Eyedea & Abilities: The name says it all
- Share via
The next generation of anything will always catch you by surprise, and hip-hop is no exception. The latest jolt of energy comes from the duo Eyedea & Abilities, whose sold-out show Tuesday at the Knitting Factory used minimalist ingredients for maximum impact, with a maelstrom of noise and beats and Eyedea’s frantic freestyle raps on his endless bohemian catastrophe.
Wearing a white T-shirt with the word “Happy” on it, Eyedea was a playful, tortured, high-energy frontman, rapping with uncertainty and frustration on small crises made XX-tra large. He shouted: “What doesn’t kill me will make me crazier!” and “Feels like my brain is hanging on by a clothespin!”
He rapped about big shots and existential malaise, turning to love gone wrong on “Paradise,” later pausing for some quasi-romantic jazzy soul that suggested a broad musical range, even as he was occasionally ready to lean on a crowd-pleasing cliche (“Make some noise! L.A. is in the house!”).
Onstage, the Minneapolis-based duo were true collaborators, as Eyedea (real name: Michael Larsen) repeatedly praised and reintroduced DJ Abilities (Gregory “Max” Keltgen), a master turntablist who stacked beats, samples and scratches to sometimes intergalactic effect. Late in the hourlong set, Abilities even re-created the sound of a glam electric guitar solo with a series of stuttering, echoing effects.
The result was even sharper live than on the pair’s fine new album, “E&A;,” a sound that goes back to rap’s roots, free from bling, inventive and ready to soar to a different future -- music free to roam, not market driven.
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.