Los Angeles Times

Producer creates music to get lost in

- By Randall Roberts

Nalepa

“Thoughtfor­ms” (Airspace)

Producer Steve Nalepa has been a stealthily influentia­l electronic music creator, scene builder and sound technician for years. As co-founder of the TeamSuprem­e beat collective, he’s organized online cyphers that, using assigned source material, test beatmakers’ skills at producing unique tracks. Establishe­d producers including Kenny Segal, Mr. Carmack and King Henry earned early attention through their work for the collective.

An expert at Ableton software, the Highland Park-based Nalepa has taught a generation of producers how to craft beats. He’s also composed film scores and built onstage Ableton rigs for artists including Drake and the Weeknd. As a member of the Acid, he’s released acclaimed records for Mute.

All of which is to say, Nalepa’s skills are as deep as they are dynamic, and “Thoughtfor­ms” illuminate­s a new realm within the Nalepa universe.

Eleven plaintive instrument­al tracks draw from ambient, Chicago house, new age and German minimal techno. Back in the day the record would have been perfect for the socalled 3 a.m. eternal zone where exhausted ravers retreated to revel in the post-dance floor ecstasy of the Orb, Future Sound of London, Aphex Twin, Mike Ink and Spacetime Continuum.

The record’s hardly a nostalgia trip though. Tracks such as “A Study of Dreams” and “Whirlpools” deliver of-the-moment comfort and warmth — a kind of salve against the politics- and climate-generated chaos currently overwhelmi­ng the world.

As a companion to “Thoughtfor­ms,” Nalepa “rallied up some heavy homies to make some really nice work,” as he explained in a recent text message. Most prominentl­y, he tapped self-described “interventi­onist/immersioni­st performanc­e artist and sculptor” David Henry Brown Jr., who of late has been crafting ridiculous­ly elaborate Instagram selfportra­its as David Nobody.

Elsewhere on “Thoughtfor­ms” Nalepa composes beat-free washes of noise that suggest guitar band My Bloody Valentine and Cologne, Germany, producer Reinhard Voigt’s work as Gas. An album that rewards deep, high-volume listening, “Thoughtfor­ms” is music to get lost in, one that you inhabit as if spelunking through a grand cavern.

 ?? Neilson Barnard Getty Images ?? STEVE NALEPA goes deep in “Thoughtfor­ms.”
Neilson Barnard Getty Images STEVE NALEPA goes deep in “Thoughtfor­ms.”

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