on #lamusic will reveal the futility of corralling a meager 10 moments into a yearend list. What follows is a ranked rundown of, for lack of a better term, musicrelat­ed things that reveal the bounty of creative energy being generated in L.A. 1. YG sends off Nipsey Hussle at Coachella (April 14 and April 21). Two weeks before Compton rapper YG’s debut at Coachella, best friend and collaborat­or Hussle was killed in front of Hussle’s Marathon clothing store in Crenshaw. As the city grieved, YG was mourning while also preparing for the biggest performanc­e of his life. Hussle had been planning to show up for a cameo. That Sunday in the Sahara Tent, YG stood before a packed crowd and let loose with a searing, emotionall­y charged set that he dedicated to Hussle, whose image was projected on screens. 2. Jenny Lewis releases her album “On the Line” (March 22). One of the city’s great chronicler­s must have been hoarding lyrical ideas, because the sheer volume of killers on this record is overwhelmi­ng. Whether she’s “wired on Red Bull and Hennessy” during a song of the same name or singing the fatalistic couplet “Everybody’s gotta pay that toll and maybe / After all is said and done, we’ll all be skulls,” the singer-songwriter keeps hitting creative peaks. 3. Cuco throws a block party (July 28). The feelgood Sunday party thrown by the Hawthorne heartbreak­er at Grand Park downtown capped a wild year for the artist. With a fat advance check from an Interscope label deal, the artist invited his devoted young flock to celebrate the release of “Para Mi,” his first album, with a communal afternoon of dance, food and carefree carousing. Community building in action, it felt like a movement gaining traction. scenes, weight-loss tips: The rap producer’s busy Instagram is a stream of moments, each made possible by his astounding hit-making success over the last half-decade. Scored by his latest tracks, the videos are a blast and the photos are so celebrator­y, especially those with his family, that you can’t help feeling happy for the man. 5. Zebulon builds a scene. The Frogtown bar-restaurant-club complex relocated from New York a few years ago and has already establishe­d itself as the most inventive music venue in the city. The kind of place that rewards spontaneit­y and experiment­ation, the space this year booked painter-singer Terry Allen, experiment­al metal band Liturgy, breakout math-rock band Black Midi, the Sun Ra Arkestra, guitarist William Tyler and the duo of Meg Baird and Mary Lattimore. 6. The Broad introduces the “Black Fire Concert Series” (July 17, Aug. 14). Organized in conjunctio­n with the downtown museum’s “Soul of a Nation” exhibit, the Broad’s astounding set of summer events connected visual and aural art through performanc­es by avantjazz titans including drummer Roscoe Mitchell and saxophonis­t Anthony Braxton. Mixed in with future-beat performanc­es by such California artists as Teebs, Terrace Martin and Beans, the roster was as vital as the visual art. 7. Dueto Dos Rosas play at Viva Pomona (Aug. 24). They’re not hip and they don’t pretend to be, but the sibling duo has created renditions of classic Mexican rancheras that have earned them millions of YouTube views. Dressed in traditiona­l Mexican outfits, the young harmony singers sent Vans-wearing hipsters into a tizzy in August with a soaring set at the undergroun­d Latin music festival in Pomona. 8. Mac DeMarco unveils the first in a trio of videos (March 5). The Echo Park resident coupled his curious album-length soft-rock meditation on nothingnes­s, “Here Comes the Cowboy,” with a series of videos that featured him as a lizard man, a faceless magician and a scrawny alien working on an old computer. Viewed singly, they’re as surreal as they are striking. Taken as a whole, though, the videos create the sense that we’re entering the DeMarco Cinematic Universe, one that by the end of the year has

grown to envelop a new DeMarco-directed Iggy Pop video.

9. Highland Park becomes a nightlife

destinatio­n. The eastward migration of the city’s cutting-edge music community has been occurring for much of the ’10s, but only in the last year has the neighborho­od fully establishe­d its new (overly gentrified) character as a hub. With venues including the Hi-Hat, the Lodge Room and the Highland Park Bowl; record stores Permanent, Gimme Gimme and Mount Analog; and producer Adrian Younge’s Linear Labs recording studio and record shop, musical frequencie­s permeate the air. Plus, Billie Eilish grew up there.

10. Leaving Records celebrates a decade.

Founded as a cassette label by experiment­al electronic musician Matthewdav­id, the imprint has expanded both its reach and its character. This year, it issued the acclaimed debut by minimalist composer Ana Roxanne, a studio album by Carlos Niño & Friends, a live session by bassistcom­poser Sam Wilkes and half a dozen limited cassettes. It also hosted a twice-monthly gathering at Tierra de la Culebra in Highland Park called “Listen to Music Outside in the Daylight Under a Tree,” which will continue in 2020.

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? A FAN body-surfs during Cuco’s Grand Park party.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times A FAN body-surfs during Cuco’s Grand Park party.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? JENNY LEWIS hits a creative peak on new album.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times JENNY LEWIS hits a creative peak on new album.
 ??  ?? YG towers over everyone during g his fitting sendoff to slain best friend and collaborat­or Nipsey Hussle at Coachella.
YG towers over everyone during g his fitting sendoff to slain best friend and collaborat­or Nipsey Hussle at Coachella.
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ??
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times

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