Hear now: Tips on new Eleni Mandell, Lo-Fang, Lambchop, more
Below are a few tips on new releases of note, as published in Sunday’s Times.
Lo-Fang, “Blue Film” (4AD)
Lo-Fang is the pseudonym of Matthew Hemerlein, a singer and pop composer who wrote, recorded and played all the instruments on this debut. Drawing on digital R&B, modern pop, “Kid A”-era Radiohead and electronic music, he presents three- and four-minute song bursts that are tightly structured but labyrinthine in detail. “When We’re Fine” floats on a digital loop, a tiny-but-mighty rhythm, backward-spinning bleeps and bloops and a catchy chorus. An early contender for debut of the year, “Blue Film” comes out Feb. 25. Lo-Fang goes on tour with his most famous fan, Lorde, this spring. Highly recommended.
__
Eleni Mandell, “Let’s Fly a Kite” (Yep Roc)
A lovely record about the heart, children, commitment, joy and other Saturday afternoon-style pleasures, “Let’s Fly a Kite” presents Los Angeles singer-songwriter Eleni Mandell at her lyrically precise best. Nick Lowe’s backing band on the standard guitar, keyboards and drums employs a tasteful array of instruments — vibraphone, flugelhorn, violin and trumpet — to craft sophisticated but playful parlor music. “Little Joy” is one of the most loving songs to a child you’ll hear this season (Mandell is the mother of toddler twins). “Maybe Yes” takes a stand against ambivalence in a delicately expressed work that outlines reasons why “maybe” won’t cut it. Here and throughout “Kite,” Mandell’s wonderfully direct: “Maybe doesn’t turn me on/ Maybe’s not filet mignon/ If your answer’s ‘I don’t know’/ Maybe I will let you go.”
__
Lambchop, “Nixon” (Merge)
Few records have dented my psyche in the past 14 years more often than Nashville country-politan band Lambchop’s “Nixon.” A humble, unassuming record that blossoms in grand fashion with each listen, the 10-song work was created by wry mastermind Kurt Wagner with a dozen-plus Nashville session players and resides in a realm where orchestrated country, expansive Curtis Mayfield-style soul and independent rock meet. Wagner’s kind of a glum fellow, but humor and vivid observations lift his spirit, and when he moves into falsetto the songs erupt. The label that released it, Merge, agrees. It just issued a deluxe double-disc version featuring bonus 1998 sessions called “How I Met Cat Power.”
__
Afterhours, “Lowlife” (Not Not Fun)
A dimly lighted, textured instrumental album released by the consistently surprising L.A. label Not Not Fun, Afterhours’ “Lowlife” is precisely titled. Six songs that hit on mesmerizing breakbeat-inspired dance jams, minimal house and ethereal ambient music, the debut by Los Angeles-based Nicholas Crozier Malkin surprises from track to track and measure to measure. Each a different glimpse at predawn bliss, many of these tracks could have been released at any time in the last few decades. The beat-heavy “Sixty Forty” sounds like New York City trip-hop circa 1998 but falls off a cliff three minutes in, landing in a pool of ambient pleasure. “Lovesick” is nine minutes of hypnosis that explores a quick groove and rides it with gleeful, if restrained, abandon.
ALSO:
Black Flag apologizes for a dysfunctional 2013
Pete Seeger wielded ‘Hammer’ with melodic clarity, civic grace
L.A.’s Warpaint branches out from the abstract with stepped-up spin
Twitter: @liledit
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.