Los Angeles Times

Listen, is that summer in the distance?

- By Randall Roberts

For artists looking for traction, February often marks a new beginning. Like early buds signaling springtime’s bloom, new songs enter the world with the promise of the summer bounty — full-length albums and national tours — to come. Below, a few tracks of note from L.A.-based artists with larger projects in the offing.

John Carroll Kirby “Blueberry Beads” (Stones Throw)

Though he wears the most impressive mullet of 2020 (so far), Kirby’s business-in-front-party-in-back aesthetic doesn’t extend to the work on his debut album as a solo artist. Rather, his work (like his hairstyle) cascades from front to back like a stream rolling over rapids.

Kirby, best known for his songwritin­g and production collaborat­ions with Solange on her 2018 album, “A Seat at the Table,” has been a behind-the-scenes keyboard stylist on tracks by artists including Frank Ocean, Shabazz Palaces, Blood Orange, Sébastien Tellier, Yellow Days and Kali Uchis. “Blueberry Beads” is a tease from Kirby’s forthcomin­g album (April 24) for Highland Park-based Stones Throw records. A midtempo instrument­al funk jam, it’s driven, like most of Kirby’s work, by a piano-based melodic theme. Partway through, a fuzzy synthesize­r enters the frame to harmonize, and the beguiling conversati­on, along with a snare-snap propelled rhythm, suggests an artist ready to take the lead after an early career as a sideman.

Carla Olson featuring Stephen McCarthy “Timber, I’m Falling in Love” (Sunset Blvd. Records)

The first song from the forthcomin­g record by Olson, the longtime Angeleno country rock singersong­writer, is a collaborat­ion with the Long Ryders’ McCarthy. Armed with jangled guitar riffs and an easy harmonic interplay, the two tag-team on a firstcrush song written and performed by Patty Loveless. Though this is their first recorded duet together, Olson and McCarthy have collaborat­ed in the past, most notably on her 1987 duet album with the late Byrds co-founder Gene Clark, “So Rebellious a Lover.”

Olson’s new album, “Have Harmony, Will Travel 2,” which arrives March 20, closes with a previously unreleased duet with Clark. Called “Del Gato,” it brings to glorious light a Clarkwritt­en song about a wanderer with “lips parched and bloodied” and a “face torn by sandstorms and pride.” For the new album, Olson, who’s got deep roots in L.A. going back to her early 1980s work with the Textones, also plays with the Eagles’ Timothy B. Schmit, Herman’s Hermits singer Peter Noone, soul crooner Percy Sledge and early Bee Gees instrument­alist Vince Melouney.

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