FRANKLIN SIRMANS

“It’s all about looking and knowing,” says Franklin Sirmans, who has been head curator of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s contemporary art department since 2010. We are walking through Lost Line , an exhibition mostly organized by Sirmans’ colleague, Rita Gonzalez, on the second floor of the museum’s Broad Contemporary Art building—or BCAM, as everybody calls it. But even if Gonzalez spearheaded this show, it does what the contemporary department has been doing for the last four years: exploring connections between art from now and then in the museum’s collection, trying to figure what the museum has, and should have, and what the work can say together.

This may sound like a run-of-the-mill undertaking, but it’s actually not. Often, when you visit a “from the collection” show at a major museum, you feel that history is set, its major players chosen, and that you are simply being shown some of its highlights. Lately at LACMA, shows from the collection have been flexible propositions about how history might work. This openness feels almost radical.

We have just looked at a panorama by Argentina-born, Londonbased Amalia Pica, a younger artist new to LACMA’s collection. It spans the length of half a wall, and it’s made up of grainy, letter-size photocopies that come together to show a woman standing on a rock with a megaphone at her side. She stares out at a landscape much bigger than she is. On the adjacent wall hangs a framed letter and image detailing a work Terry O’Shea made in 1972. Sirmans tells me the story, versions of which I have heard before: O’Shea, who had won the museum’s Young Talent Award, had produced a geometric resin sculpture, then drowned it in the La Brea Tar Pits, those bubbling pools of tar adjacent to LACMA’s campus. Pica wasn’t even born when O’Shea threw his sculpture into the pits, but her work, like his, suggests the impossibility of competing with the grand bigness of the natural world. Making loose, cross-generational connections like this is something Lost Line  does nicely.

“We’re dealing with 1968 to the present, and having a building with 1968 to the present, and having a building that’s theoretically just dedicated to contemporary [art], it’s very exciting,” says Sirmans, referring to BCAM, which opened in 2008, thanks to financial Backing from philanthropist Eli Broad. “How do we deal with this? How do we acknowledge how contemporary art changes?”

Sirmans, who grew up in a 1980s New York where he likely saw Keith Haring drawings on subway walls out of the corner of his eyes, became fascinated in high school by Jean-Michel Basquiat’s merging of street, expressionism and tribal history. He studied English literature and art history at Wesleyan, where he wrote his thesis on Basquiat. Then he took a job in finance. But because of his thesis, Thelma Golden, then curating a Basquiat show at the Whitney Museum, asked him to write a chronology of Basquiat’s life and work for the catalogue. So began a career that took him to Milan, where he was U.S. news editor for Flash Art, to DIA Beacon outside of New York, where he worked in the publication Office. In the 2000’s, he curated or co-curated shows like OnePlanet under One Groove at the Bronx Museum or Make It Now: New Sculpture in New York  at the Sculpture Center. Then, in 2006, he went to the Menil Collection, a private Houston museum, to serve as curator of modern and contemporary art.

Sirmans began thinking about Los Angeles before he knew he would move here. Still at the Menil, he had been asked to write an essay for the Now Dig This: Art and Black Los Angeles 1960 – 1980 catalogue. Now Dig Thi s would open at the Hammer Museum in 2011, feature primarily assemblage art—works made by piecing together found objects and disparate materials—and trace the post-1960 influence of L.A.’s black artists. Instead of writing about those artists or assemblage specifically, Sirmans chose his subject the curator Walter Hopps. Perhaps because Hopps had been the Menil’s first director, his approach to exhibition- arranging was on Sirmans’ mind.

Hopps, the son of L.A. surgeons marked by his thick hair and thick-rimmed glasses, studied microbiology in school but had already begun his love affair with art history—school trips to museums had led to visits to local collectors’ homes. He married an art historian he met at UCLA, Shirley Nielson, at the base of the Watts Towers in 1955 and opened Ferus Gallery in 1957. The space would offer Andy Warhol his first show and champion the smooth, cool light and space art that would become a SoCal trademark. It also introduced some West Coast found-object art, though Hopps would promote that art to greater effect later, organizing, among others, an exhibition of black assemblage artist Noah Purifoy’s work at the Washington Gallery of Modern Art in 1968.

“Though I came to the guiding light late,” Sirmans wrote in the now-published catalogue, “I imagine that when curators of my generation were young and dreamed of being curators, visions of Walter Hopps danced in their heads.”

Hopps was a “curator’s curator,” says Sirmans. “He had this commitment to really clearly asking, ‘What does it look like?”” Hopps organized the first retrospective of Marcel Duchamp, the artist perhaps best known for the urinal he turned 90 degrees, named “Fountain” and exhibited at the Society of Independent Artist in 1917. The influence of his pragmatic radicalism on artists in the U.S. was undeniable, but no U.S. curator had paid him such close attention before. “[Hopps] would say, ‘This person is worthy of this sort of treatment,’ and because you give them this sort of treatment, you’ll learn from it,” says Sirmans.

If you read the press announcing Sirmans arrival and departure from the Menil and announcing his arrival at LACMA, words like these appear: “quirky,” “mash-up,” “diversity,” “reinvigorated,” “fresh,” “range of interests.” Collectors and members of art collector committees who have gone on tours with him will say they “like the way he talks about art,” and what they seem to mean is that he makes art—even iconic, canonized objects like Mondrian abstractions or Rauschenberg combines—seem openended and unpretentious but still genuinely interesting.

When Sirmans arrived at LACMA, the museum was in flux. Michael Govan had been director for just over two years. BCAM had just opened, its third floor filled with flash, expensive work from Eli Broad’s collection. Christine Kim, formerly of the Studio Museum in Harlem, had recently joined the contemporary Department as well. “Michael [Givan] said, ‘Dive in,’” Dirmans remembers. So he, Gonzalez and Kim worked through the collection, assembling a show they would title Human Nature. “We had four rooms to say, ‘This is how things were different [after 1968’],’” says Sirmans/ The first room included Bruce Nauman’s Walk with Contrapposto, a video in which the artist sways his hips in an exaggerated way while walking along a narrow corridor, and a photograph by Hannah Wilke of herself topless with kneaded erasers stuck to her face and chest, wielding two toy guns. Starting with work like this, that deals with rawness and embarrassment, rather than flashier pop- or minimalism- informed work from around that time, felt like an announcement that LACMA was going to do things differently.

Right now, Sirmans, who is working on the Ends and Exits  show on art from the 1980s scheduled to open this spring, has images of work by savvy appropriation artist Sherrie Levine and the sometimes abject, sometime elegant Robert Gober on his office wall. Works by both of them will go into the show. And he’s been looking at Basquiat again, as he crafts yet another essay on the artist. Recently, he spent time in front of “Gold Griot,” now owned by The Broad Art Foundation in Santa Monica. The work features paint stick on horizontal panels of wood, depicting a wildly grinning man with a skeletal torso, wide eyes shaped like sunflower seeds and teeth that look like blue, red and white

“Seeing it again now, I see how much the head is a split between an African mask and something like a carnivalesque costume,” says Sirmans. “You know it better every time you stand in front of a painting. Each time of writing is a time of trying to reckon with it, saying to it, ‘Tell me something else.’”

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RUDI KONICZEK

Vancouver Island is home to countless artists—from painters and potters to carvers, jewelers and glass blowers. A restorer of classic automobiles—defined by the Classic Car Club of America as distinctive in engineering or coachwork—might not be an  obvious candidate for inclusion in this group. Rudi Koniczek, however, more than merits it: The cars he restores are significant examples of 20th-century automotive art.

On its own, the Mercedes-Benz 300SL, under whose spell Koniczek fell as a young man, would qualify as art. “It’s one of the sexiest things I’d ever seen,” recalls Koniczek, now 64, interviewed recently in his casual, comfortable workshop near Victoria. So sexy, it turns out, that the car steered a newly immigrated Koniczek down the road to becoming a mechanic and, eventually, a world-renowned 300SL restorer. With its low, wide stance, long nose and top-hinged, gull-wing doors, the300SL combines the attributes of elegance and sportiness with performance that remains impressive by contemporary standards. It dashes from zero to 60 mph in about eight seconds and can attain a top speed of 150 mph.

From its introduction in 1954, the Gullwing appealed to celebrities of the era, with Sophia Loren, Clark Gable and Pablo Picasso becoming owners. Contemporary owners include designer RalphLauren and Jay Leno, who has written extensively about his car. Oprah Winfrey sold her 1954 Gullwing in 2008 to benefit the Arts and Culture Workshop at the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls, which she established in South Africa.

Other famous Mercedes owners bring their precious vehicles to Koniczek, including celebrities and heads of state, but he won’t name them out of respect for their privacy.

Flamboyant, irreverent and an engaging conversationalist quick to laugh and jest, Koniczek seems to derive great joy from life,  and anticipates his clients will do the same. Before accepting a commission, Koniczek insists potential clients travel to Victoria for a few days to become acquainted. Sharing conversatio  over a few meals, Koniczek decides whether expectations and enthusiasm for the project are mutual, and if there’s a basis for  friendship. Occasionally, Koniczek declines to offer his services.

Besides overseeing the restoration of more than 100 300SLs to date, Koniczek and his craftsmen restore a plethora of significant motoring icons, including Mercedes-Benz models from the 1920s and 1930s, Bugattis, Talbot-Lagos and Lagondas.

 





 

The list of countries from which cars arrive testifies to the quality of his work, with clients in the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Hong Kong and the United States. Koniczek never advertises, relying on the strength of his reputation. With 63 cars waiting to receive attention, the business plan seems to work.

Koniczek’s childhood  as difficult. Born in Germany in 1949, he immigrated to Canada with his family in 1953 and settled in Toronto. His German heritage prompted bullying by his classmates. Recalling these experiences provides the foundation for one of the truths that guide his life: “Never hurt anybody, and never be hurt by anybody.”

 An apprenticeship with Mercedes-Benz showed his talent and skill. Koniczek eventually became the national troubleshooter for the company, traveling across Canada to repair vehicles and training others in the mysteries of fuel injection and diesel  engines. In 1969, he made his first trip to Victoria, a journey thatchanged his life.

Koniczek left Mercedes-Benz in 1971 to work for himself and returned to Victoria, where he opened Autohaus, a shop dedicated to the service and repair of European cars. Despite its success, Koniczek decided to follow his heart and turned to the restoration of Mercedes-Benz 300SLs. “Always follow your passion” informs every aspect of his life and is often mentioned in his conversation. “What I do isn’t work, it’s a way of life, and money will follow passion. And if it doesn’t, you’re still having fun,” he says.

Once a car arrives at Rudi & Company, the teardown begins. Depending on the condition of the vehicle, a full restoration can take up to 18 months and cost around $300,000. In the calm, bright workshop, 300SL components are quietly being repaired or refurbished. Says craftsman Ross Morrison, “The cars are so valuable, it is necessary for everyone to maintain focus. A moment’s inattention can result in damage that can be expensive to repair.”

Eight craftsmen work with Koniczek, the least experienced of whom has been with him for 18 years. Once a car is completed, Koniczek and the owner will take it on a 300-mile drive on  Vancouver Island. If satisfied, he delivers the car with a one-year warranty.

Gooding & Company, a premier international auction house, recently sold a special lightweight 300SL that had passed through Koniczek’s care, after having been discovered in a rat-infested  garage in California. The pre-sale estimate was shattered, with the car realizing $4.62 million when the bidding ended.

“Rudi has gained a reputation for quality craftsmanship and  integrity. His business stems from a distinct passion for the cars, which is abundantly present in each finished project,” says Gooding & Company specialist Paul Hageman, who adds that Koniczek is widely regarded as a leading expert on the 300SL.

The most important thing he can pass on, says Koniczek, is his passion for life, particularly in relation to young people. Since the early 1970s, Koniczek has welcomed students doing work experience into his shop. Two have made a career with Koniczek, working with him over 20 years. Students who go elsewhere are offered Koniczek’s support in finding the career that will best suit them, as whatever they do should “not be a job but a lifestyle,” he says.

With a happy marriage to Patti, seven successful adult children, and his professional success, Koniczek is a man—and an artist— who seems to have found both recognition and contentment living the values he espouses.

 

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SHELTER HALF

LOCATED IN THE LA BREA DESIGN DISTRICT IN LOS ANGELES, THIS INNOVATIVE CONCEPT STORE BRINGS TOGETHER BRANDS, ARTISTS AND CRAFTSMAN THAT SHARE A SIMILAR AESTHETIC AND SPIRIT. IN THIS INTERVIEW, CO-FOUNDER DAVIDE BERRUTO DISCUSSES THE STORE’S PHILOSOPHY AND EVOLUTION

Why did you start Shelter Half ?

A desire to create both a venue for commerce based on collaboration and free creative expression as well as a “shelter” where people can come together to discuss and further new ideas about furniture, art, food, music, etc.

It is very rewarding and refreshing to be able to do something fun and creative with people I love, without the pressure of a business plan, without having to be overly concerned about being commercial… Shelter Half is remarkably different from all the other spaces on the street, because it can afford to be more conceptual and does not have to invite participants solely based on the selling potential of their “products” but rather there is an interest in their point of view, in what they have to say through their products or art.

How do you pick the people and products you feature at Shelter Half?

We work as a team and we began by inviting people to participate based on our personal taste, our extended network of friends and the intent to foster a diverse community. We put up a playground and asked people if they wanted to come and play. We are excited to see that now after a few months, more and more people are showing up on their own and asking if the can come and play too.

The items in the store are all produced in the U.S. Why is this important to you?

I think it is important to take time to think about how things are made, where they are made, why they are made, how they are designed and if they have longevity. There is both a long tradition of craftsmanship and quality in this country and an incredible ability to innovate. I would like to be able to celebrate both at Shelter Half.

Besides being produced in the U.S., is there a point of view or aesthetic that ties all the items in the store together?

I would say that there is a loose plot line that can be felt, but it is hard to describe—it’s vintage, it’s modern, it’s about comfort and aesthetics, but also taste, quality and honesty.

 


 

 

You are also the CEO of Environment, a sustainable furniture company. How is the philosophy of Shelter Half similar or different from Environment? What made you shift from a focus on furniture to also selling items such as apparel, accessories, food, photography and more?

I would not call it a shift in focus, but rather an inclusion of other important elements that, as a friend of ours put it, results in “strategies to improve the quality of life.”

Shelter opened last December as a three-month pop-up, but you have since extended it indefinitely. What will happen next?

The most interesting and inspiring aspect of this project is that it is intended to be fluid and we can let it evolve without too many constraints into what it is supposed to be.

 

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SHARKTOOTH

Atlantic Avenue, downtown Brooklyn’s main drag, is dotted with countless lookalike boutiques and restaurants. But among the storefronts selling African shea butter, screen-printed tote bags and vegan cookies is a hole-in-the-wall shop that offers something entirely different. Barely bigger than most living rooms, Sharktooth is an aesthetic oasis—a blend of antique and modern design that you’ll want to spend hours exploring. There, owner Kellen Tucker sells vintage textiles (primarily floor coverings and quilts) to a clientele who appreciates the value of good construction that has stood the test of time.

Originally from Portland, Maine, Tucker moved to NYC in 2011, but her interest in well-worn fabric started much earlier. “It started about five years ago with quilts,” she explains. “I was living in Athens, Georgia, and I started seeking them out. It was like I had a revelation with an object. I really wanted to understand and learn how these quilts came to be: all of the hands, and time, and fabric that went into them.” Tucker started mending some of the more damaged quilts, and selling them online. Soon, she moved from Athens to Brooklyn, “sort of on a whim,” and took a job at an antiques shop. She honed her retail skills there, and after a year or so, a bail bonds office  came up for rent a few blocks from where she was working— Tucker pounced. “It just all happened so quickly. It was such a good deal and it just seemed really well timed. Like a gift, in a way. So I rented it, took a month to renovate, and here I am.”

Now a year old, Sharktooth specializes primarily in antique rugs. In the shop, they sit in lush piles, a riot of warm colors that contrast with the whitewashed floors and walls. Tucker  also offers some of the quilts she’s collected over the years, but with an ingenious twist. To eliminate the kitschy, country look of the quilts, she dyes them in dark, neutral tones. Though  you can still see the individual fabric patterns on some of these dyed pieces, the color brings them into the 21st century. “I think a quilt that has the perfect palette, and the perfect pattern, and the perfect weight is an amazing thing, and I would never dye it. But so many of these are so ‘granny,’ with bright calico fabrics. I like modernizing something really old, and repurposing it.”

She sources her inventory at flea markets throughout the northeast, a process she relishes. “I really like to get up early, so that’s part of the appeal; you have a reason to get up at 4:30 a.m. to go to the flea markets. There’s a bizarre satisfaction I get out of that—having camaraderie with all these people who are 25 to 40 years older than me. It’s just a fun community to be a part of.”

Asked about the shop’s incongruous name, Tucker starts to laugh. “It’s purely sentimental. A friend of mine would say, ‘That’s sharktooth’ instead of ‘That’s cool.’ The name was a way to lighten all the pressure of having a store in New York; I didn’t want to overthink things.” But that’s not the moniker’s only benefit. “If I turn the music down in the store,” she says, “I can hear what everyone’s saying on the sidewalk. Every time someone outside notices the sign, they say it out loud, which is so fun. I’ll just hear, ‘Sharktooth! Sharktooth? Sharktooth,’ all day long. It’s so easy to take yourself too seriously, and it’s kind of a reminder to lighten up.”

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SEMI KIM

“I draw every day, carefully keeping all my ideas,” Kim explains. “Once a concept becomes clear, I start to make pieces. I don’t normally use other visual references—I listen to music. My memories and emotions serve as inspiration.”

The mystical and superstitious Korean traditions Kim learned during childhood may have played a part in her decision to study theater and performance at the prestigious Central Saint Martins College of Arts in London instead of practicing traditional studio skills. Ritual celebrations, including special food and dress, are part of a Korean upbringing and have deep meaning. Even birthdays are colorful customs with (perhaps subconscious) theatrical flair.

“I chose to study theater design for performance because I wanted to be different from others,” Kim demurs. “My course of study allowed me to direct, design, work hard and draw more. The theater is a total platform for art.”

While Kim would love to someday complete a project that includes music and film, for now she is happy creating her signature graphic works on paper and soaking in all the alternative film and performances that Europe has to offer. She counts the hipster ennui classic “Stranger Than Paradise”, directed by iconic New Yorker Jim Jarmusch, as a favorite flick, as well as the more recent “Noi the Albino” by director Dagur Kári—a very Icelandic take on teenage isolation and the end of the world.

When it comes to the stage, Kim notes the work of Ultima Vez, a contemporary dance company founded by choreographer and filmmaker Wim Vandekeybus, and also James Thiérrée, a French circus performer who happens to be the grandson of filmmaker Charlie Chaplin and the great-grandson of playwright Eugene O’Neill.

However, when asked to define her own technique, Kim skirts the issue. She prefers to blur the lines between what is considered traditional drawing and painting, tasking her generation of artists to do the same.

 

 

 

“I personally don’t like to divide the genre,” 32-year-old Kim explains. “My generation doesn’t define what we do every day. We just live it up. My art has become boundless. It could be drawing, it could be painting. It’s just part of living my life.”

Free association is, in fact, a large part of Semi Kim’s work. She creates her architectural landscapes by drawing, tearing and collaging with pencil, ink and glue. Figures appear in some of her early work, but recently her compositions have favored graphic pattern and representational shapes. Sometimes, as in her 2013 “Drawings in Repetition” series, triangles represent mountains, brushstrokes mimic water. Kim’s cool blue color fields of texture rely on the power of negative space. Though seemingly simple and spontaneous, there are often several layers involved in her process. She likes to include photocopies of drawings she has used or discarded as part of other work, breathing new life into an older idea or sketch. Kim loves what this process represents— in this case, a human feeling or emotion you may have again and again. Even the concept of time is recognized here, as meticulously placed hits of intrigue—a literal blueprint to the architecture of thought.

“I never get bored with blue,” Kim concedes. “Never! People feel free in general when they carefully look at the sky or the sea, and I’m not exceptional, I guess. I will have an adventure with many other colors this year.”

When she’s not preparing for a show, Kim enjoys publishing small books and catalogues with her friend Alexandre Thumerelle, an owner of 0fr. bookshop in Paris, an indication of work to come.

 

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HOT KNIVES

Would you ever think that Chimay Blue—the dark Belgian ale brewed at a Trappist monastery—could be used as an ingredient in a grilled cheese sandwich? Alex Brown and Evan George, the duo behind the cheeky DIY food blog Hot Knives, thought so when they conceived the Beer-Onion Soup Sandwich, a savory mixture of onions that have been simmered in a mixture of Chimay Blue, mushroom stock, margarine, bay leaf and thyme, enveloped between gooey, melted Gruyère cheese and two slices of grilled sourdough bread. “Of the five trophies we’ve taken the Grilled Cheese Invitational over the years, our favorite is the only one with booze in it—no surprise there,” George explains.

The Beer-Onion Soup Sandwich represents the outside-the-box thinking that has earned Hot Knives a cult following (their blog garners 60,000 readers a month). In addition to their blog, Hot Knives has also produced a number of local foodie affairs, such as the Great L.A. Beer Run, during which participants picked up the finest craft beers while riding around the city on their bikes,   as well as the Craft Beer Fest.

This summer, Brown and George released their second cookbook, Lust for Leaf: Vegetarian Noshes, Bashes and Everyday Great Eats—The Hot Knives Way.  Their first cookbook Salad Daze , was released in 2011 and featured vegetarian recipes for homemade kimchi and cast-iron mushrooms, whereas Lust for Leaf  features recipes for DIY wieners and patties, and booze you can eat (think pumpkin beer muffins, gin holes and Manhattan pop tarts).

 

 

 

 

 

Brown and George met more than a decade ago, at Occidental College in Los Angeles Brown spotted George after freshman orientation. He knew it was friendship at first sight. “We found each other smoking cigarettes,” says Brown. “I tracked Evan down because he was wearing a Joy Division T-shirt.”

They became fast friends and soon found themselves working together as line cooks in the school’s dining hall. “We were making 50 gallons of Alfredo sauce in steam cauldrons,” says Brown. George, who was studying history, and Brown, who had taken up philosophy, would goof around in the kitchen, putting blood-colored handprints on their T-shirts while re-filling the salad bar.

After graduating in 2004, Brown and George found themselves in the same predicament as many graduates of their generation: They were unable to find full-time professional jobs. So they returned to the kitchen. “I flipped burgers and worked at a cafe making salads,” says George. “Alex worked first at a bakery that did high-end breakfasts, and then in a French café.”

Eventually George, after juggling cooking with various newspaper gigs, found a full-time job at a now-defunct alternative weekly called L.A. Alternative, and Brown found work at a fine cheese distributor. Brown weaseled his way into writing a food column with George, where they would do things like discuss vegetarian recipes they were developing and review beer before the whole craft beer craze. “We thought we were doing a good service by letting people know there was good beer out there to pair with the food,” says Brown.

When the newspaper collapsed in 2005, Brown and George decided to keep their column on the web, and Hot Knives was born. The two have a guy’s guy DIY ethos with their blog—it’s never too formal and they like to have fun with it. They play around until they figure out something they like. The pair comb L.A green markets—Atwater Village, Silver Lake and Hollywood are their favorites— looking for fresh produce and other ingredients to use in recipes like Thanksgiving pop Tarts, a pocket filled with all your favorite Turkey Day dishes; Peaches and Scream, a Habañero peach jam; and Hot Kniveçoise, their version of salade Niçoise.

The Hot Knives duo have come a long way from their college days, when they would try to make the most screwed-up cheap snack they could think of by staring at the contents of a bare fridge—an egg sandwich made with eggs poached in Pabst Blue Ribbon and stale bread, for example.

Despite still having full-time jobs, the two manage to find time to  meet and discuss recipes, cook meals for their friends and families and work on cookbooks. Just don’t ever call them chefs. “We don’t call ourselves chefs,” says Brown. “We say it as a joking term. We’re cooks; we’re having a good time.”

 

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Boss Selections

Sunny Levine is just days away from finishing his most ambitious collaborative project to date, Boss Selections Vol. 1, featuring no less than 14 songs by 14 different musicians, all of  them written and recorded by Levine in his Los Angeles studio.

His collaborators include drummer James Gadson (Bill Withers, Beck), his aunt the actress Rashida Jones, and his friend Amir Yaghmai aka Young Dad, one of L.A.’s most in-demand indie guitarists, who plays in Julian Casablancas’ band and toured with Charlotte Gainsbourg. “I didn’t want to make another record where I am the artist,” explains Levine at his studio one afternoon. “So I just picked everybody that I would want towork with and made a mixtape, basically. A really cool mixtape.”

Today, RnB singer Orelia is coming to the studio to lay down her vocal track, but before she arrives, Young Dad is going to stop by and record some bass lines for the track Rashida  recorded the night before. Levine will be up until 4 a.m. tonight wrapping everything up before getting on a plane to New York in the morning, where he is recording yet another track for the album, with Brooklyn indie singer Nick Nauman  of Keepaway. When Levine returns, he will have about two weeks to take care of overdubs and mixing; it will be a sprint to the finish for sure, but luckily for Levine, making music— on his own and with others—is what he was born to do.

Music is in Sunny Levine’s blood—his grandfather is Quincy Jones, his father is producer Stewart Levine (Simply Red, Joe Cocker, BB King, Dr. John, Minnie Riperton, and Jamie Cullum) and his uncle is producer QD3 (Tupac Shakur, Ice Cube). Becoming part of the family business was a no-brainer. After fronting the band Matta Haari,

Levine decided to try his hand at production and found himself working with artists such as Mickey Avalon, Hugh Masekela, Ariel Pink, Pete Yorn and the Happy Mondays. Levine recently wrapped up his third solo album, Hush Now, an “emotional rollercoaster” of a record. Boss has an entirely different flavor, he explains. “It still has an emotional throughlin in that there is soul in every song, but it’s generally more  optimistic and up tempo. A lot more grooves and rhythm. And it leans on a few key influences—that 1980s British take on RnB, and splashes of deep house.” When people ask him whether it has been hard finding continuity between the tracks, because they have all been recorded with different artists,  Levine reminds them of the common denominator. “It’s my take on those different artists,” he explains. “Even if the songs all have a different sentiment, the vibe of it is the same.”

Three of his all-time musical heroes are featured on the record. First, Hugh Masekela, the South African singer and trumpet player who contributed to Paul Simon’s Graceland . It was a now or never opportunity—Masekela was coming to L.A. for two days only, on one of which he would be performing, so Levine quickly wrote his version of the “dream Hugh Masekela song” and demo’d it in his voice. When Masekela showed up, they had two hours to get the song down. The track is called “One of These Days,” and it is about unrequited love. “It was such a great thing, hearing it in his voice.” And that was the first track Levine recorded for Boss . “It was so soulful, it set the record off on such a nice journey,” says Levine.

The second of Levine’s all-time heroes on the record is James Gadson, whom Levine describes as the “best drummer alive.” He certainly is among the most recorded drummers in RnB history, having played with everyone from Bill Withers to Ray Charles to Frank Sinatra to Beck. Gadson has hardly ever been recorded singing since the beginning of his career with pioneering soul and funk band Charle   Wright and The Watts 103rd Street Band, with whom he had a hit called “Love Land.” “He’s a legend,” says Levine.

Singer Brenda Russell is the third of Levine’s heroes on the record. “She is someone I grew up up knowing, but we never made music together.” Levine says Russell was curious to check out all the “weird sounds and manipulation” he specializes in. Between working with Russell, Masekela and Gadson, Levine was in producer heaven. “Those three are crazy heroes of mine and to have them come in was a true gift,” he says.

Each song took a day to record, and the majority of artists on the record he had never worked with before. Like Phlo Finister, fashion-forward pop singer and best friend of Peaches Geldof dubbed the “next big thing” by Vice ’s Noisey. Then there’s Aska Matsumiya from the synth band ESP. “I met her in Japan when she DJ’d the party for the opening of the Citizens of Humanity store,” says Levine, who had been influenced by certain subgenres of 1970s and 1980s Japanese pop for a while. He had been searching for someone who could sing in that style, and when he found Aska, the search was over. “I always wanted someone who has that kind of voice, with a little bit of broken  English, and then an accent. Slightly strange and beautiful.”

Aska really loved the track recorded by Young Dad, who strolls into the studio halfway through our interview and grabs a bass guitar. As well as being a go-to indie guitar hero, Young Dad also sings on all the Daedelus records and has worked with the Gaslamp Killer. Young Dad’s track, “Midnight Fools,” “is kind of like an electro RnB track inspired by  home décor and succulents,” says Levine, in all seriousness. Young Dad explains that he and Levine are so close (they have been tight since high school) they don’t even need words to communicate their ideas about music. Levine will just do a little dance, or move his hands in a certain way, and Young Dad will understand exactly what’s up. “The best thing about this project is just how social it has been,” says Levine. “You have to be organized yet open-minded when dealing with so many different creative personalities—something between a  shrink, an interior designer and a boxing trainer. But I think I found my perfect outlet with this format. Hopefully I can just keep making records under this Boss Selections umbrella.”

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