Buzz Bands: Kevin Bronson on the music scene in Los Angeles and beyond

Justice takes it to the streets, meekly

[Jeff Weiss boned up on his French and surveyed the scene at the South stage on Saturday night:]

Justice’s Coachella performance and subsequent Echoplex set have already passed into the stuff of legend. Those who were there described it with a level of hyperbole akin to a Moses parting the Red Sea armed with nothing but a pair of turntables and a crate full of old Daft Punk LPs. Truth be told, conventional logic suggested that by mid-May, at least four Silver Lake hipsters had perfected lustrous Gaspard Auge mustaches, purchased plane tickets to France and sought employment at various Parisian boulangeries to support their aspirations in the emerging Gallic techno scene.

So, perhaps it was these nearly insurmountable expectations that caused me to be unimpressed with the red-hot Parisian techno duo’s Detour Festival performance.

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One last time around the Bloc Party

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[Later this morning, I will have a guest post on the Justice set. For now, here's my final take ...]

Bloc Party made me wish I'd chosen the Turbonegro set to end my Detour.

Oh, the Englishmen were charming enough, and their dancier material fairly rattled the buildings at Main and Temple streets. But it ended up providing a little too pat a finish to the long day. You add this one up, and it equals a day's worth of small tent-caliber material at Coachella.

Do I wish I'd spent my Saturday on the couch watching college football? No.

Do I wish Detour had at least one band that was trying to save rock 'n' roll? Yes.

Photo: Bloc Party on the East state (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

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Oops ... Moving Units beset by glitches

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With a throng of very young fans ready to shake their bodies to every note, Moving Units nearly crashed and burned on the South stage. Blame the gremlins. "Sorry," front man Blake Miller told the crowd after having to restart a song not once but twice, "you're not supposed to see the smoke and mirrors."

Yes, for all the Units' swagger, much of the electronic underpinning of their new songs -- "Hexes for Exes" will be released on Tuesday -- comes courtesy of a laptop. And something was not in sync on this night, so the crowd that filled 1st Street was left with warts and frustration. It made you nostalgic for a three-piece dance-punk band that married in-your-face attitude with riffs so sharp you could shave with them.

There's little of that on the Units' new album. Maybe the band's swagger remains, but the danger is gone.

I will say one thing: "Kids From Orange County" could probably fill the dancefloor at Cinespace.

Photo: Blake Miller beckons as the Moving Units start their set (by Kevin Bronson / LAT).

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Should I put in for mileage for covering this event?

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Ssh, people are trying to work in that building (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

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One exchange heard during Autolux's ambient set

"For years, everybody in Los Angeles has been rooting for this band."

"They must be awfully tired."

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There's still no cure for the 1980s

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As the sun set, things started to get topsy-turvy.

The Shout Out Louds channeled the Cure, and too well. They're nice, they're Swedish, they figure to gain ground now that they are no longer on a major label (Capitol) and are aligned with a hip indie (Merge). But some of the tasty stuff in their set Saturday, and on their album "Our Ill Wills," veers awfully close to the bittersweet flavors dispensed by Robert Smith (although I'm not sure I ever saw him in red horizontal stripes) back in The Decade That Nobody at the Detour Festival Was Old Enough to Remember.

And it occurred to me while Adan Olenius warbled through the band's nice set that this Detour -- lacking anything resembling a groundbreaking headliner -- represented little more than a window to what you can get away with calling hip, as long as it's danceable and illuminated by enough Glo Sticks and neon bracelets. At least the Shout Out Louds were playing; the myriad DJs dispensing their various strains of disco were just recycling. Whether they are collagists or mere selectors, their music acts as little more than an aural cattle prod, and possesses about as much longevity.

The herds moved obediently.

Photo: Shout Out Louds (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

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This was probably sponsored, but we hope not

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Even better, it's the wall of City Hall (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

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Ghosts in the afternoon, and nobody said boo

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The Deadly Syndrome's music is sweet, then paranoid, then nervous, then chaotic. But there's something that holds it together, as the young quartet showed on the South stage. Overcoming a few first-festival hiccups, the Syndrome fared pretty well -- much better than the cardboard-cutout ghosts that the band stations onstage during their performances. Most of the ghosts succumbed to the breeze and blew over. The convulsive pop, with its tinkling keyboards and explosive guitars, held up.

Only when guitarist Will Etling tried to join the set-ending drum circle (the quartet huddles around Jesse Hoy's kit in kind of a percussive exclamation point on the song "Eucalyptus") did the Deadly Syndrome run into trouble. Etling unplugged himself -- his guitar cord was too short to reach over to the drum kit. They simply weren't used to playing on stages this big. Get used to it, guys.

Photo: Chris Richard of the Deadly Syndrome (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

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A colorful start to the Detour Festival

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[Follow along as I meander through an autumn Saturday in a four-block region conveniently located just across the street from The Times' offices ...]

As festivals go, this promises to be a pretty good block party. And as Bloc Partys go ... well, we'll leave that for later.

The LA Weekly Detour Festival in downtown Los Angeles is a good idea -- a "mini-Coachella" in an area of the Southland whose renaissance cannot be understated. Four stages of music, exhibitors and vendors, wacky art installations, hipsters lounging on the resplendent lawn at City Hall: Detour seems to have it all. And you could even take the subway to get there. Try that in Indio in April.

Detourscissors_2 We lurched off to a noisy start at 2 p.m. when L.A.'s the Pity Party (playing the first of its two gigs today; the two-piece were also scheduled to play in the evening at the Eagle Rock Music Festival) served up a mid-afternoon spazz attack on the East stage. Yelpy, hyperkinetic, dissonant: OK in small doses.

Detournicovega_2 When the color-coordinated bands kicked in, though, it got fun. The crowd was colorful enough -- there were a lot of horizontal stripes, lively headbands, frilly dresses and glow-in-the-dark footwear. Then Scissors for Lefty came out on the South state wearing only shorts and gold body paint. Nico Vega went for all black, always safe, Aja Volkman in a leotard.

Then the Aggrolites, head-to-toe in red Dickies, riled up a West stage crowd with their relentlessly tight dirty reggae, delivering the best set I saw during the daylight. Jesse Wagner and crew are serious: Get with their program. Or they might send some workers over to your house.

Photos: Top, the Aggrolites' Wagner; left, Scissors for Lefty; right, Nico Vega (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

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About the Blogger
Kevin Bronson
Kevin Bronson has covered emerging and indie music since 2002 in his weekly Buzz Bands column in the Calendar Weekend section of the L.A. Times. He adores caffeine, judicious use of falsetto and the 6-4-3 double play. He abhors exclamation points, modern country and any notion that New York City is the center of the cultural universe. He's older than any music blogger he knows but has been known to pogo. He'll try not to pretend.

Bronson's Buzz Bands show can be heard Wednesdays from 6 to 8 p.m. Pacific time on the Internet radio station LittleRadio.com.

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