Flea follows his restless instincts into the cosmic drift of ‘Honora’

Flea: Honora (Nonesuch Records)

For more than 40 years, Flea has remained one of the most recognizable and elastic musicians to rise from L.A.’s underground music scene. Even as the Red Hot Chili Peppers moved away from the wiry brilliance of Mother’s Milk and Blood Sugar Sex Magik into a stretch of increasingly pedestrian albums, Flea remains driven by boundless imagination. It’s a quality that propels his curiosity to extend far beyond the familiar contours of RHCP’s repertoire. With Honora, his first offering under his own name, Flea opens up a liminal space where jazz phrasing, psychedelic haze, and cosmic drift fuse into a vast and unmoored sound.

Released by Nonesuch Records, Honora finds Flea (born Michael Balzary) stepping away from his bass while delving into the mysterious regions of jazz and psychedelia. The trumpet he wielded in such notable early ’90s numbers as RHCP’s “Pretty Little Ditty” (from Mother’s Milk) and Jane’s Addiction’s “Idiot’s Rule” (from Nothing Shocking) rings out here with subtlety and sincerity.

Honora settles into a thick flow of slow and luminous currents, as Flea follows instinct rather than flash, shaping the album’s immersive grooves and meditative reverie.

Not every experiment lands. Flea’s spoken-word and sung passages are occasionally too on the nose, tipping into a kind of earnestness that distracts from the music’s quiet strengths. But those moments are offset by an extraordinary supporting cast. Guitar player Jeff Parker brings the same understated brilliance that defines his instrumental prowess in Tortoise, and with his more recent work leading the ETA IVtet. Here, Parker is joined by two other ETA IVtet members, stand up bass player Anna Butterss and saxophone and keyboard player Josh Johnson—the latter of whom also produced the album.

Parker, Butterss, and Johnson ground Honora with depth and atmosphere, swaying between charged rhythms and billowing ambiance in songs such as “A Plea,” “Traffic Lights” (featuring Thom Yorke of Radiohead), and the album’s most profoundly psychedelic excursion, “Frailed.” Here, Flea plays bass alongside an expanded cast of characters including drummer Deantoni Parks, Warren Ellis playing viola and flute, Nathaniel Walcott on Fender Rhodes, percussionist Mauro Refosco, and fellow RHCP bandmate John Frusciante playing trumpet and providing snare drum treatments.


Nick Cave’s voice on a cover of “Wichita Lineman” settles into the song with a hushed, embered calm, turning Jimmy Webb’s wide-open meditation into something slower and more weathered, delivering the aching gravitas that only Cave can summon.

With Honora, Flea stakes his claim as the architect of his own new world, shedding expectations and following his instincts.

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Record review: Total Peace comes out of the gate strong with self-titled debut

Three years in the making, Total Peace’s self-titled debut album comes out of the gate strong with volume and urgency. What began as a neighborly chat between Michelle Williams and Matt Cherry during the peak of COVID isolation turned into a full-fledged band grounded in old school human interaction and no-frills songwriting.


Cherry is best known for slinging layered and complex guitar parts in the psychedelic post rock outfit Maserati. Here, he trades his effects pedals for a bass and a microphone. His voice is heavy, tuneful, and raw in songs such as “Taped Up,” “Trance,” and “Slipped.” It’s a bold pivot that calls to mind the ramped up energy of Gang of Four’s Entertainment! and the introspective back-and-forth between Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd throughout Television’s Marquee Moon—all driven by the sheer exuberance of the Stooges’ Self-titled LP. The riffs are bold and the rhythms are undeniable, reveling in the power of repetition.

Guitarists Williams and Craig Gates and drummer Greg Stevens round out the lineup with a compelling synergy. Stevens and Williams share roots in Atlanta’s early aughts indie rock band Red Level 11. Their chemistry grounds the record’s driving pulse, as they thrive on stripped-down dynamics—no synths and no nonsense.

There is no concept at work here per se, but Cherry says, “Michelle and I are neighbors in Inman Park. She has a bunch of historical documents about people and events on our street in the 1910s and 1920s that we thought were interesting. Several of the songs are loosely about those things. Other songs,” he goes on to says,” “are about different topics ranging from fictional characters to various midlife crises and dark thoughts.”

Recorded live at Maze Studios in Reynoldstown with engineer Ben Etter (Erasure, Washed Out, Nikki and the Phantom Callers) and mastered by Joel Hatstat (Bambara, We Vs. the Shark, Liz Durrett), this self-titled debut leans into its compact and hook-laden energy. “Tom Talbot,” “Mold Blue” and “Be Free” dance on a tightrope between post-punk tension and anthemic release. There’s a visceral joy in cranking it up for the sake of catharsis, and Total Peace hits like a welcome jolt of electricity.

Catch Total Peace’s live debut at Waller’s Coffee Shop on Friday, August 15, with Go Public and Tall Fences. 6-10 p.m.

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Guitar explorations with Tom Carter on Sat., Dec. 9

Tom Carter


American primitive guitarist, improvisor, and co-founder of psychedelic drone-folk trio Charalambides, Tom Carter makes a rare solo appearance in the intimate settings of a private home studio in Scottdale. All are welcome. BYOB.

Sat., Dec. 9. Donations of $5-$10 are greatly appreciated. Music starts at 10 p.m. 322 Patterson Ave. Scottdale, GA 30079

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Rad/ATL’s Hidden Hand podcast: An interview with Randall Frazier of Orbit Service

Orbit Service photo by Matt Condon

Welcome to another episode of Rad/ATL’s Hidden Hand podcast.

The music you’re listening to is “The Coldest Nights,” taken from Orbit Service’s sixth and most recent album titled The Door to the Sky.

Currently based in Bailey, Colorado — a small town in the mountains near Denver — Orbit Service is the name under which Randall Frazier has created music since the early aughts.

Over the years, Frazier has crafted a spacious and drifting sound that’s bound by a singular and textured quietude. His voice blends with atmospheric drones, improvisation, elegant post-rock songwriting, and musique concrete to a psychedelic effect.

I spoke with Frazier on October 16, 2019, shortly before Orbit Service shared the stage with the Legendary Pink Dots at the Masquerade in Atlanta — his fourth tour with the group. For this conversation we talked about creating space with music, life in Colorado, and our shared affinity for the Legendary Pink Dots.

To learn more about Randall Frazier and Orbit Service look online at orbitservice.bandcamp.com.

Thank you for listening.